99% Invisible - The Quiet Storm
Episode Date: July 22, 2025How a radio show born at a small college station in DC and dedicated to smooth, romantic love songs transformed black radio and reshaped love lives across the country.The Quiet Storm Subscribe to Siri...usXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes of 99% Invisible ad-free and a whole week early. Start a free trial now on Apple Podcasts or by visiting siriusxm.com/podcastsplus.
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This is 99% Invisible. I'm Christopher Johnson filling in this week for Roman Mars.
In the mid-1970s, the national media was reporting on the rise of a new socioeconomic group that was quickly gaining unprecedented access to jobs, education, backyard swimming pools, the good life.
Journalists seemed fixated on what many were calling the, quote,
new black middle class.
Black families have entered the mainstream of American life in larger
numbers than ever before in our history.
No one of them is exceptional, but their total story is.
The media's obsession at the time was with how, for this one section of Black America,
the protests and violence of the 1960s seemed to be cross-fading into quiet middle-class
achievement.
Nowhere near as exciting as a riot or a burning is the move into middle-income America.
But this is what Black Americans are achieving more than ever before. In August 1973, Ebony magazine had its own special issue all about the black
middle class. On the cover, there was a fisheye photo of an anonymous black man
wearing a crisp suit with a tight afro and a briefcase walking through the city
with purpose. The stars of the moment were regular, ascendant Black Americans.
We were dealing with people that were having economic stability for the first time in generations.
This is writer and cultural critic Craig Seymour.
Although there'd always been some version of the Black middle class,
Craig says this group of Black Americans was different.
The Black middle class of the 70s was really reaching the world with arms wide open
and trying to have new opportunities and new experiences that have just not been afforded to masses of Black people before that.
And as these new masses were figuring out what upward mobility felt like,
they were also exploring what Black middle-classness
sounded like.
It was the aspiration to expand, to seek out new type of sounds, kind of have new sonic
adventures.
That's the type of thing that was so different.
In the previous decade, some of the biggest songs in Black popular music had been dance-y,
sometimes political, and heavy on the funk.
Like James Brown's Black Power Anthem,
Say It Loud, I'm Black and I'm Proud.
This song was a good time with a strong message.
Say it loud, I say it loud.
One more time, say it loud.
I say it loud.
But by the mid-1970s, that new generation of Black Americans was gravitating to a much
more mellow sound, a sound that matched the soft life of their middle-class dreams.
They wanted music that was smooth and easy and all about love and romance.
And at a small Black college radio station in Washington, D.C., a show called The Quiet Storm would give them exactly what they were looking for.
Welcome to The Quiet Storm, four hours of my favorite songs presented for your enjoyment.
Relax and enjoy The Quiet Storm.
The concept of The Quiet Storm radio show was pretty straightforward, an evening program featuring hours of mostly uninterrupted soulful ballads and love songs.
That simple format made the Quiet Storm an overnight sensation.
And as the show became a fixture in homes and on car stereos throughout Black DC,
it also set off a debate over how Black music should sound and what it should say.
In the early 1970s, before the Quiet Storm radio show was created, Washington, D.C. was
an epicenter of black middle class life.
The city was experiencing new levels of black access to good jobs and higher education.
D.C. was nicknamed the Chocolate City,
a town full of black socialites,
politicians, and professionals.
You had affluent middle-class black folks
that liked to go out and party, that had homes.
Deanna Williams worked as a DJ in Washington.
It was a thriving community of all kind of social economic but black,
very very blackity black black and we were thriving. And then the Mecca of all
the HBCUs, Howard University. Oh my goodness. Howard got a new radio station
in 1971 and renamed it with its own call letters, WHUR, which stood for Howard University Radio.
This was the first black-owned radio station in D.C., a city where three out of four residents
were black.
Even though WHUR was technically a commercial outlet, it had a strong grassroots feel.
There was a news department, blocks of cultural programming, and lots of music.
And not just the up-tempo R&B or funky dance music you might hear on other stations, but also roots reggae, Chicago blues, and freedom songs.
Deanna Williams was one of WHUR's first DJs.
She had a show called Ebony Moonbeams.
I would come on, you know, this is Deanna Williams, Ebony Moonbeams on 96.3 WHUR, and
tonight I've got some special things for you.
