Mick Unplugged - Wendy Moten | Soulful Survivor: Triumphant Journey on The Voice
Episode Date: July 15, 2024 Mick Hunt dives into a deep and inspiring conversation with Wendy Moten, exploring her impactful journey on The Voice and her life as a performer. Wendy shares insights into the resilience and deter...mination that have defined her career, from her early days in Memphis to her profound moments on national television. This episode sheds light on the strength of the human spirit and the enduring power of music. Wendy Moten's Background: From her roots in Memphis to captivating audiences nationwide on The Voice, Wendy shares her musical evolution and experiences on the iconic TV show. Defining Moments: Wendy discusses the impact of her performance of "Don't Give Up" on The Voice, in which she embodies her personal resilience and connects deeply with audiences. Discussion Topics:Wendy's strategic decision to join The Voice as a seasoned artist, aiming to rejuvenate her solo career.She experienced challenges and growth during the show, including performing with two broken arms.Wendy's reflections on her approach to music emphasize authenticity and emotional connection.Key Quotes:"Being on The Voice was not just about competition; it was about proving to myself and others that passion doesn't age.""I fell and broke both my arms, but the music kept me going. That’s the power of not giving up."Next Steps:Listen: Explore Wendy Moten’s music, including her powerful performances from The Voice.Reflect: Consider the role of perseverance and resilience in your own pursuits.Engage: Share how Wendy’s story of resilience and renewal inspires you using #MickUnplugged.Connect & Discover:LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/wendy-moten-b53ab018Instagram: Instagram/com/wendymotenFacebook: facebook.com/wendymotenofficialWebsite: wendymoten.com ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Are you ready to change your habits, sculpt your destiny, and light up your path to greatness?
Welcome to the epicenter of transformation.
This is Mic Unplugged.
We'll help you identify your because, so you can create a routine that's not just productive, but powerful.
You'll embrace the art of evolution, adapt strategies to stay ahead of the game,
and take a step toward the extraordinary. So let's unleash your potential. Now, here's Mick.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to another episode of Mick Unplugged, where we highlight your because,
that reason that fills the true you. And today, we have a remarkable vocalist who's captivated
audiences across many genres for over 30 years. From her early days in Memphis to her unforgettable
performances on The Voice, she has continually inspired many with her powerful voice, her
determination, and her resiliency. Please welcome the incredible, the captivating, my diva,
Miss Wendy Moat.
Wendy, how are you doing today?
All right. How are you, Mick?
I am wonderful, Wendy. I'm so excited that you and I get to spend some time together.
Yes, thank you. And what an amazing introduction. I want to get to know me more, too.
What is she? I want to know her story.
It is all true. And let's talk about Wendy's story, right? Because your journey
in music spans three decades, even though you must have started when you were like one year old.
Exactly. You're right.
What has been the most significant moment in your career so far? choosing to go after something like the voice at my age and my stage of my career.
And that was frightening, but I knew it was the only thing I had to play catch up, you know,
because I was a recording artist in the nineties. Then it became background singer to the stars all
in the 2000s. So I spent 25 years trying to figure out a way to get back out front. So the only way
to get back out front when COVID shut everything down, that was my window because everybody was afraid. Nobody knew if we would
ever be in a setting where we all could be together again. I said, since everybody's afraid
in the music business, it's my chance to get out there. And if the voice takes me, then that's the
path I'm going to take. And then I'll know to continue that journey. Otherwise, if they had
said no, I would have to come up with another solution. No, you don't. And I've heard you talk many times
about how The Voice challenged you, right? And it gave you growth. And one of the things that I
always tell people is you should be growing every day. I don't care how young you are, how old you
are, how successful you are. We all have to grow where it goes away. What did you learn about Wendy on The Voice? Well, I knew that I was already swimming upstream.
