p Ie 1 MICHIGA CITIZE E .. ntertainment anu ry 6·12, 1991 , , Sh uld the gold-certified success of the debut Tony! .Toni l Tone! album have left any doubts that a major new p,op/R&B fo ce has 'arrived on the scene just in time for the new decade, The Revival, the second album from the Oakland, CA funkmaster has cleared them. Dwayne Wiggin, Raphael Wiggins and Tim Christian­ t he core of Tofiy! Toni! Tone !-have emerged as a s igni ficant force a mus icra ns , producer, songwriters and consummate performer. And with the success of such smash singles as the #1 R&B hi t,' . "The Blues, " the top ten pop­ crossover smash, "Feel Good" and their newest hit, ''It Never Rains- (In Southern California)," the Tonys arc po-ised on the brink of super­ stardom . . Largely written, arranged and performed by the Tonys, The Rev iv al - fourteen songs and some 65 minute long-is, Afrocentrically speaking, remarkably 'broad and deep. It ranges from pul­ verizing, Bootsy-styled funk like "AII The Way" and 'Th� Blues" (the album' fir I single),·to cool an d exy Earth, Wind & Firc-s ty lcd , ballads like "What 1'cr You . Wan/" and "It Nell r Rains (In South rn 'alifornia)," to .radio-readypop song lik . "Jo Jo" -:- a mcssauc song . about teen runawa.,y . The Revi 1 I an album tha ets a pass-thcpcas chant out of the, JB, over' a ba line, out of the Pinter Sist r '''}', "" Can an" (on "Let', Have A Good time"), which ample Tower of Power. Public Enemy" Flavor Flav, Richard Pryor. Eazy E and Tommy Dor ey on single cut F'Oakland Stroke"). and which sets ,it. two lead .ingcrs into a d ep " voice/high voice calland­ re ponse worthy of Sly Stone and Larry Graham ("The Blue It). , II , • VIV TQNY� TONI! TON":! -,Oakland' three fresh funkma ters, kicked orrtbe fir t leg oftbeir 1990-91 U .. tour.with appearances beginning in Richmond, VA an ending in Merrillville, IN. Three 'T' will perform' at th� Masonic. . emple in Detroit, MI January 5. (l-r) Ti�othy Chri stian, Dwayne Wiggin & Rapbael Wiggins.' - FamiJ y gospel ingers ... and· the former headquarters of Sly & The Family Stone, Tow c r of Power and, t'he Pornlcr Sisters. A� Michael E. Ross writ­ ing In the New York Times noted : "A cify of 356,000 that has bee'\. viewed asa cul� t u r a l s c co nlf- ur ing player b c s id e an Franci co, its sister to the west, Oakland i em .rging anew, In. the par­ JaIH:� of the music. Oakland � IS In c lfcct." Dwayne' a .es: ment is a l i u lc more down to earth: ' "Oakland i Hard Times Cit . You can't half- te p here. Whatever you do, you have to be good at it." family affair, Tony! Toni! Tone! i compri cd of Raphael "Ray" Wiggin. lead vocal . ba s: his brother Dwayne Wig ins. lead vocal'. guitar; and Timothy Christian. drums. Growing up in Oakland. the guy, played all kinds of gig: rock and soul and jazz. Saturday night blowout and Sunday morning crviccs. By the time they got out of high chool, the Tony were accompli 'het) i ns t rumc n­ tali t . Their fir t big break wa a gig a' the b ckup band or fcllow 0 kland n iive , Sheil E. At the time (sum- mer of 1985), . heila wa get­ ting ready to tour behind the huge success o f "The Glamorous Lilc' and "A L01'c lJ izurre. " • 'II F�' I) () LY been look­ ing for a ha�:-'I'I hut. bowled over by Ray, Tim and CARL, he decided t.o bi te the bullet • fire her whole band. and hire the Tonys.: The guys ended up touring with Sheila when he opened for Lionel Richie in America and Prin e in Japan. Eventually. Prince trrcd to recruit thc Tonys for lus own band. an invitation the guys reluctantly declined. A, they put it on "Born NOI To KII1Jlv" - Thing may be gctu n ' crazy. but we ain't wcarin ' p i ley. When it came ti me to cut their first album. the Tony once again turned to Oakland native, their old friend Denzil Foster and Thomas McElroy. The ere tive force in Club Nouveau, Foster and McElroy were just then com­ ing off the Club' tri ng of rna h hit in 1987. including "Jealousy," "Situation #9," "L an On Me, " and "Why YOII Treat Me So Bad." The y contributed three o ngs to The Re» ral: "Don " Talk cha AboUI ftI.e," "Let's Have A Good Time," and "Skin Tight, " , Tony! Toni! Tone! toured arenas 'and 's t a d i u m s throughout the summer of 1988 clean 10.tO 1989 as part otthc Bud Superfest. A the .months went by, they.� per- formed with nearly every big name in onicmporary R&B: Bobby Brown. Guy. New Edition. Kid 'n ' Play. all 'n' Pc p a , Heavy D Levert. Stephanie Mill'. Peabo Bryson, The Whisper '. Karyn White and Patti Labelle. By the summer of 19S9. the Tonys we re cuui ng virtually everybody else on the hil]. "Bands like New Edition and Guy arc better known." rotc penni' Hunt in the Los An rclcs Time '. "But the Tonys arc better at the dance­ able high-tech funk that" in vogue now." TIl"Y ERE AL '0 bet­ ter at'the wearing of fly threads. a pr dilection which ha e 'taol'. hed the Tony as fa shion trend-setters. After all. they r not called Tony! Toni! Tone! for nothin " Th y swe r th t followin til ir appe ranee on Ar erno. the Ton ht Eddie Mur- phy weari ng the exact outfit the�'d worn on the .how ... al­ though omeone .o mchow neglected to t c l l Ed th'C\t .pcnny loafers were not the kicks of choice that year. -On the o rhc r hand. Ar- enio himself showed u in a ma gaz in e . prc a d wearing Tony -stylcd clothes. a per­ formance grudging! y sal ute d by Dwayne, "I must admit Arsenio did look good." he say', The To ny s also take credit for pioneering pika dOL well in advance of Dc La Soul arid Kw a m e . To d a y. having gone through a relet­ tively severe b Iac k -a nd­ whi rc phase, the Ton's have c ha ng c d up again. Sa y s Dwayne: "Now we're wear­ ing 'orne colors that hit, ou 'bout a mile away." On a more eriou tip, the oulfulne . of The Revival should hit the dedicated mu ic lover' from about a mile away. too. And Dwayne. coming from Oak­ land, know just :.vhat the Tonys ' success mean to hi homeboy , "It' given the younger generation a ign th t they can 0 out and make good money without doing b d thing s." he y. "We nand a omethin a a role model." • TilE TONY , rootsine s and their funk come to them _'._ ' naturally. All three of the pri ncipals are n tive of Oak­ land, California: the current home of Digital' Under­ ground. Me Hammer, Oak­ town 357, Too Short, Sheila E .. Frankie Beverly and Maze. 'and the Hawkin