Like the other DJs, Deanna had eclectic tastes and the freedom to play mostly whatever she
wanted.
It was freestyle.
You heard it all.
You heard jazz, you heard gospel. You heard the beauty of us.
360 degrees of the black experience is what we did.
But this kind of programming was not bringing in a lot of money. So just a few years after WHUR first went on the air,
Howard's president, James Cheek, started pushing the station to focus more on raising revenue.
James Cheek started pushing the station to focus more on raising revenue. Management had a new mandate, which, as one historian put it,
was to pursue an upscale commercial niche in the FM market.
Basically, they wanted a more bougie audience.
Dr. Cheek offered me the opportunity to first become the sales manager of Howard University Radio.
As part of that new mission, WHUR hired a woman named Kathy Hughes.
Here's Kathy in an interview with KUT Radio in 2020.
I was blessed my first year, increased the ratings and the revenue substantially.
In 1975, when Kathy was just 28 years old, she became the first woman to run a broadcast
facility in the nation's capital. And she would soon reshape the station in ways that would ripple
through black music and radio for the next decade. She did it by focusing on a new target audience,
DC's young, thriving black middle class. Kathy Hughes was incredibly savvy about understanding how radio audiences worked, how to sell airtime,
but also how to program certain types of music to specific audiences.
Music critic Eric Harvey has written about WHUR's history, and he says, as Kathy was
thinking about how to make music shows to attract new listeners to the station,
she decided to survey the people closest to her.
You know, she was looking at her girlfriends. Who was she hanging out with?
Upwardly mobile, single, black women who were being completely underserved by popular radio.
From her focus group, Kathy realized that a local show
that appealed to single black women,
especially professional black women,
could be really popular
and a great source of ad revenue.
Kathy began to loosely conceive
of a weekend evening show focused on romantic music,
slow soulful R&B ballads,
and very smooth love songs.
She knew that there were a lot of single young black women in the DC area.
This is writer and cultural critic, Craig Seymour, again.
So she thought, well, hey, who doesn't want to be serenaded?
You know, who doesn't want to have somebody play love songs to them and talk in a deep voice and listen to that.
So she kind of tailored the show to that particular audience.
One version of the show's origin story,
and there are a few,
is that Cathy had a bit of a tough time
finding the right DJ to host the show.
She eventually settled on an intern named Melvin Lindsey,
who also babysat her son.
Although Melvin was not Cathy's first or favorite choice for the DJ gig, he was the
one who would soon take her idea and make it a huge success.
Melvin was a handsome, button-down kid from D.C., known for carrying a briefcase around
campus.
He could also be super shy.
Deanna Williams was one of Melvin's mentors at WHUR.
Melvin was still a student when I was on the radio.
He was very quiet until he got comfortable.
And that quietness is what set Melvin apart immediately,
the night he hosted his first show in May 1976.
That's because Melvin represented a new kind of on-air personality.
The previous generation of black radio DJs were super performative, flamboyant, and kind
of rambunctious.
Rock-a-chip time one more time and look out y'all, cause here we go!
How about that now?
Let's continue on with more recorded music.
K-C-O-H!
Melvin mellowed that profile way out.
When he spoke, ugh, pure satin.
Melvin was so gentle and fluid, and it all seemed just effortless.
The next couple of songs I'm gonna play
have a lot of meaning for me
and I want you to listen to the words.
They're dedicated from me to you
and then I'll be back to say something else before I go,
but listen to these, they're just for you.
["Warm Inviting Engaging"]
Warm, inviting, engaging, that was his style.
His style of radio, it made you feel
like he was talking directly to
you. That's a big achievement to be able to do that as a radio personality. He had the voice,
he had the composure, he was humble. It was like a chef. Like he prepared this great soul-satisfying meal.
WHUR had never done a show that sounded like this. Up to that point, the station was mostly a mix of public affairs programming and a lot of jazz.
Definitely not B-side baby making music.
Listeners were caught totally off guard.
On the night of the first broadcast, Melvin was flooded with calls from people requesting their own favorite slow jams.
Others phoned in just to show the young DJ some love.