I'm a middle-aged Black woman from Memphis. So I'm dealing with gender, race, age. I have nothing
to lose. I might as well just go for it. And once they said, yes, we want you on the show,
of course, I had to have a conversation with myself.
And it was like, self, leave your ego at home, and you're just going to pay attention to the challenge of the week.
So I went on The Voice for three reasons.
I wanted to see if I was still competitive, if it still mattered.
I wanted to be an advocate for people over 50, 60, 70, 80 years old and remind people that we have value and we have dreams and passion.
And if you have the courage, pick it up and actually go after it. If you have the passion
to, there's nobody to tell you no. And for the style of singing that I wanted to do,
very classic singing. I wanted to see if there was an audience because the music industry
will tell you that there's no value in it today. But I went on air, that show,
to find out for myself,
week after week,
being under a microscope
and realized they're wrong.
And there are a lot of people out there
that would dig what I have to offer.
And so I went to get the noise
out of my head about my path.
So here we are.
I'm with you.
I made it to you.
You've already been here. One of the
amazing things and staying on The Voice for just one more moment, hearing you and a point that you
made about music today. If a song came out like before 2003, I probably don't know it or listen
to it because it all sounds the same, except your new stuff. And we're going to go there. But on the voice, ain't no way.
Jolene and I have nothing. Wendy, when I tell you I had to sit down on my floor.
Oh, wow.
When you hit not even the notes, but just your control and how you make every song personal.
How do you do that?
I've been blessed to be around the most iconic artists in music history my whole
career. So I learned from them. My first all-star band had Billy Preston, and I'm older than Billy
Preston was at that time. I thought he was old. I'm like, no, no, I just got started. I've been
around legends my whole life. I did the work. So they made me feel like I belong with them and I belong in this music game.
And so my goal, like you said, has always been to learn and to grow with every experience. I still
do that to this day about learning to grow and doing the voice. I just took everything that I
had grown and learned because I knew I had something higher that I wanted.
I wanted to continue the race. So I need a fuel to continue the race.
Just being in that show helped help me get that rocket fuel that I tell the young people about, you know, because a lot of them were very devastated when they get sent home from shows like that.
So I explained to them, listen, this is a gas station. This is where you fuel up. And then you take the fuel and you go to, you need gas again. It'll be some other experience. I said,
but for me, I need that rocket fuel. Cause I'm at the end of the race. You're not at the end.
But you know what I mean? You know, I have a long way to go. I do feel like I'm just getting
started. I love that sensation. Yes, it's amazing.
And let's talk about now.
Yes.
Don't give up.
So, you know, I don't have a music background like you, obviously, but I love music, right?
Born and raised on music.
When that song starts, the five second intro, I hear Memphis.
I hear Stax.
I hear Sam and Dave.
I hear Isaac.
All in that five seconds, I hear Memphis and I know
where this song is about to go. And then Wendy's voice comes in strong and then you hear the words.
And Wendy, I just sat back like this and just smiled because you take me places on that song.
Talk about Don't Give Up and the inspiration behind it and its importance to you.
Well, Don't Give Up was actually written about 2009 with David Santos and myself.
And I think we both were touring musicians
and maybe we wrote it to encourage ourselves
to keep staying in the music game.
But it wasn't ready to be released.
I don't think I lived enough to make that song.
You know, I like being the messenger when I sing
and I like to get self out of the way.
This is the first song
that's ever been a
personal testimony. So when it was time to, when I knew it was time to release it, I had something
to talk about. I stayed in the music business way beyond time. And then the voice was already a
miracle and then falling on the voice and getting back up. Did you know I fell on the voice? I fell, broke both my
arms, was on the set the next day. And I never cried that whole time to like after surgery,
but I did the last three weeks of the voice with two broken arms and my pain level stayed at three.
So that song, Don't Give Up, it meant a lot more to me because I was living it literally. And then
I had, you know, millions of people, six to eight million people who saw me live that out, too.
So that song holds true.
