Minnie Riperton performs on a TV show, USA, 1975.Photo by Gilles Petard/Redferns via Getty.
This piece was written for the KCRW music documentary podcast Lost Notes. This season, the poet and cultural critic Hanif Abdurraqib explores a single year: 1980 - the brilliant, awkward and sometimes heartbreaking opening to a monumental decade in popular music. You can find all the episodes from Lost Notes: 1980 here. Support KCRW original programs like Lost Notes by donating or becoming a member.
In the spring of 1980, producers set out to bring Minnie Riperton back to life. They were armed with a disparate arrangement of prerecorded vocals, and a host of willing guest stars, She had died one year earlier, after a years-long battle with breast cancer. She had left behind scraps of recordings from past sessions. They weren’t very cohesive, and under many other circumstances, they would have been disposed of. But producers had an idea. They would latch on to the waves of grief and sentimentality that had taken over after Minne’s passing. They knew they could put the vocals over new arrangements. Call up some of Minnie’s old friends and collaborators. And like that, there would be an album that sounded new. An album that might, if they were lucky, hit the charts with a ferocity that no Minnie album had before.
Photo by Richard E. Aaron/Redferns via Getty
The casual music fan may know Minnie Riperton best not by a song, but by a song within a song. “Lovin’ You” came out in 1974. At the three-minute mark of that tune, a perfect piercing note unfolds over the birdsong and the dreamlike electric piano. A note arriving late in a song that felt like it had already done its work. To get the magic of that note near the song's conclusion … it makes listening to the song feel like the slow unwrapping of a gift – undoing the ribbons and tearing off the paper before opening the box. The piano is played by Stevie Wonder. He produced the whole album – “Perfect Angel” – but he used a pseudonym: “El Toro Negro.” It was to avoid a contract dispute with his label, Motown Records.
This story was written and performed by Hanif Abdurraqib. The senior producer for Lost Notes is Myke Dodge Weiskopf. The show’s creator and executive producer is Nick White. He also edited this piece. KCRW’s USC-Luminary fellow is Victoria Alejandro, and she provided production support for this series. Additional thanks on this episode to Sheila Simmons and Al Banks.