For the next two days,
WHUR Switchboard lit up with listeners
calling in from all over the DC area,
asking about that new show.
Together, Kathy Hughes and Melvin Lindsey,
the intern student babysitter,
had just created a hit.
Here's Melvin in 1991,
talking about how the show just took off.
It started out of love, out of fun,
out of people putting their heads together,
and not even realizing that we were really creating
such a monster in the radio industry.
But the program still needed a name.
About a year before the show first went on the air,
Smokey Robinson had released a comeback album full of love songs
titled A Quiet Storm, which featured the extremely sensual,
suggestive hit single of the same name.
Quiet Storm
Blowing through my life Kathy told Melvin they should name their show The Quiet Storm.
She said the phrase had, quote, subliminal seduction in it, which was exactly the feel
she wanted for her program.
Naturally, Melvin used Smokey's track as the show's theme song.
Good evening, I'm Melvin Lindsay and welcome to The Quiet Storm.
Again, I want to thank everyone from WHUR's news department, the entire staff here.
They've been so good to me.
The Quiet Storm show started in 1976, and by the end of the next year, it was the number one
weekend music show in Washington. The show was so successful,
Cathy expanded it to weeknights,
which made WHUR the second highest rated FM station in DC.
And it brought in millions in ad sales for the station.
The Quiet Storm's sudden and wild popularity
came in part thanks to Melvin's innovation as a curator.
Instead of going for the up-tempo jams,
he chose softer tracks,
the Smooth Soul, the Romantic Ballads,
and much of it was new music by black artists
like Gene Carnes, You Are All I Need,
and LTD's sumptuous, perfectly titled track, Love Ballad.
And what we have is much more than they could see
And they'll never ever, never, never, so much more have
As a grassroots-oriented station, WHUR had its own history of free-form programming,
where DJs just kind of let the music sprawl.
Melvin and Cathy's innovation was the way they took that free-form approach
and applied it to a new kind of music,
slow jam deep cuts.
Throughout the day's programming, starting with morning drive until afternoon drive,
you got music that was keeping you up, going, more up tempo music, but then that stopped
when it got dark and you were not working and you were not driving.
You had finished dinner and homework with the kids and you were not working and you were not driving, you had finished dinner and homework with the kids,
and you were lighting your candle and maybe more and chilling.
And so what you were hearing were mid-tempo and ballads that were about love.
Music critic Craig Seymour remembers how, as a kid,
he and his mother would sit in the car outside their home,
listening to the quiet storm, completely immersed.
And we would wait until the commercial break,
and then go inside the house and turn on the radio
while the commercial break was on,
because you just really wouldn't want to miss these songs,
because you really had no other chance to hear many of them.
These weren't hits now.
They were really rare cuts, deep cuts, and unique to him and his taste.
Melvin really seized on a major shift that was happening in Black music in the late 1960s and early 70s.
In that moment of arms-wide open exploration, Black groups were experimenting with a whole new kind of sound. It starts with the artists making these, I don't want to say slicker in a bad way,
but just kind of these more sophisticated, musically sophisticated type of popular music.
Sophisticated. That's how several critics have described this evolution, as popular soul and
R&B started to expand from the shorter, more jerky dance funk tunes
of the previous era.
Artists were smoothing the edges,
making songs longer, and bedazzling their tracks
with big, rich string sections.
This modern, elegant, soft, romantic edge
to popular soul music that artists were expanding upon
in the early 1970s.
And you can look at what Isaac Hayes was beginning to do.
Lush orchestrations for big concept albums with very romantic themes.
You have Isaac Hayes doing, you know doing these long instrumental tracks.
Barry White.
All these things are about that are starting to happen along with black music soundtracks.
This is music and culture critic Nelson George.
He says one thing that was driving this expansiveness was the influence of soundtracks for black
themed films like Shaft, Trouble Man, and Sparkle.
This was beautiful, innovative music
that adapted funk and soul to the openness, continuity,
and minor key moodiness of film scoring.
For example, songs like Curtis Mayfield's
Give Me Your Love from the Superfly soundtrack. Black film soundtracks were having a major influence on R&B.
And as more and more artists began replicating the lush, palatial sound of film scores, what
emerged was a kind of smooth soul that would help define Quiet Storm.
