The Jazz Soul of Jazmina!
by Christopher Flowers

Snuggled in an extremely humble warm coat that offers her prophylactic protection from the consumptive "I'm-A-Diva" disease that afflicts a few (if not many) of her underground dance music female (and male) contemporaries, she sheepishly accepts her accolades, says Jazmina. "I'm not really moved about the money and where my place should be in this business. I've done more than I thought I would in five years. "High On Hope" reached the number one spot in the UK...I don't need the tour or whatever...It's about using those gifts that God has given you...if nothing else happens...I'll be satisfied," says Jazmina.
This Garden State, Newark exclusive, glucose shrill queen was born into an ancestry of gospel singers and musicians, peeled her shyness away after being mesmerized by the then teen sensation Desiree Coleman in the Broadway production of "Mama, I Want To Sing". Within two weeks of a tearful catharsis behind her, in praise of Desiree's showstopping performance; Jazmina, this sepia twigling, stood in front of the pulpit on one of those santified, God-fearing Sunday afternoons wailing the gospel classic, "God Has Smiled On Me" as a stunned church gazed in awe! That echoing, fervent femme falsetto made her devotional leader mother to drop the microphone! "The whole congregation turned around and the pastor looked out of his office and gagged!," Jazmina remembers.
Her "rites of passage" into R&B dance underground took root at AceBeat's legendary Campsite Studios on North 6th Street. AceBeat's campsite and label launched the careers of such dance music stars as Jomana, Charvoni, Joey Washington, The Voices of 6th Avenue and Brothers Of Peace (BOP). It was Bill Watkins who caught a whiff of Jazmina's feathery vocal texture while she was rehearsing with her university's choir and later set up an audition with his cousin, producer/musician Tyrone Payton and his empirical con-flux, Intense. Also sitting in at the audition was the cashmere-throat "Intense" imminent lead vocalist Khison, and AceBeat Records President/Founder, Ace Munchin. After the audition, although Ace was wary of her style; with Tyrone's insistence, Jazmina joined Intense completing the musical triad.



A lack of solid distribution and major promotion plagued Intense's follow up, The Movement Soul EP containing three powerful contenders for worldwide success, "Holding On" feat Khison on lead vocals, "Mighty Love" and the strongest of them all, the emotion drenched, "I See You" penned by Eddie Stockley and Kenny Bobien featuring them on backing vocals along with Charvoni both songs led by Jazmina. "I See You", her "pet tune" she says, "It'll have it's time...I'm going to put it out again".

Slated for their second release on the Shelter label around mid September or October is the socially relevant battle cry, "Life Is Special", produced by Tyrone Payton. About the lyric, Jazmina says, "You have these young boys and girls thinking that they have to do all of this craziness to survive...it's not necessary. I like to speak the truth. It's alright to dance, get sweaty and have fun...but I want the dancer/listener to go home with something in their head...to learn something."
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Jazmina Live @ The ThinkSoul Experience Show 2008 |
DISCOGRAPHY
Garage Movement EP - AceBeat Records (1989)
Let The Rain Come Down (Remix) - Movin' Records (1990)
Movement Soul EP - AceBeat Records (1991)
High On Hope - Intense feat. Jazmina - Shelter Records (1993)
Good Time - Johnny Dangerous feat. Jazmina - Hourglass/KULT (1994)
Love Me For A Day - Jazmina - KULT Records (1995)
Stormy Weather (I Don't Mind) - Johnny Dangerous feat. Jazmina - Nervous Records (1998)
Soul Of The Music - Jazmina Oliver - Imani Records (1998)
Rescue Me (Y Don't You) - Willy Washington - Dance Tracks (2000)
I'll Be Watchin' - Catalan FC/Sven Love feat. Jazmina - What's Up Records (2002)
It Ain't Easy - Willy Washington feat. Jazmina- Defected Records (2004)
I'm Happy/I Won't Complain - Blaze feat. Jazmina - AceBeat Records (2004)