Don Cornelius remembered: Patrice Rushen looks back on âSoul Trainâ
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Veteran keyboardist, singer and songwriter Patrice Rushen, now serving as artist in residence at USCâs Thornton School of Music, was still a student at Locke High School in South Los Angeles in the early 1970s when she first came into contact with Don Cornelius and âSoul Train.â She landed more than a dozen hits on the R&B charts in the 1970s and â80s including âFeels So Realâ and âForget Me Notsâ and subsequently became an in-demand studio and touring musician. Here she remembers Cornelius, who died Wednesday.
âWhen he decided to move âSoul Trainâ out here [to Los Angeles from Chicago], I was in high school. In the summertime youâd go to the park and hang out with friends. They had a lot of organized activities for us. One day I remember Don came to the park and talked about his show, âSoul Train,â and he said, âAnybody who wants to go, weâll have buses and take you to the TV studio. All youâve got to do is come on the show and dance.â I was in some of the early âSoul Trainâ episodes as one of the dancers.
âYears later, after my career started forming AND I had some commercial success with some of my tunes, I was on the show as a guest, and it was like Iâd come full circle.
PHOTOS: Don Cornelius | 1936 - 2012
âSeeing people like Al Green, the Temptations, James Brown and others on the show -- thatâs my association: the chicken dinner and a Coke [provided by Cornelius] and enjoying having the experience of being on a TV show. Then being in a situation where âSoul Trainâ had a big part in breaking my career as far as having exposure on television in a really meaningful way to an audience that turned out to be my core audience.
âHe remembered me -- he said âDidnât you use to dance on this show?â It was very moving for me. You saw the power of television and then I really noticed for the first time in my life an African American who had the kind of vision he had.
âIf you were on âSoul Train,â it could make the difference between a few thousand people hearing you on the radio to millions seeing you at one time. It became a trend-setter. Having that as a platform for so many artists, myself included, gave us access to millions of people at a time, and elevated you to a certain status.
âDick Clark is a very deep individual and personally likes a lot of different things, but his show [âAmerican Bandstandâ] focused on a particular aspect of popular music and most black artists had to achieve a certain crossover pop success to be on that show.
âWhereas with âSoul Train,â the platform was also open to people who were on the way up. He didnât mind sometimes introducing new artists, or giving a major bump to an artist he believed in who was at that middle place; somebody who was making some significant noise but needed a real boost.
âAt first, when I was just one of the kids riding the bus over to watch a television show happen, being an observing participant with a bunch of kids from South-Central L.A., that was the big thing.
âThen, just seeing somebody as I became more knowledgeable about the music industry and savvy, watching someone with vision and making that vision happen. Now there are still so many obstacles to getting a show on the air -- his believing in it and making it work speaks for itself.â
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Photos: Don Cornelius | 1936 - 2012
Don Cornelius, creator of âSoul Train,â dies at 75
Video: 6 âSoul Trainâ performances from Don Corneliusâ heyday
-- Randy Lewis