At the countless shows we saw Res open for Talib Kweli or Mos Def over the years - me tagging along as my man's plus-one, because my unglamorous gig slapping HTML around website copy could never get us on any guest list - I watched him nod hard to the bass-heavy tracks, and like a good girlfriend, I nodded yes too.īut my favorite - that song I fell for fast - was How I Do's opener, " Golden Boys." I loved its sound - Res' voice alternately sneering and soaring over music that, foreshadowing Santigold's own mashed-up aesthetic, couldn't be pinned as alt- or neo- or whatever prefix you tried to give it. He was a music journalist with bylines in glossies like Vibe and Spin, a Queens-born hip-hop head. I'd managed to get my hands on How I Do months before it was officially out - one perk of dating the man for whom I'd recently moved to New York City. In those early days of 2001, who I did know was her Philly friend Res (a singer whose debut album, it so happens, White largely wrote and produced). Her final form - Santigold, the genre-defying heroine who'd later burn bright in my consciousness - was not yet a glimmer. Back then White lived not in the spotlight but mostly in liner notes and underground scenes, a Black woman grinding, like so many before her, to make a name for herself in the music industry. It's been 20 years since I first heard a song from the mind of Santi White, but at the time I fell in love with it I didn't know I had her to thank. Because the way that certain music comes to hold a central place in our lives isn't just a reflection of how we develop our taste, but how we come to our perspective on the world.
For 2021, we're digging into our own relationships to the records we love, asking: How do we know as listeners when a piece of music is important to us? How do we break free of institutional pressures on our taste while still taking the lessons of history into account? What does it mean to make a truly personal canon? The essays in this series will excavate our unique relationships with the albums we love, from unimpeachable classics by major stars to subcultural gamechangers and personal revelations. Up until now we have focused on overturning conventional, patriarchal best-of lists and histories of popular music. NPR Music's Turning the Tables is a project envisioned to challenge sexist and exclusionary conversations about musical greatness.