Representative of how the Internet can aid in creating music, the Foreign Exchange started when Little Brother rapper Phonte heard a beat on Okayplayer.com by Dutch producer Nicolay and asked if he could lay some vocals over it. Nicolay agreed, and the song "Light It Up" appeared shortly after as the B-side to Little Brother's 2002 single "Whatever You Say." Relying mainly on instant messaging and email, the duo continued to work together, with Nicolay sending beats to Phonte, who would add vocals and send them back until they had enough tracks together to form an album.
Not once during the entire process of making
their debut, Connected, which came out in 2004, did the members of the
Foreign Exchange speak over the phone or in person. Due in part to an
increasing production load, Nicolay moved to the States, and Leave It
All Behind, the second FE album -- more R&B-oriented than the debut
-- was recorded.
Released in 2008 and featuring a handful of stunning
videos, its lead single, "Daykeeper," was nominated for a 2010 Grammy in
the category of Best Urban/Alternative Performance (and lost to
India.Arie's "Pearls"). After assisting two of their associates,
YahZarah (The Ballad of Purple St. James) and Zo! (SunStorm), with
albums, the Foreign Exchange released Authenticity. All three albums
were issued in 2010 through The Foreign Exchange Music. A DVD/CD set,
Dear Friends: An Evening with the Foreign Exchange (2011) and a two-disc
set of remixes and new songs titled The Reworks (2013) preceded the
group's fourth studio album, Love in Flying Colors.
" The title of the fourth Foreign Exchange album is so corny that the back cover might as well show Nicolay and Phonte,
together with their dozen-plus associates, leaping over an airstrip
with ear-to-ear grins. Once the serene strings on the closing "When I
Feel Love" fade out, it's clear the title is absolutely descriptive, as
the prevailing mood deeply contrasts with that of the racked Authenticity. If there is a bridge between the two albums, it's third track "Better," in which Phonte
rhymes matrimony with acrimony and sings of being healed. Second to
that is chamber folk-soul ballad "Listen to the Rain," where Phonte
is overwhelmed, "lost inside this pain," but that segues into the
speedy drum'n'bass ballad "Call It Home," where the spirit starts to
lift and turbulence is counteracted with optimism: "Sunny days are
rare/But I'd follow you almost anywhere." Otherwise, from "Feels so
good, love's flying high" -- Carmen Rodgers' invigorated chorus on opener "If I Knew Then" -- to the blissful duet finale featuring Jeanne Jolly, Love in Flying Colors is about the rush and delight of falling in love. As usual, almost all of the instrumentation is performed by Nicolay. The uptempo tracks of his City Lights, Vol. 2
were something of a warning flare, though the bright synthesizer-laced
grooves here are a little funkier and more musical. "Right After
Midnight" is prime modern boogie, while "The Moment," the best track Blaze never made, is soulful house hotter than +FE Music: The Reworks highlight "So What If It Is." Phonte,
who has developed into an exceptional singer, is supported by several
co-lead and background vocalists used in a variety of imaginative ways.
Each guest appearance is worthy of mention, but Gwen Bunn's
entry -- for the last verse of broken beat throwback "Can't Turn
Around" -- adds a jolt like no other. In 2013, it takes a certain level
of bravery to make R&B this open-hearted, joyous, and musical. U.K.
acts like 4hero, New Sector Movements, and Bugz in the Attic
were doing it in the early 2000s, but none of them put it together
quite like this, in one concentrated shot, with the songwriting on the
same high level as the productions and arrangements. This crew is elite. "
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