Oop! Chaka Khan Says New School Singers Use ‘Butts’ and ‘Body Parts’ to Compensate for Weak Vocals [VIDEO]

Oop!  Chaka Khan Says New School Singers Use ‘Butts’ and ‘Body Parts’ to Compensate for Weak Vocals [VIDEO]

Chaka Khan, known as the “Queen of Funk”, Khan’s who’s Grammy award winning career began in the 1970s as the lead singer of Rufus before going solo with her smash hit “I’m Every Woman”, as never been one to mince words or issue out shade to other singers that she thinks that are worthy.  Just recently Chaka Khan  in an interview shared that she had once told her now dear friend Mary J. Blige that she ‘f****d up her song ‘Sweet Thing’.  In 1975, Sweet Thing was originally recorded by Chaka Khan, however 1992, Mary J. Blige resurrected the classic hit by reintroducing it on her ‘What’s the 411?’ album but according to Chaka, she sang it flat after staying up all night and recording at 8 a.m.  Now appears that Chaka has taken her shade tour to another interview saying that these new school singers use ‘butts’ and ‘body parts’ to compensate for weak vocals.

During a recent appearance on Jessie Ware’s Table Manners podcast, the legendary Chaka Khan criticized what she sees as a shift away from vocal ability, arguing that some artists rely more on physical spectacle than singing.

“These women are doing any and every damn thing on stage and trying to sing, too,” …“The ones who are doing the most physicality’s, with their butts and stuff, and their body parts, are the ones that usually are compensating for what they don’t have.”

See video below

 


 

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