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News : Wyclef jean
NeoSoul/Hip Hop superstar Wyclef Jean would love to get The Fugees
back together again -- the problem is persuading fellow singer Lauryn
Hill. Both have gone their different ways with highly successful solo
careers but he still dreams of a reunion for the group whose album "The
Score" sold 17 million copies to become one of the biggest Hip
Hop chart successes of all time.
"The Fugees still didn't break up. We are still trying to make
stuff and work stuff out," he told reporters. "But an album
is very important. You can't just throw a garbage album out there. That
is not good for The Fugees," he added in Barcelona in preparation
for the MTV Europe Awards.
"If the Fugees are going to do an album, it has to be excellent
like the last one or they had better not do an album, you understand,"
he said. "I want to do a Fugees record. You have to talk to Lauryn
Hill. You have to talk to the girl. The girl is the problem -- not me,"
he added in a very public plea to the singer who achieved enormous solo
success with her award-laden "Miseducation of Lauryn Hill"
album.
Wyclef Jean, the son of a Haitian preacher, who was taken to America
as a child, has branched out in his career since the heyday of The Fugees.
Now he is a rapper, writer, producer and record-label owner. He has
helped to boost the careers of Whitney Houston and Carlos Santana and
produced Sinead O'Connor and Mary J.Blige. He even persuaded Bob Dylan
to appear in the video for one of his hits.
His latest collaboration has been with Tom Jones, the hip-thrusting
singer who has now attracted a whole new generation of pop fans.
"Tom Jones is incredible. He still sounds great. His voice sounds
the way it sounded 20, 30 years ago. I have just collaborated with him
and did his whole new album."
Two years ago Jean hosted the MTV Europe Awards in Stockholm. This
time he will be doing his stuff on stage and leaving the host's role
to Sean "P.Diddy" Combs, formerly known as Puff Daddy.
"Performing is my tool," he said. "I love to perform
-- I am a musician. I like to make people laugh too, especially women."
The huge potential audience for the international music channel held
added appeal.
"It's a chance to reach a billion people," he said. "Make
sure you shoot me well on my good side," he told the cameramen.
Asked who he would hand out an award to, he said: "If I had the
Wyclef Jean award, I would probably give it to Bono (lead singer of
the Irish supergroup U2) because he has done a lot for charity. That's
my heart. That is what I support."
He himself founded the Jean Wyclef Foundation to get children from
deprived inner-city backgrounds to develop an interest in music, science
and reading.
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