Concert in your area for Funk & Soul, R&B, and Jazz.
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New York City was the stomping ground for Bilal Sayeed Oliver as he started to blossom on the scene. It wasn’t long before Aaron Comess from the Spin Doctors, in an after-school jam session, discovered him. Bilal took the opportunity to record a demo CD with Aaron Comess, which was sent to an A&R at Interscope Records. The label offered him a contract and sent him straight into the studio to record what would later become “1st Born Second”, which was released on July 17th 2001. The album was very well received in the charts with it making it to number 31 on the Billboard 200. To date, it has sold upwards of 319,000 copies.
Bilal would feature on various recordings over the next decade, whilst working on his sophomore release, which would be titled “Love for Sale”. It was an album that was slightly experimental, exploring new genres and showing a natural progression. Unfortunately, Interscope rejected the original idea, saying that it wasn’t commercial enough. If that wasn’t enough, most of the album was leaked online. He considered quitting music, but the album was downloaded upwards of 500,000, so he consequently embarked on a tour of the album. With almost a decade having gone by, Bilal came back with the album “Airtight’s Revenge” released on his own Plug Research Label. It was released on September 6th 2010, and peaked at number 21 on Billboard’s R&B chart.
With his career back on the rise, he toured and re-entered the studio a couple of years later to work on “A Love Surreal”. It was released on February 26th 2013, making it to number 17 in the Independent Albums Chart.
The reputation of Bilal Sayeed Oliver is highly acclaimed in the US through the genres of R & B, soul and jazz. The unassuming independent artist has a glittering roster of past collaborators including Jay Z, Kendrick Lamar and The Roots. Although what sets him aside from the hip hop elite is his humble mannerisms and down to earth stage demeanour. He has earned his place on the stage through hard graft, integral songwriting and a bubbling untapped talent.
The Pennsylvania musician has been hard at work since his career beginnings in the late 90s and has worked his way out of the home state to achieve a global reach regarding his fanbase. Spending prolonged spells across Europe and Australia, he has graced some of the most esteemed jazz stages and always puts on a masterful show. You can see the passion through his face as every note hits hard. He is a natural showman and has no issue in charming an audience between flawless renditions of 'Think It Over' and 'Sometimes'. He ends his show with a powerful cover of 'Tainted Love' by Gloria Jones to receive the largest round of applause of the evening.
Do not recommend. Didn't expect any opener because no such info was available on the page of the event or in email confirmation. The show was supposed to start at 8pm. 8:50pm comes by, an opener singer started to perform. Yaya Bey only came on stage around 9:30 or 9:40 or so and the show ended in about 40 mins. 20% of that 40 mins of performance was Yaya Bey talking about politics. With all due respect, 30 mins of live performance with 1.5 hr of wait is not what I signed up for.