So the music is changing, the ambition, the song,
the tracks are getting longer.
And so, you know, HUR is one of the stations
that was responding to that in terms of what
their playlist is and the sound of the station.
The Quiet Storm may have been aimed at the black middle class at first, but it quickly
transcended.
If you walked through any of DC's black neighborhoods in the evening, you could hear the radio show
coming out of row house windows and the cars that drove by just as the sun was setting.
When the Quiet Storm time came, it's like the tempo just slowed down and it was just,
it's just so hard to explain the piece.
Now that radio culture isn't as big, but just how a show could really just change the vibe
of a whole city or at least the black part of the city at a particular time.
It's almost like a dimmer switch, you know, where it's like all of a sudden these ballads
started coming in and just the whole vibe of Black Washington began to change along with the
moods of Melvin Lindsay. And at the time, Black DC was looking to turn down the dimmer switch,
not just on the mood, but on life. The quiet storm became so deeply special to Black Washington because this was a moment
when folks really needed some quiet.
The movements of the 1950s and 60s had led to historic gains in education, employment,
housing and the expansion of Black political and racial self-awareness, all of that.
But look at the tremendous costs.
The civil rights era had been so violent, so tumultuous, especially in places like D.C.
The biggest uprising after Martin Luther King's assassination took place in the heart of black
Washington.
What that did to the psyche of black people starts to push us into a post-civil rights era of the 1970s.
Fredera Hadley is an ethnomusicologist at Julliard.
And so people start really turning to the future
and trying to just imagine what is this we are now entering
or creating.
This moment of swift change brought up all sorts
of existential questions for black folks. As we integrate into a white world, how do we remain Black? What do we do differently?
What's still ours? And given how hard white people fought this, are we safe in this new America?
Desegregation had been exhausting. Integration and assimilation were exhausting. Some Black folks just needed
a moment to catch their collective breath. And Fredera says, the quiet storm provided
a soundtrack for that transition. A transition to some semblance of normalcy by way of romance.
I think it really takes hold because it is the music of that kind of intimate, deeply
personal life.
It's not about we shall overcome.
It's about you and me or me and mine.
It's about feelings.
Like, how do I feel about you?
How do I feel about us?
How do I want you to feel about me, right?
In some small but really important ways,
Melvin's show helped people to shut out the loudness
and intensity and confusion of the world
just for a few hours and focus on themselves
and their own hearts.
This was a time to unplug, to pour a glass of wine,
to make dinner for yourself and maybe the ones you love.
Melvin was skilled and he learned what song is going to get people at this time.
This is former WHUR DJ Deanna Williams again.
He knew when people were getting home, he knew when people would probably finish dinner,
he knew when people were probably getting in bed.
So you getting in bed, it's time to get some, you know, get in bed,
get down with it music.
You know, your mama was listening, you know, your daddy was listening to
the Quiet Storm, like I said, that baby making music.
So get in bed, get busy in bed, get busy in the kitchen, whatever.
Look, it's easy to snicker about the Quiet Storm, a show full of sappy love songs and
sugary ballads about sex.
But for Craig Seymour, it was bigger than that.
He first discovered The Quiet Storm at a pretty young age, and the show helped him wrestle
with some big questions about true romance.
It was so much of an education for me because those ballads that Melvin Lindsay played gave
me a certain deeper feeling of like wondering what life circumstances would have to happen
where you would feel like this, like the way that a singer would sing a particular song.
I kind of grappled with the mysteries of adulthood through listening to The Quiet Storm.
Specifically, Craig says The Quiet Storm helped him sort through his feelings of love and
desire as a gay kid.
Craig didn't realize at the time that Melvin Lindsay was also gay.
But today, Craig definitely thinks Melvin's musical selections often had double meanings,
that he would play certain songs to send messages and tell stories that only his gay listeners
could decode. You're kind of faced with these romantic songs
about love gained, love lost.
When I would try to put myself into those situations,
there's a way that I had to confront queerness
because, you know, I knew that I wasn't going to be singing
You Bring Me Joy, you know, to a woman.
But for me, that wasn't scary. It was
kind of fascinating and kind of safe to explore the idea of romance in this safe space of the Quiet Storm.
