The Incomparable Chaka Khan
Eight-Time Grammy Winner With A Style And Presence All Her Own Has A New CD
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Play CBS Video Video Preview: Chaka Khan Singer Chaka Khan talks with Russ Mitchell about what her music has meant to her over the years, and how she participated in the Chicago chapter of the Black Panthers.
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Video Chaka Spreads Holiday Cheer Grammy winner Chaka Khan stopped by The Early Show for a special holiday performance of the Christmas classic, "Do You Hear What I Hear?"
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Video Kenny G And Chaka Perform Grammy winners Kenny G and Chaka Khan teamed up for a duet on "Beautiful" on The Early Show. The pair also spoke about their new albums.
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The singer with a voice once described as a "sensual, shiver-inducing siren wail" now has a new CD, "Funk This." (AP)
"Very good," Chaka Khan told CBS News correspondent Russ Mitchell.
Great? Excellent?
"Just really good."
She's the eight-time Grammy award winner whose 30-year career has inspired singers like Whitney Houston and Mary J. Blige. Now at the age of 54, Chaka Khan is back with a hot new album.
"And I'm listening to it, I'm thinking 'old school Chaka,'" Mitchell said. "Is that the idea?"
"Well, yeah that is the one thing, we were going to try to recapture the sound that made people fall in love with my voice in the first place," she said.
It's a love affair that began on the south side of Chicago. Today she's Chaka Khan, a star wherever she goes. But back then, she was Yvette Stevens.
She and her younger sister performed in talent shows around the city with the help of their mother, Sandra Coleman, who acted as costumer, chaperone and chauffeur.
"They did this song, and it was no music at all. She had to come out with just her voice. And it was so pure, and so beautiful, you know. Right then I said, 'My baby can sing!"
"We would sing at different talent shows and different competitions around Chicago," Khan said. "People started throwin' money on the stage and yelling, 'Little Aretha.'"
"How'd you like that?" Mitchell asked.
"I liked it. I was kind of taken aback, of course, at first, you know? I was like, 'What are they talking about?'"
They were talking about a voice that would one day be described as a "sensual, shiver-inducing siren wail." But as a young girl in Catholic school, Yvette Stevens never dreamed of a life in music.
"Yeah, I felt like I wanted to be a nun when I was a kid. And who knows? I could have easily become one."
But she was coming of age in the turbulent 1960s, an adolescent determined to make it on her own.
"She was very, very independent and very headstrong," her mother said. "And she didn't want to take any orders from anybody anymore, you know? And so she ran away from home, several times."
She ran away for good at 16, and joined the Black Panther party.
"They mostly had me, 'cause I was a young chick. I was in high school, so they didn't really bestow really heavy duty stuff on me. I could sell papers. I started a free breakfast for children program. I did that every morning, before I went to school. I usually missed my first class because of it!"
Back at her old school there is a room dedicated to her, which she would never have predicted. "I didn't think I'd make it through," dropping out of school and later deciding to take on an African name, Chaka. It means "woman of fire." And when she married bass player Hassan Khan, Chaka Khan was born.
"And the one thing that I knew I could do well at that point, and I could get paid at, would be singing."
She joined the funk band Rufus, and in 1974 they hit it big with a Stevie Wonder song, "Tell Me Something Good." They were so big they even appeared on a Bob Hope TV special.
But the idea of being famous scared Khan. "Because I'm kind of a private person. And I at the time, you know, I wanted to live my life and experience life."
But decked out in leather and feathers, and with a voice that was unmistakable, Chaka Khan couldn't escape the spotlight.
"I was in the hospital having a baby, in labor. And people are asking for my autograph. Hospital staff! And I thought, 'Dude, this is not cool.'"
"What do you do in those situations?" Mitchell asked.
"I just tell them, 'I'm trying to have a baby here!'"
After five gold albums and one platinum, Chaka Khan left Rufus and went solo, striking gold and platinum all on her own. And then, in 1984, came the biggest solo hit of her career, "I Feel For You."
"Somehow I knew that something would change, and it did. People started calling me 'Chaka Khan Chaka Khan,' instead of just saying my name once."
"Does it bother you still when people do that?"
"Well, now it's like a mosquito flying on my head. Before it was like a ton of bricks falling on me."
As her star continued to burn brighter, there were far more serious problems.
"Well, I was running away from a lot of stuff. I was, you know, self-medicating a lot.
"Is it easier for you to call it medicating?" Mitchell asked.
"Yeah. 'Cause that's what it is. That's what I was doing." But then a moment came when she knew she had to stop: "When I had help. And God came into my life. God touched me for the probably last time, with that finger."
"And as we speak today, no more drugs?"
"No. No more drugs. No drink. I don't do anything. I'm clear. I'm in present time. And it was boring as hell at first! Now, there's never a dull moment."
That's because Chaka Khan, mother of 2 and grandmother of 2, is performing on tour. In January, she'll star on Broadway in the Oprah Winfrey show, "The Color Purple."
"Every-woman" Chaka Khan has been "through the fire" and rediscovered a part of herself.
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- Joining the Black Panther Party tells a story,a drama of american soul movement in the political and JazzMovement of our times during VietNam and JEdgarHoovers freak complex conspiracy 1971.
Chaka Khan,Chaka Khan,Chaka Khan.
thru the fire and out into the light Chaka Khan Chaka Khan Chaka Khan did do it right seeking fortune and fame over imprisonment isolation and shame.
ecoavila go your own way.
California Dreaming executing 8 American Black Panthers in mass,2008,with an american PuertoRican Vietnam viet in the mix Chaka Khan Chaka Khan Chaka Khan
Make me want to halla~
mercy mersy me in the back ground
ecoavila - Reply to this comment
- I''m happy she''s back ... i''ve heard one cut with mary j and it''s smokin! You go girl!
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- But judging by the sig, this person probably has never understood or acknowledged the cultural contributions of "Black" American artists anywaY.......Posted by brianbwb..........Judging by you sig brian-Big-White-Boy, you are just posing as an artistic elite who is far above me in every aspect of life, right? She has had some really great songs, but as it stands today, she will not add to her list of hits. Yes, I am white, but you didn''t know that we kick off the mornings around here with vintage Stevie Wonder and the like did you? I apologize for not telling you that before allowing you to stick your big foot in your mouth. There comes a time for artists to hang up the crown and accept a lesser role in music. Today''s talent is thin enough without muddying the pool even further with tired voices still trying to break crystal but only managing to cause wincing and gritted teeth. Did you hear her version ob "Beautiful" and was it? No, it wasn''t at all unless you were listening to it while reading her resume. signed MityWhity (obviously a racist, a noose-hanger, a deer-hunter and hates kitty cats and potpourri - I mean c''mon, just look at THE NAME man!)
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- I guess Mitywity is either from the "what havwe you done for me lately school", or is too isolated to remember CK''s works that raised the standard for vocalists until today, and prompted such a powerhouse like Whitney Houston to cover "I''m Every Woman" note for note, a very unusual tribute.
So if Muhammad Ali lost his last fight, he is still "the greatest of all time", because of the sum total of his contribution to American culture and history, and if MityWity doesn''t care for one of Chaka Khan''s recordings, she is still a major chapter in the history of American Music.
But judging by the sig, this person probably has never understood or acknowledged the cultural contributions of "Black" American artists anyway. - Reply to this comment
- Hmmmm. I''m thinking Simon Cowell would send her packing for home before even making the taped version of the show. Really, her version of Beautiful was that bad. That voice is shot.
- Reply to this comment
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




