Babyface

Babyface or Baby Face can refer to:

Nicknames

  • Baby Face Nelson, an infamous 1930s bank robber
  • Roosevelt "Baby Face" Willette (1933–1971), an American hard bop and soul-jazz musician
  • "Baby Face", Jimmy McLarnin (1907–2004), two-time welterweight boxing world champion
  • "Baby Face", the Baldwin DR-4-4-15 locomotive
  • "Babyface Killer", Chow Yun-fat
  • "The Baby-Faced Assassin", Ole Gunnar Solskjær, a former Manchester United football player
  • In music

  • Babyface (musician), real name Kenneth Edmonds, an American R&B and pop songwriter, record producer and singer
  • "Baby Face" (1926 song), 1926 song with music by Harry Akst and lyrics by Benny Davis
  • "Babyface" (song), a song by U2
  • Babyface, the former name of rock band Axe (band)
  • Fictional characters

  • Baby-Face Finster, a criminal disguised as a baby in the Merrie Melodies animated short film Baby Buggy Bunny
  • Babyface, a character in the movie Toy Story
  • Baby Face Finlayson, a character in the British comic The Beano
  • Baby Face, a character in the video game Dynamite Headdy
  • Babyface (song)

    "Babyface" is a song by U2 and the second track from their 1993 album Zooropa.

    Composition

    "It's about how people play with images, believing you know somebody through an image and think that by manipulating a machine that, in fact, controls you, you can have some kind of power."

    "Babyface" was written by Bono during the Zooropa recording sessions in late 1992/early 1993. The song contains themes of desire, voyeurism, image, celebrity and technology. It involves a man having an obsession with a famous woman, whose image he keeps on a televised recording. Through the course of production, U2 and producer Brian Eno incorporated a toy piano into the melody of the song. The Edge sings the vocals with Bono during the verses and chorus.

    Reception

    "Babyface" received mixed reviews from critics. The New York Times critic Jon Pareles described the song as U2 combining "'With or Without You' and Bowie's 'Ashes to Ashes'" while praising the "tinkling countermelody" of the song.The Boston Globe's Jim Sullivan called it "the most conventional song" on the album and "a smooth-glider where the subversiveness is half-buried in the rolling rhythms and the soft, seductive melody." In contrast, Parry Gettelman of Orlando Sentinel felt the song was "tediously repetitive" and caused the album to falter.

    Babyface (musician)

    Babyface (born Kenneth Brian Edmonds; April 10, 1959) is an American R&B musician, singer-songwriter, and record producer. He has written and produced over 26 No. 1 R&B hits throughout his career, and has won 11 Grammy Awards.

    Early life

    Edmonds was born on April 10, 1959, in Indianapolis, Indiana, to Marvin and Barbara Edmonds. Barbara was a production operator at a pharmaceutical plant. Edmonds, who is the fifth of six brothers (including future After 7 band members Melvin and Kevon Edmonds, the latter of whom went on to have a modestly successful solo career), attended North Central High School in Indianapolis, Indiana, and as a shy youth, wrote songs to express his emotions. When he was in eighth grade, Edmonds' father died of lung cancer, leaving his mother to raise her sons alone. At this stage, Edmonds became determined to have a career in music.

    Music career

    Edmonds later played with funk performer Bootsy Collins, who tagged him "Babyface" because of his youthful look. He also performed in the group Manchild (which had a 1976 hit "Especially for You" with band member Daryl Simmons), as he was a guitarist for the band. Then, as a keyboardist in the light-funk and R&B group the Deele (which also included drummer Antonio "L.A." Reid, with whom he would later form a successful writing and producing partnership). One of his first major credits as a songwriter for outside artists came when he wrote the tune "Slow Jam" for the R&B band Midnight Star in 1983. The tune was on Midnight Star's double-platinum No Parking on the Dance Floor album, and while it never was a single, it received massive radio airplay and the song is still played on quiet storm radio stations. Babyface remained in the Deele until 1988, when both he and Reid left the group.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    You Were There

    by: John Foxx

    You were there
    When I was looking through
    Your pictures in the night
    You were there
    When I fell asleep and I
    Woke up in the light
    And when the streets filled
    And my heart stilled
    And I asked someone the time
    Chorus:
    You were there
    You were there
    You were there
    I know you were
    And you were there
    When I stopped to stare
    By the quiet trees
    And you were there
    And I thought that you were
    Someone else I'd seen
    And when the traffic roared
    And my heart soared
    So that I could hardly breathe
    (Chorus)
    Oh you were there
    When I stood and watched
    From so many years ago
    You must have smiled
    When I was walking through
    The places that you'd known
    And when I'd given up
    And all the letters stopped
    And no trace at all remained




    ×