Craig and I both grew up in the Washington area in the 1970s and 80s. When I was a little kid,
my mom would drive me from Silver Spring, Maryland into Northeast
D.C. to drop me at my grandma's house near Fort Stevens.
As we rode down Georgia Avenue into the evening, past the Safeway and the barbershop in Shepherd
Park where I hated going to get my hair cut, I'd stare out the car window.
It had been two decades since the King riots, but I could see a lot of the
buildings were still boarded up. From the backseat of my mom's Green Ford Granada, I could hear
the quiet storm crackling into clarity on the car radio.
The music of Marvin Gaye along with Tammy Terrell the year 1967, 724 in Washington once
again good evening.
My mom was a single black woman from DC
who worked for the city government not quite middle class but my mother loved love and she
sang every song it must have felt like melvin was DJing just for her the music of patty labelle on
whur the title tunes her latest album i'm in love Love Again. And before that, it's Patti LaBelle with Since I Don't Have You.
Two minutes before 8 p.m., you're listening to The Quiet Storm.
By the early 1980s, WHUR's The Quiet Storm had grown into something way bigger than the radio
program that Kathy Hughes and Melvin Lindsay started in 1976.
That one local show was now having a big influence
on broadcasting across the US.
Within 10 years, almost every major market black radio station
in the country has a quiet storm.
Three to five hours, overnight usually,
maybe starting at 11 or midnight.
These became a staple.
Nelson George wrote a front page story in 1986
for Billboard magazine with the headline,
Quiet Storm Sweeps Black Radio.
He describes how the DC show had inspired 120 broadcasters
around the country to develop their own shows
and sometimes even entire stations,
just like the WHUR program. Those new
shows were not affiliated with the original Quiet Storm but a lot of these
copycat programs nodded to it with names like Sunday Night Cool Out and Soft
Touch and their approach and sound was pretty standard Quiet Storm and the DJs
were clearly imitating Melvin's signature smooth style. There's a lot more mellow voices.
They tended to be either very low-tone women
or low baritone men.
It's really a profound aesthetic change.
It's going from hard, you know, some whiskey to cognac.
So like in New York was Vaughn Harper.
Vaughn Harper had a very deep voice.
Welcome to the Quiet Storm.
You know, blah, blah, blah, blah.
It's 107.5 WBLS four times, and I just can't walk away.
Not from you, because you are the spice of life.
As Quiet Storm programming took off
on black radio in the mid 1980s,
the Quiet Storm sound solidified
into a brand new genre of music.
Record companies saw this as a chance to sell a lot of music to the so-called sophisticated
Quiet Storm audience with disposable income.
And they put pressure on musicians as they went into the studio to record their next
albums.
Here's music critic Eric Harvey again. Record labels started asking their artists, hey, you know, can we get a song on side B or QuietStorm format?
And then we'll, you know, service the other radio stations with the more uptempo kind of pop songs.
And here's probably the most impressive sign of just how powerful and influential Quietstorm had become.
Quietstorm Radio was launching full superstars.
Several legendary artists owe a lot of their stardom to Quietstorm.
Not just because of a few songs, these are balladeers who fully embodied that smooth, mellow, romantic sound.
Artists like Luther Vandross. who fully embodied that smooth, mellow, romantic sound.
Artists like Luther Vandross.
["A House is Not a Home"]
Craig Seymour wrote a biography of Luther Vandross
and says knockout quiet storm ballads
like A House is Not a Home
are what really helped solidify Luther's massive audience.
["A House is Not a Home"] Luther's massive audience. But no one saw more commercial success thanks to Quiet Storm Radio than Anita Baker.
Her 1986 album, Rapture, was a Quiet Storm staple, with songs like Same Old Love and
You Bring Me Joy.
You bring me joy when I'm down At the time, it was rare for a black musician doing adult R&B to have what was called a
crossover album, one that went beyond Quiet Storm and other formats that were considered
black radio to find success with mainstream, that is, white listeners.
But that's exactly what happened with Rapture.
The album was launched by Quiet Storm Radio and then crossed over to Pop Radio, expanding
Anita Baker's audience exponentially.
I mean, the song Sweet Love, you know, it reached the Billboard Top 10.
