Whoa, Nelly! Turns 20: How Nelly Furtado Took Flight
By Alex Gonzalez
Twenty years prior, a 21-year-old singer from Canada stepped onto the scene with her debut single, “I’m Like a Bird.” At the time of its release,
Nelly Furtado didn’t know the song could be a big radio hit. Her folky, coffee home fashion and sound was different from that of the Britneys and the Christinas of the time, although she knew “I’m Like a Bird” was something special.
“I’m Like a Bird” led Furtado’s debut album,
Whoa, Nelly!, released October 24, 2000. Like most of them of the album, it was produced by songwriting pair Brian West and Gerald Eaton of Canadian musical group The Philosopher Kings. As soon as Furtado first wrote the song, Eaton and West weren’t sure if it would fit in with the rest of the record.
“She just had on guitar, and it also was group kind of an eas, folky song,” Eaton tells MTV News. “I think Brian and I wrote a bridge with her, nevertheless it wasn’t up until the production of that song that we knew we had something special. We all noticed it a little also ‘happy’ for this cool, fresh album we were attempting to prepare, so we were a little skeptical of it at first. Nevertheless any time the production came with each other, and we got that order kind of hip-hop bounce groove, that’s as soon as we began getting really excited.”
The song went on to
peak at No. 9 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and
win The perfect Female Pop Vocal Efficiency award at the 44th Grammy Awards in 2002. It also caught a persons vision of
Timbaland, who eventually worked with Furtado on her 2006 album,
Loose. “I knew she was different,” Timbaland tells MTV News. “That video was different at the time. I just thought she had a unique fashion and routinely thought that me and her could mesh.”
Back in Toronto, Furtado, Eaton, and West weren’t expecting such a grand reception. “We didn’t really imagine that it could be a pop success,” West tells MTV News. “We hoped that things would go well, however we were sort of thinking it could be this tastemaker album that could be played in, like, Urban Outfitters. We thought we were way more hipster than we were.”
West and Eaton first encountered Furtado circa 1997 at a Toronto nightclub showcase called Honey Jam, an all-female musical showcase
also known for launching the careers of Melanie Fiona and Jully Black. At the time, Eaton and West had released three albums with The Philosopher Kings, although were wanting to get more into the production side of music.
Any time while they first saw Furtado perform, West remembers Eaton being blown away by the sincerity of Furtado’s delivery. “The women [onstage] would have sing-offs and rap-offs,” West says, “and she was the only one that had her own material.” West and Eaton’s manager insisted that they converse with Furtado, who then signed a production deal with them.
In the early stages of recording
Whoa, Nelly!, West, Eaton and Furtado cut tracks in West’s small attic apartment, set up with a sampler, keyboard, computer, as well as a guitar. The trio made three demo tracks before Furtado caught a person's eye of the now-defunct Dreamworks Records.
West estimates that the album took “close to two years, from starting to end” to record, and that they recorded “half of the album in Toronto, and the other half in L.A.” Eaton recalls working on the album’s first track “Hey, Man!,” Which samples Kronos Quartet’s “White Man Sleeps,” over the course of a month.
“We had that string sample, and there was a lot of combining of genres,” Eaton says. “We mixed it all with each other plus it attempted to prepare it sound contemporary and fresh. It just took a lot of time to get that balance right.”
Another cut, “Shit on the Radio (Remember the Days),” alludes to Furtado’s early days as a underground artist. Lyrically, the song is about the disapproval she obtained from her companions in the Toronto underground music scene as she started to receive more mainstream attention.
“We had a process where we should make one song for the masses,” Eaton says. “We would attempt to create it a little bit more commercially obtainable. And then we would respond to that one song with another song that we should make for ourselves. We would attempt to push the envelope of edginess and freshness and just stuff that we've never heard before. We didn’t necessarily like the stuff that was playing on the radio. We just thought there was a lot of crap on the radio and we were like, let’s attempt to get something on the radio that’s really cool. We habitually set out to get our stuff on the radio. [The album] wasn’t like an artistic project, where we just wanted to create it for ourselves and for a little categorize of people.”
The song “Baby Girl” showcases Furtado’s ability and affinity for improvisation. While it was never officially released as a sole, nor did it chart in the U.S., “Baby Girl” became famed for Furtado’s “
ba-da-ba-pa ching ching ching” ad-lib in the chorus. Two years later, Timbaland
sampled her vocalization for the chorus of rapper Ms. Jade’s “Ching Ching” and produced a remix of
Whoa, Nelly!’s second single, “Turn Off the Light,” as well as Ms. Jade. Timbaland also enlisted Furtado for a remix of Missy Elliott’s “Get Ur Freak On,” which appears on the soundtrack to
Lara Croft: Tomb Raider.
“Nelly had a fashion that was different from Missy’s, however had similarities at the same time,” Timbaland says. “They both were risk takers, and I think my production is risk-taking in itself. I put crickets in songs and I put crazy things in records.”
Timbaland, West, and Eaton all note that Furtado is an exceptional songwriter. West says that before he, Eaton, and Furtado recorded
Whoa, Nelly!, Furtado suggested to return to school study to be a writer.
“She has this lyricism that I think is a lot deeper than other songwriters’,” West says.
Today, Furtado is a very private person. She makes very rare posts on Twitter and Instagram and she hasn’t released an album in
almost four years. A new extended edition of
Whoa, Nelly! (released October 23) contains dance remixes of some of her album cuts, and also live performances and tracks left over from the recording sessions.
Timbaland, West, and Eaton all mention that if there were a possibility to work with her again, they could be on board.
Furtado has much experimented with her sound since the days of “I’m Like a Bird.” Her most recent album, the John Congleton-produced
The Ride, shows a more minimalistic, stripped-back side, as heard on icy tunes like "
Pipe Dreams." Ever since rocking her Adidas shell toes and her big hoop earrings in the “I’m Like a Bird” video 20 years prior, she’s never been afraid to take risks, even as her sound has evolved.
“Nelly understands what she wants to mention, as soon as it comes to artistry,” Timbaland says. “She’s one of the greatest to ever do it, especially once it comes to studio sessions. She really gives it her all. She’s very poised in the studio and plays no games.”
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