They can see if they need evidence.
I was the evidence for myself and for them.
So I hope it inspires them.
It inspires me.
It took me a couple of months when I first started singing the song not to weep.
That's how close it was and as I've been
going I can get the chance to sing this song without you know crying because it's so true to
my heart and so part of like what I'm going through right now and I finally got to that point where I
didn't and the tears are gratitude it's not sadness but I would get emotional and I'm like I'll be
glad when I get to the point where I can sing this song without putting me all in it.
So I can, like, get the words out.
You know, you can't cry through every word.
It took a minute, a couple of months.
I would just tear up.
But, you know, I'm going to have to hear you sing that song live.
And I'm not saying right now.
But you know where I'm going with this, right?
Studio song, live performance song, two different things.
So if you touch me in studio, I can only imagine what Wendy's going to do to me live.
Well, that's the new thing about my approach to singing now is that what you hear, what
you don't give up, that's what it's going to sound like live because my approach is
always live singing.
I know studio has a kind of sterile thing and structure to it that you should have, but that's
not how I sing. So I like being out as free melodically as I want to be ad libby as I want
to be. And what you hear is what you're going to hear live. I'm ready. So Wendy, you've successfully
performed across multiple genres, which honestly, you're a unique one of one because not many people
can do that successfully.
Some people can try and some people say they do, but they're not Wendy Moten.
I'm just going to say that.
That came from me and me only, but I said it, right?
Okay, thank you.
How do you approach adapting your style to different types of music?
Well, you know, it was problematic in the 90s when I was signed to EMI during that Whitney
Houston Mariah Carey era. I was EMI's
Whitney Houston. So pop R&B was the only way to go if you were a black female. Okay, well, that
lived, you know, until 1998 and hip hop rap took over, you know. So I was forced to stay in one
lane, which you have to do when you're with a major label, I get it. But it was problematic
for me because there were so many different things I wanted to sing. After that deal was over and I've
gained so much more experience through the years, I finally found peace with knowing I'm one of
those artists that like to sing in numerous genres. So I have to create my own universe for that
because it's not accepted in the conventional ways. So my musical career has just always been
unconventional anyway. And on that unconventional parallel to the record business, all I see is
green pastures and whatever I have, I want to create it, mountainous, beauty. Whereas on the
conventional side, yeah, we want to be on that side sometimes. But do we? Because it's like really fast.
It's quick.
It's overnight.
And you've forgotten right away.
So I've made peace with I have a career on the unconventional side.
And with that freedom, I can sing whatever I want.
And I love singing three or four different genres.
I do it in my show.
I'll go from Aretha Franklin to Tammy Wynette to Paul Simon, because I want to
sing the songs that should never be forgotten. And of course we can add new songs. All right.
Okay. But then there's some songs that just shouldn't be forgotten. And I found ways to
bring my own span to it and my own interpretation. I've always wanted to be that type of great
storyteller as a singer. And that is just telling the story, getting out of the way
and making sure that the audience,
well, not making sure,
but just hoping that the audience goes along with you.
I've always wanted to be that type of singer.
And that's what our favorite artists do to us.
We go listen to the same song over and over
because it taps into something.
And so I finally found how I do that.
It's amazing.
We hear a lot of stories
about touring and being on the road. And for someone who's been in this business for close
to three decades, right? When you started at one years old. Yes. Has touring affected you? Has
touring changed? Like what are some things that people, the average person like me, what do we
not know about being on the road and
what that means for you from a health standpoint, stamina standpoint, missing family, friends,
craziness that you see on the road? Like, what is that like? Well, they consider someone like me,
a road dog means we stay on the road constantly. I would have to say people who are touring
musicians are typically people who love being alone, you know, because you're going to
spend a lot of alone time together. Then you have this other family that you're living with,
and they're a little bit like you too. They want to do great work. You know, I've been blessed to
be on great tours where it's like a well-oiled machine. So you get paid on time, you get top
dollar, you got the best hotels, you get the best tour situation. So there's that tier that I've
been on that you worked hard for. You did the work to reach that level. So with that, you require and
expect a certain quality of life. And then you got the people who just starting out, you may be in
your car. You may have to sleep in there. You may have to be in a van. I was making sure that that
was not going to be my journey. So I had to do things to make
sure, make better choices, be prepared, mainly work ethic. My work ethic, nobody can talk about
that. Personality, I'm a good person. That's choices. All those are choices. And I made sure
that those, if somebody had to say something negative about me, no one would believe them
because I worked hard to make sure that people would think
that, no, she didn't do that.