It crossed over to pop audiences and it started in the Quiet Storm rotation. Sweet love,
he'll make your heart ring out your love.
I threw those shit bombs out of your mouth.
To this day, Anita Baker can still sell out, you know,
5,000 seat theaters, and it's hard to imagine
Anita Baker's stardom being half of what it is today
without being nurtured in the quiet storm format.
Coming up, not everyone was into these smooth baby-making vibes.
The Quiet Storm backlash smooth, pop soul, love song sound was blowing up on radio stations
and in record stores all over the country.
But not everyone was feeling the love.
There were lots of aesthetic criticisms about Quiet Storm music, which, you know, in some
cases was deserved.
First of all, music critic Eric Harvey says some music fans complained that Quiet Storm
music wasn't really music at all. More like mushy, tuneless versions
of Black America's great funk, jazz, and soul traditions.
This is music that could easily be called by some critics,
you know, sonic wallpaper, easy listening.
And in a way, the detractors were right.
Part of the point of Quiet Storm was that it was music
that wasn't necessarily so rich. You could just vibe. So one of the features that was making Quiet Storm so popular
in the mid-80s was the very thing it was getting dragged for at the exact same time.
This is music that is designed in a certain way to blend in with other activities, making
dinner, having a glass of wine, making out, etc.
etc. And, you know, for some people, it's like what you listen to over the PA system
at the mall.
Even harsher, if you can imagine, was the critique that Quiet Storm was so decidedly
apolitical. And to some, that was unusual for a form of black music as big and influential
as Quiet Storm. With more than a hint of shade, one critic even described Anita Baker as of saying that African Americans have succeeded in making it to the middle class, like we're just going to listen to this kind of soft complacent sounding
music as a symbol of all we've achieved, but you know people who were still
thinking we have a long way to go in terms of full equality and Quiet Storm
feels sort of like a retreat from that.
This was the 1980s, a moment when Black America and Black DC in particular was in the midst of
multiple crises, especially with Reaganomics, crack cocaine, and the war on drugs. The way some
listeners saw it, Black music had a responsibility to capture the urgency of the moment, but Quiet
Storm seemed to be abdicating Black music's historic role as the teller of truths
about the hard realities of black life in America.
The last thing black folks needed
was gushy love songs and apolitical music.
It felt complacent, especially as Reagan took over,
and especially as the opportunities
for African Americans in the US
started retreating back to a pre-civil rights era. And here was Quiet Storm just kind
of encouraging people to be calm and stay home and be domestic and make money.
Resentment was growing for Quiet Storm, which just felt more and more out of
touch. A new generation of artists and fans wanted something really different
from black popular music.
and fans wanted something really different from black popular music.
When you look at the attitude when hip hop arrived as a force, a lot of what hip hop came to represent was antithetical to the quiet storm. This is music critic Nelson George again. The ideas about what
is acceptable in black music at that time had gotten very conservative.
Because now you're looking at a class of executives and radio programmers who are middle class,
who are aspirational, who are cavassier drinkers, who are, you know, they play backgammon at
the club.
The gooey, apolitical, deeply unfunky sound of Quiet Storm
had proven so successful that by the mid-1980s,
it dictated what many major labels wanted
from their Black artists.
Record companies had locked in on so-called upscale urban
audiences, and the gates were all
but closed to Black music that didn't
appeal to those listeners.
This was exactly when and why rap music,
which was relatively new at the time, kicked in the door.
This whole hip-hop thing, sneakers?
We're wearing sneakers into the club?
No, we're not wearing sneakers into the club.
What Quiet Storm became part of was a calcification,
and so things became more about the mainstream.
We get these records and they all sounded
really shiny and glistening.
Hip-hop comes in and begins to rebel against the smoothness.
Even as hip-hop took off in the late 1980s,
Quiet Storm Radio was still popular all over the country.
Kathy Hughes, the station manager who first dreamed up
The Quiet Storm Show, left WHUR decades ago
and went on to start a giant media company.
Melvin Lindsay, the original voice of The Quiet Storm,
left WHUR in 1985.
And wow, I've got to take a deep breath before I do this.
