Kashif (artist)

Kashif
Born Michael Jones
December 26, 1959
New York, New York, U.S.
Residence Venice, Los Angeles, U.S.
Other names Kashif Saleem
Occupation
  • Songwriter
  • record producer
  • singer
  • author
  • humanitarian

Musical career

Genres
Instruments
  • Synthesizer
  • keyboards
  • piano
  • drums
  • percussion
  • vocals
Years active 1974–present
Labels
Associated acts

Kashif Saleem, previously Michael Jones (born December 26, 1959), is an American multi-instrumentalist, singer, songwriter, record producer, artist, composer, author, director and educator from New York City. Kashif first taught himself to play a $3 song flute at age seven and later the piano in the basement of his church. At age 15, Kashif joined B. T. Express and performed on stages around the world. He studied Islam and changed his name from Michael Jones to Kashif, which means discoverer and inventor. He crafted his own distinctive sound and later signed with Arista Records enjoying success as a solo artist.

Together with Stevie Wonder he is considered a pioneer in urban music thanks to his specific synthesizer technology approach and the introduction of MIDI in his production.[1]

Career

Musician

Kashif was born Michael Jones on December 26, 1959, in Harlem, New York. His only connection to his birth family is his birth certificate, which indicates that his biological mother was incarcerated when he was four months old. It lists no biological father. His introduction to music came in the form of a $3.00 song flute when he was in elementary school. He was instantly hooked and insisted on playing his flute all throughout the school day. His teacher encouraged him and delivered on her promise that she would help to enroll him at a junior high school that had a great music program. That is where he first learned to play trumpet, piano, flute, saxophone, and tuba. Kashif lived in eight foster homes in various neighborhoods in Brooklyn including, Bushwick, Bedford Stuyvesant, Brownsville, East New York and others. By age 12, with the mentoring of his junior high school music teacher (Robert Wedlaw) he had mastered several musical instruments and began performing in some of New York's finest night clubs (The Copacabana and Lloyd Price's Turntable).

In 1974, at the age of 15, Kashif was recruited as a keyboard player and vocalist to join the funk band B. T. Express, whose credits included the hits "Here Comes The Express" and "Do It ('Til You're Satisfied)", among others. Seeking a more challenging musical assignment in 1978, Kashif exited B. T. Express and landed a job as a keyboardist for R&B musician Stephanie Mills.

1983–1989: Solo career and nominations

In 1983, Kashif signed with Arista Records as a solo artist and continued with hits like "I Just Got To Have You, Lover Turn Me On", "Stone Love", "Help Yourself to mMy Love", and the Grammy-nominated instrumental "The Mood". In 1983, his second album, Send Me Your Love resulted in two Grammy nominations, "Edgartown Groove", featuring Al Jarreau, and the instrumental "Call Me Tonight" along with the hits "Baby Don't Break Your Baby's Heart" and "Are You the Woman". Introduced to Arista by Milton Allen, its artist development director in 1983, his self-titled debut Kashif (1983) spawned the hits "I Just Gotta Have You (Lover Turn Me On)", "Stone Love", "Help Yourself to My Love", and "Say Something Love". With this release, Kashif was well received as an innovator in music, as R&B artists were only beginning to experiment with synthesizers and other electronic instruments. He is said to have been Arista Records' attempt to respond to Warner Bros. Records' Prince.

Record producer and activist

1981: Love Come Down

In 1981 Kashif wrote and produced the hit "I'm in Love" for Evelyn "Champagne" King, which was a shift in sound from King's "Shame" to a minimalist becoming Kashif's signature sound. The song revitalized King's career and branded Kashif as one of the most sought-after producers of the day. Over the next ten years, he created hit after hit including "So Fine" for Howard Johnson, "Love Come Down", "Becha She Don't Love You". and "Back To Love", among many others.

His other albums include Send Me Your Love and Condition of the Heart. On the album Love Changes, Exposé provided background vocals. 1989's Kashif, with the cover of the Four Tops' hit "Ain't No Woman Like the One I Got", "Baby Don't Break Your Baby's Heart", and "Are You the Woman",

1983–1987

Kashif can be heard on releases by Kenny G, George Benson, Evelyn "Champagne" King, Johnny Kemp, Melba Moore, Dionne Warwick, Giorge Pettus, Stacy Lattisaw, Meli'sa Morgan, Exposé, The Wootens, Freda Payne, Whitney Houston, and others. His Grammy nominations are for the instrumentals "The Mood", "Call Me Tonight", "Edgartown Groove" featuring Al Jarreau.

In 1985, he received another Grammy nomination for another instrumental entitled "The Movie Song". He also wrote and produced "Inside Love" for his musical idol, George Benson. It was during this time that he met and launched the career of then unknown Kenny G with "Hi How Ya Doin" and "Nighttime in Tribeca".