She didn't say that on purpose.
So, but my work ethic allowed me to cross genres and keep working because I was versatile.
But with that, I also gained more knowledge and added some of those things to my arsenal
so I could have a lot more longevity, which, you know,
I'm enjoying right now. I mean, I'm a miracle. I am a freaking miracle. My music came out in the
90s. You weren't even born yet. Yes, I was. Yes, I was. So, Wendy, what do you want people to know
about you? Where can we follow you? What's the next three years of Wendy look like?
Well, I have to tell you, you know, please follow me, Wendy Moten, M-O-T-E-N, on all these social
media formats. We have to do that. We need the numbers. We need that. I think we need the
engagement. I try to, you know, keep it kind of personal, you know, personalized. My music, you
know, you're a music lover, please, you know, not. My music, you know, you're a music lover, please,
you know, not only just me, but just support independent music because we're out here by
ourselves and the machines are humongous. The music machines that keep things going,
it doesn't discourage us. But because of globalization, somebody like me, some independent,
we have so much more freedom. So depending on how
much time you want to invest in it, we can make something happen. They say all you need for
artists, you just need a thousand fans. I'm shooting for like 10,000 steady fans. I can
have a long career till I'm like 95 years old. You know, we'll just be old together,
drinking a glass of wine and singing old classics.
I'm going to be right there with you.
So for all the listeners and followers of Mick Unplugged,
make sure you are following Wendy.
We are making sure she exceeds 10,000 so we can sip on some wine with her.
I'm not into wine. I'm over bourbon.
Look, we can drink water. We can drink, you know, bourbon.
I'm a maker's mark person. You know, I just didn't want to go that far. I didn't want to, you know, we can drink water. We can drink, you know, bourbon. I'm a maker's mark person.
You know, I just didn't want to go that far.
I didn't want to, you know, we just became friends.
I didn't want to go like hardcore.
We're family now.
We're family.
Well, again, all platforms at Wendy Moten, M-O-T-E-N.
And do me a favor, everyone that's listening and watching.
Definitely support.
Make sure you're downloading and listening to all of her new music.
Go look at The Voice.
I promise you, if you go watch some of Wendy's episodes, oh, my God, you will be transformed and transpired because that's what she did to me.
And Wendy, don't give up.
I promise you it means more to a lot more people than you think.
I'm telling you that personally. Like the words to that song can get you through some time.
So I appreciate you putting that song together because that song is deep.
And I love every word, every beat and every melody of that song.
Thank you. Well, you know, when you listen again, listen to the second verse one more time.
And that's what I'm living through right now. It's deep.
OK, if anybody should encourage them to through right now. It's deep. Okay.
If anybody's listening, it should encourage them too, I would hope.
It's a true story.
And so everyone that's listening or watching, I'm going to have a link to that song here.
And we're all going to listen to the second verse together.
We might have a second verse listening party.
You can invite me.
I'll be there.
Okay.
You better be. Okay.
I'm serious.
All right.
And for all the listeners to make unplugged,
remember your, because is your superpower. Thanks for listening to Mick unplugged. We hope this
episode helps you take the next step toward the extraordinary and launches a revolution in your
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unplugged. Remember stay empowered, stay inspired, and stay unplugged.