It's been nine years I've been here
with The Quiet Storm at WHUR, and if you haven't heard by now, this is my last night. At midnight it's sign off
and sign out. There are so many people to thank and so many people to thank.
He was lured away by WKYS, another Black station serving DC, and a WHUR rival. As proof of
Melvin's star power, WKYS offered him a historic million dollar multi-year contract to
replicate his old show under the new name Melvin's Melodies. Melvin had a huge
career in radio and TV around Washington. He was hosting a show on BET until he
became too sick to work. Melvin died of AIDS in 1992. He was 36 years old. So young.
Towards the end of his life, Melvin expressed a lot of gratitude for the love and support that he got from his fans.
He was a local celebrity. People in DC loved him. Still do.
Here he is in a phone interview not long before his death, talking about all the great food his supporters were sending to his bedside.
Apple pie, lasagna, brownies.
I mean, people just, I mean, unrealistic, fine things.
The show does love.
There are still Quiet Storm shows everywhere, like The Sweat Hotel, hosted by Quiet Storm
legend Keith Sweat.
WHUR still has its program, now called the original Quiet Storm.
And hip-hop did not kill off the Quiet Storm sound.
Actually, a lot of rappers, from a tribe called Quest, to Kendrick,rick to Drake have sampled or incorporated new
and old school Quiet Storm into their music.
On his song Doomsday, you can hear MF Doom's sample of Shaday, who was a Quiet Storm in today's R&B, stuff you maybe didn't realize was a continuation
of the genre.
I'd say over the past 10 years, the kinds of music that even pitchfork hipsters are
listening to, it owes a lot to the legacy of Quiet Storm. Stuff like Frank Ocean, stuff like Solange.
This is music that is, again, it's not trying to wake up the neighbors and it's soul music, it's R&B music.
This is music that is based in vibes, it's based in ambience.
As I've worked on this story, almost every Black person I mentioned it to
immediately recognized the quiet storm and knew something about the radio show.
Across a range of ages, from all over the U.S.,
even folks born well after Melvin Lindsay passed.
The story of Quiet Storm is that this is a genre of music
really championed by Black folks.
And during its heyday,
it mostly stays within Black communities.
This is ethnomusicologist Fredera Hadley again.
And that doesn't mean like,
oh, no one can come in and participate.
But I think if one is going to talk about Quiet Storm, that's one of the genres that
demands that you center Black love, Black emotions.
It's not about marching.
It's not about being on Soul Train, like all these very kind of broadly visible things.
It's about Black intimacy.
And I think that's part of what makes so much of the story,
A Quiet Storm, important.
It's something that black people name, created,
and maintain for themselves.
The Grammy winner for Marvin Gaye,
that's Sexual Healing.
Before that, from the album I Want You,
we heard Come Live With Me, Angel.
It's 852 in Washington.
You're in tune to the Quiet Storm. 99% Invisible was produced this week by me, Christopher Johnson, and edited by Vivian
Lay.
This episode was mixed by Martin Gonzalez, with music by Swan Royale, Jamila Sandotto,
and George Langford.
Fact-checking by Nidia Bautista.
Special thanks to Nelson George,
who's working on a very cool new documentary.
It's called A Great Day in Hip Hop, The Film.
There's a link on our website.
Go check it out, show your love and support.
Special thanks also to the Black Radio,
Telling It Like It Was collection
at the Indiana University Archives
of African
American Music and Culture. Also, 99PI is throwing a Quiet Storm party. DJ Ayanna Heaven will be
spending slow jam classics from the 70s and 80s and it's all going down Sunday July 27th
in downtown Brooklyn and it's free. Check out our website and socials for more info
And if you're local or in town come through
Kathy to is our executive producer Kurt Colstead is the digital director
The rest of the team includes Chris Barubei Jason de Leon Emmett Fitzgerald Delaney Hall
Lasha Madon Kelly Prime Joe Rosenberg Jacob Medina Gleason, and the boss, Roman Mars.
He'll be back next week.
The 99% Invisible logo was created by Stefan Lawrence.
We are part of the Sirius XM podcast family,
and this episode was produced in beautiful Brooklyn,
New York.
You can find us on Blue Sky,
as well as our own Discord server.
There's a link to that as well as every past episode of 99% Invisible at 99pi.org.