Remember when scoring a slow drag with the object of your (prolonged) desire was the ultimate high? That one dance could be the beginning of a rare and beautiful love thang as long as the deejay kept the slow jams coming. For the lover in you, ESSENCE.com sets the mood with its top favorite 25 slow jams.

I was listening to Prince's Adore and I love that song and I think that is the greatest slow jam. But I know there is some competition for great slow jams. For example D'Angelo How Does it Feel? Or even Janet Jackson Any Time, Any Place. Tell me the greatest Slow Jam in your Opinion.


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CSJ doesn't have one bad song, in fact, it doesn't have one less than amazing song, he took everything brilliant from Black Ben Carson, and refined it's production and lyrics with some absolutely brilliant sample work. Peggy is the best he has ever been on vocals, the album is so good, that today, my three best tracks from this album are I'll Never Forgive Hipsters For What They Did To Brooklyn, Bitcoin Assassination and Polly. But only a couple of days back, they were The Last of Us, Lemmy and Lee Daniels Freestyle.

You'd think that being one of the top wedding DJs in the country who specializes in 80s music, I would have put together this type of selection of songs a long time ago. Well, truth be told, I've had this screenshot in my phone for probably close to a year as a reminder. I'm very surprised that its taken me this long to put together this selection of 80s R&B Slow Jams for your wedding playlist. Inspiration for this playlist actually goes all the way back to a private event I DJ'ed back in October of 2018 out at Folly Beach at a house on the beach. Despite this client having a very diverse taste in music, the prevailing theme for the evening included a ton of the best 80s R&B slow jams. Putting together this playlist brought back a ton of 80s memories, as most all of the songs you'll see were released when I was in elementary, middle, and high school. If you are a fan of 80s music and want to explore some slow R&B jams that are perfect for the end of the night at your wedding, you'll want to read on.

As a professional wedding DJ who is ALL about the music, you are about to embark on another one of my musical journeys. Simply put, the possibilities are endless as it pertains to the song selections on your wedding playlist. When you hire me to be your wedding DJ, I am here to work hard for you in designing the absolute best playlist that defines your musical tastes as a couple. Since I am not a wedding DJ who wastes his time playing with lights or photobooths (there are separate companies who provide those services), my focus is on solely on the music. I love putting these types of musical posts together not only because I love music, but also because it allows me to reminisce when things were so much different in the world.

"You Are My Lady" | Freddie Jackson

Wow. This song is such a beautiful representation of Slow R&B Jams of the 80s. Freddie Jackson knocked it out of the park with this slow and sexy song from 1985. "You Are My Lady" was the second song to be released from his record Rock Me Tonight. The song would make it all the way to #1 on the Hot Soul Singles chart in late summer and fall of 1985.

We all know that P has made some of the funkiest and baddest jams in the history of music. But despite that, I don't think he gets enough credit for his slow jams. So on this thread, I want you to list your personal top 15 P slow jams of all time. By the way, I know some of you out there consider When Doves Cry a slow jam (even though I consider it uptempo), so if you list it I have no gripes with you. Now here's my list as follows:

A slow jam is music with rhythm and blues and soul influences. Slow jams are commonly R&B ballads or downtempo songs, and are mostly soft-sounding with heavily emotional or romantic lyrical content. The earliest known use of the term is the 1983 Midnight Star recording "Slow Jam" on their album No Parking on the Dance Floor.

Essence magazine compiled a list of the "25 Best Slow Jams of All Time", containing songs of the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s,[1] and Complex compiled a list of 100 slow jams in "The Best Songs to Get You in the Mood".[2][3]

How slow is slow? Most of my favourite basslines are in slower songs. Sir Psycho Sexy is a nice one.


Donny Hathaway - Live, is just one great slow bassline after another. As is D'Angelo - Voodoo.


Alex

A couple of weeks ago, a slowed-down version of Dolly Parton's classic ballad "Jolene" went viral. A lot of people who heard it loved it, a few people didn't, but everyone seemed to agree that it was like listening to either an entirely new song or the same song again for the first time.

