D'Angelo Essentials
With an unmistakable voice and an innate ability to modernize the rich Black musical traditions that preceded him, D’Angelo helped birth the neo-soul movement of the mid-’90s. A demo tape and an impromptu piano recital for an exec earned him a deal at EMI, under which he released his 1995 debut, <i>Brown Sugar</i>. The album was a mix of earthy, vinyl-crackling soul that evoked Marvin Gaye and the edgy swagger of golden-era hip-hop. It featured a gorgeous reworking of Smokey Robinson’s “Cruisin’” alongside downbeat tributes to objects of his desires such as “Lady” and “Brown Sugar.” 2000’s <i>Voodoo</i> followed—a vulnerable meditation on love, fatherhood, sexuality, and spirituality that heightened D’Angelo’s stardom via one of R&B’s all-time most memorable songs: “Untitled (How Does It Feel).” After a lengthy hiatus, he returned in 2014 with <i>Black Messiah</i>, a stirring collection of soulful analog grooves and sociopolitical lyrics that reflected the then-budding Black Lives Matter movement. D’Angelo passed away in 2025 following a battle with pancreatic cancer.