In 1985, Kashif teamed up with then newcomer, Whitney Houston. The result was the hit "You Give Good Love". Kashif also produced and was her duet partner on "Thinking About You", a single track from Houston's 17-million selling (30 million until current day) debut album. The album became the bestselling debut album by a female artist. Kashif also produced "Where You Are" on Houston's second project, the result, a 15-million selling (25 million until current day) album entitled Whitney.

In 1987, he produced "Love Changes", a chart topper in which Me'lisa Morgan was his duet partner and that name was taken from his bestselling album, which had the same name. The track also appears on Meli'sa Morgan's album Good Love. Also contained on that album was another duet that yielded yet another international hit, the song "Reservations For Two" with Dionne Warwick. Between 1987 and 1989, Kashif continued to churn out the hits for Jermaine Jackson, The Stylistics, Melba Moore, George Benson, Stacy Lattisaw, and many others.

1996–present

In 1996, with an invitation from the UCLA Extension program, Kashif created "Contemporary Record Production With Kashif". He also wrote and self-published the book "Everything You'd Better Know About The Record Industry"; it has sold over 375,000 copies worldwide.

In 2000, Kashif produced the theme song for the Para-Olympics, and wrote and produced "Brooklyn Breezes" for R&B great Will Downing. He also co-produced along with George Duke the Duke Ellington Tribute CD for The Duke Ellington Foundation. On November 14, 2004, Kashif was inducted into the R&B Hall of Fame as a "Living Legend". That year Janet Jackson's hit "R&B Junkie" used a sample of "I'm in Love" written and produced by Kashif.

Growing up in the foster care system has inspired Kashif to lend his time and energy to help find ways to improve the lives of the more than 518,000 young people who are in foster care every day in America. In 2006, he created and founded Team iCare Foundation and produced the very first Walk/Run for Foster Care at the Rose Bowl Stadium in Pasadena, California. The result was 247 individuals signed up to become foster parents. He also created the Mentorship Dinner Cruise for youth in foster care, an event where 200 youth went on a cruise in Marina Del Rey, California and were paired with 250 professionals in various industries for the purpose of creating mentoring relationships.

Kashif has received community awards from the California State Senate, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, Los Angeles Mayor, Antonio Villariagosa, all five Los Angeles County members of the Board of Supervisors, the Los Angeles County Children & Family Services and others. In 2006, Kashif founded Kashif University, which was located on the campus of Morningside High School in Inglewood California. It is an integrated education and arts training program for at-risk-youth ages 8–18.

Kashif has also added Producer/Director to his list of talents. He has written, directed, and produced commercials and corporate films for Hyundai Motors America, Casey Family Programs, UPS, St. Joseph Health System, Patten Academy, and many others. Kashif is currently producing and directing a ten part documentary series entitled "The History of R&B Music and Its Influence on World Culture" for world wide distribution.

Discography

Studio albums

Year Album Chart positions[2] Record label
US US
R&B
1983 Kashif 54 10 Arista
1984 Send Me Your Love 51 3
1985 Condition of the Heart 144 32
1987 Love Changes 118 17
1989 Kashif 29
1998 Who Loves You? Expansion
2004 Music From My Mind Brooklyn Boy
"—" denotes the album failed to chart

Compilation albums

Year Album Chart positions Record label
US US
R&B
1992 The Best of Kashif Arista/BMG
1998 The Definitive Collection Arista
2002 The Best of Kashif BMG
"—" denotes the album failed to chart

Singles

Year Single Chart positions[2][3] Album
US US
R&B
US
Dance
US
A/C
UK
1983 "I Just Gotta Have You (Lover Turn Me On)" 103 5 28 79 Kashif (1983 album)
"Stone Love" 22
"Help Yourself to My Love" 28
"Say Something Love"
1984 "Baby Don't Break Your Baby's Heart" 108 6 40 Send Me Your Love
"Are You the Woman" 25
1985 "Ooh Love" 75
"Love on the Rise" (with Kenny G) 24 87 Gravity
"Condition of the Heart" 34 Condition of the Heart
1986 "Dancing in the Dark (Heart to Heart)" 36
"Love the One I'm With (A Lot of Love)" (with Melba Moore) 5 A Lot of Love
1987 "Reservations for Two" (with Dionne Warwick) 62 20 7 Love Changes
"Love Changes" (with Meli'sa Morgan) 2
1988 "Love Me All Over" 14
"Loving You Only" 66
"I'm in Love" (with Melba Moore) 13 I'm in Love
1989 "Personality" 6 Kashif (1989 album)
1990 "Ain't No Woman (Like the One I've Got)" 33
"—" denotes the single failed to chart

References

  1. Hogan, Ed Artist Biography (Kashif). Rovi Corporation. 2014-10-06.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Kashif US chart history". allmusic.com. Retrieved 2011-04-02.
  3. "Kashif UK singles chart history". chartstats.com. Archived from the original on January 19, 2013. Retrieved 2011-04-02.