One of the things that's eerie about this is that if you listen closely, everything is just a little bit out of tune. There's conflicting information about exactly how much the track has been slowed. Some people have said that it's simulating a 45 RPM record played at 33 1/3, which is certainly the most common way people who lived with record players heard popular songs at slower speeds. But that would actually be quite a bit slower and lower than this.

The other figure I've seen (forgive me for not citing everything, I'm typing as fast as I can) is "Jolene" has been slowed by 17 percent, which sounds about right and would explain why all the notes seem just a little bit sharp. Here's the formula for slowing or speeding up a recording to shift the pitch but generally stay in tune:

If you want to drop two semitones, you shift the speed down by 12.2462 percent; drop three, you shift by 18.9207 percent, which significantly changes the track. To imitate a 45 RPM record played at 33 1/3, that's about 25.926, but very few records still sound like something a person actually made at this speed. All of these slowdowns are interesting, even the ones that don't work.

You can do all of them in the free/open-source audio processing app Audacity; it's very fast and very easy. (If you want to get freaky, you can also use Audacity to change pitch without changing tempo, or vice versa, or to start out slow and go fast, and all manner of lesser and greater perversity.)

Mazzy Star surprised me. I always thought Hope Sandoval's vocals were gorgeous but a little warbly, which gave them character, but that's almost entirely a production effect. When you slow it down, you can really hear how clean and sustained her notes are.

My Bloody Valentine is the best example of that fractal quality. You can slow it down almost indefinitely and it still sounds like My Bloody Valentine. At this rate, though, it really just turns Bilinda Butcher's vocals into Kevin Shields'.

There's more at my Soundcloud page, including The Breeders' "Cannonball," "House of Jealous Lovers," Hot Chip's "Over and Over," Grizzly Bear's "Two Weeks" (which I actually sped up), and more. (Finally, if slowing a track down and posting it online somehow breaks copyright, let me know and I'll take them down.)

Every so often, music industry executives, artists and fans will say, "R&B is dead" and then questions start to emerge, comparing today's R&B to its counterpart in the past. Where are the love ballads? Why don't men plead for their love while singing in the rain anymore? Who are the powerhouse singers of today? However, it's not so much that R&B has completely disappeared into a musical abyss but rather that the genre has changed over time. One of the best eras of R&B music is arguably the '90s.

Whitney Houston is known as one of the greatest vocalists in music history and it was well proved throughout her career. One of the best-selling singles of all time was her 1992 cover of the Dolly Parton hit "I Will Always Love You." The song broke many records, including Houston's longest-running No. 1 single and the longest-running top single from a movie soundtrack.

A few weeks back wrote a post about the 15 greatest prom scenes in cinema history. Obviously, this got us thinking about our own prom...which never had a hope in hell of measuring up to these great movie moments. In fact, we spent most of the evening profusely apologizing to our date for our lack of dancing skills. The only time we could (sort of) redeem ourselves was when the DJ decided to take the energy down a bit and play us a slow song. Doing "The Worm" and "The Robot" was totally beyond us, but we could handle swaying a-rhythmically to Edwin McCain or Lifehouse. We may have looked dumb, but at least it gave us a socially acceptable excuse to get close to our dates.

We were eternally grateful for those rare moments where it looked like we knew what we were doing, before the DJ went back to playing "Gasolina," and we went back to the punch bowl. So now we'd like to relive those awkward memories by counting down our favorite '90s (and early 2000s) prom slow-jams!

This one from the Armageddon soundtrack fills us with a warm glow because it was the go-to slow dance at our school. It was made only slightly creepy when you consider that the video (sort of) implies that Steven Tyler is singing it to his real-life daughter, Liv.

Historically (at our school, at least) most teen/tween dudes weren't really all that into dancing, let along slow songs. But the fact that this tune was featured in the Batman Forever movie somehow made it ok for us to like.

Some dairy farmers have long suspected that's the case. It's not unheard of for farmers to play relaxing jams for their herds to boost milk production, as the folks at Modern Farmer recently reported. 2351a5e196

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