• ARTISTS
  • RELEASES
  • EVENTS
  • FORUMS
  • CONTESTS
  • RADIO SHOWS
  • JUKEBOX
  • search_icon.gif
Members Login
GIANT STEP
 
  GIANT STEP 
GIANT STEP
releases
Nomadic
Who is Adriana Evans? Her self titled debut from the spring of 1997, alongside Erykah Badu's,...
releases
Nomadic
Adriana Evans also known as Adriana Madera is a singer songwriter that possesses an enormous...

GIANT STEP
  • AfriPOP!
  • Bagpak Music
  • Beatlife
  • Brooklyn Vegan
  • Brownswood
  • Daily Swarm
  • Deviation Sessions
  • Format Magazine
  • Friends We Love
  • Fusicology
  • Giant Step's DJ Site
  • Hard Candy
  • Innervisions
  • KSPACE
  • MoonRisingNYC
  • Mundovide
  • Nu-Soul Magazine
  • Okayplayer
  • Paper Magazine
  • Parlour Magazine
  • Pitchfork
  • Prefix Magazine
  • RCRDLBL
  • Rehes Creative
  • Ruby Hornet
  • Soul and Jazz
  • Soul Bounce
  • Soul Sides
  • Stereogum
  • The Afrobeat Blog
  • The Bloom Blog
  • Trees For Breakfast
  • Turntables on the Hudson
  • About Giant Step
  • Our Services
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise With Us
GIANT STEP
releases
GIANT STEP
Adriana Evans
Animatedcartunes
Listen in Jukebox
Discuss in forums
biography

Singer Adriana Evans was born and raised in San Francisco, California. Her mother, Mary Stallings was also a gifted jazz vocalist who sang with Count Basie, Dizzy Gillespie, Cal Tjader and released several solo records. At 18, Adriana relocated to Los Angeles, where she met rapper/producer Dred Scott whom she collaborated with on his 1994 album Breakin' Combs. A year later she and Dred wrote and recorded her debut self titled album for Capitol Records but soon after, the urban music department disbanded and her contract ended up in the hands of Loud/RCA.

Alongside Erykah Badu's, Baduizm, Adriana and her album with it's jazzy vibe, had the unique distinction of being responsible for ushering in what would later be dubbed the "neo-soul" movement. Rising to the heights of success on the backs of hip-hop groups like Mobb Deep and The Wu-Tang Clan, Loud Records was essentially a "rap label" and regrettably, ill equipped to properly promote and market such a revolutionary release.

Critically acclaimed yet commercially panned, (only 70,000 units sold) Adriana became disenchanted with the politics of the music industry and retreated to the warmth and freedom of the independent scene. Seven years later, her sophomore album, Nomadic was released on her own label to be sold only at shows and on her website... until now.

back
return to main listing

Sign up to receive our newsletter