Since 1996 |
Your Gateway to Music and More from a Christian Perspective Slow down as you approach the gate, and have your change ready.... |
| Home
Subscribe About Us Features News |
Nicole C. Mullen Nicole C. Mullen spoke to
me on the phone from her home in Nashville earlier this year and it was
towards the end of our time together that two things emerged to really
define who this wonderfully talented, compassionate and gentle spirited
lady is. Interestingly enough the first comment emerged during our discussion
of her clothing line Outta
"I started making mirrors first and instead of throwing a broken mirror out of my house, I thought maybe I can make it into something else so I decorated it. Now I have all these, not really masterpieces, but they are junk masterpieces that are all over my house. God allows us to take things that are easily discarded and with a little creativity we can make them into something brand new," Mullen said, explaining how her clothing line got started and drawing an analogy to how God takes lives that others are ready to discount as worthless or of little value and restores them to something new and beautiful. Continuing to talk about her clothing line she said, "What is so ironic is I was the one in the family (she grew up in) who couldn't put two things together to save my life. I went through a period of time when they thought that I was colorblind. I have always liked taking things that were about to become trash and figuring out how I could make it into something cool." The second comment that Mullen
made which provided great insight into her character came from her reply
to the very last question that I asked her concerning her response when
a complete stranger asks her what it is that she does in life. "If I say
that I am a recording artist, it has a connotation that is bigger than
life so I find myself saying, 'I live in Nashville and everybody sings.'
I make sure that I reveal that I am a wife and a mother. If people ask
me what kind of music that I do, I say that the style is what we probably
make out to be funkabilly, however the content is gospel Christian. I would
rather have a heart to heart talk with them, find out about them and discover
if there is an avenue to introduce the gospel. Is there an opportunity
to plant a seed so that God can get the increase later? In order to speak
to their heart you have to hear it first. Often when people ask who I am,
I say, I am a wife, a mother, a daughter and a friend. That is who I am,
singing is what I do. A singer is not who I am, it is what I do. Who I
am off the stage, is the real me. That is the one that should be consistent
with everything else that I do. Hopefully that character we are speaking
of is becoming more and more like
Certainly earlier this year Mullen took another big step in realizing her goal when she traveled to Ghana in west Africa to take part in ministering spiritually and practically to ex Trokosi slaves. For those unfamiliar with the term Trokosi, these are women who have been taken from their families, often as little children, by the village priest, to supposedly atone for the wrongs of the family and to appease the gods. They are then turned into sex slaves and deprived of the basic necessities of life, education, proper healthcare and often left without proper nutrition and clothing. It is not unusual for the women to later be abandoned completely by the priest, and their families will not accept them back.
Mullen traveled to Ghana with the I.N. Network USA. "The organization negotiates with the priests in Ghana (for the release of the slaves). At first, they thought they would try and buy the slaves but they discovered the priests would just acquire more slaves to make an even greater profit. Now, negotiations (may consist of) the organization putting a well in a village, bringing electricity to the village or the building of a school to educate the children of the Trokosi or the women themselves who have never been educated," said Mullen, noting that the priests are then viewed by other villagers as a hero. I.N. Network USA also teaches the people how to provide for themselves. Life skills may be as simple as teaching them how to make clothes, soaps and powders or dying fabric, tools that they can use to provide for themselves." Reflecting upon the heritage
of the African American in the United States, Mullen observed, "I often
say had there not been men and women of different colors of skin from light
to dark, different walks of life, different religious backgrounds who spoke
up on my behalf when I was in the loins of my ancestors who were slaves,
and spoke up on my
"I took my thirteen year
old Jasmine and we had a chance firsthand to see what they do. I was so
floored that what we spend on Starbucks coffee can revolutionize someone's
life (in Ghana). What we consider to be trash is a treasure to them. I
was embarrassed and humbled by that fact. It was life changing and I saw
the likeness of them in
To understand this wonderful
lady who despite having numerous chart stopping hit songs and having reached
a stature in the music industry that few attain at still a relatively young
age, you must understand her heritage. She talked about her grandfathers,
both of whom were pastors, and the heritage passed on to her parents and
then to Nicole
After returning to the phone
from sorting through routine childhood concerns with her four-year-old
and thirteen-year-old Mullen said, "The grandfather on my mom's side is
still living. The one on my dad's side is already in heaven. I remember
my granddad as a man of faith and a fine upstanding man. He was a man of
easy smiles, few words and
Prior to the release of Sharecropper's Seed Volume 1, and shortly after she wrote the words, during a concert in her hometown of Cincinnati, Mullen had the opportunity to recite the lyric with her grandfather present in the audience. She dedicated the lyric to her grandfather. "I had a hard time getting through it because the other people in the audience and I were busy crying. Hopefully he is proud of it. I am proud of the heritage that was passed down to me," she said. "The essence of the whole album is that you take care of the seed. If you do that, it may turn out to be a harvest and one that blesses you later. My parents were good to me. I never remember them doing things to hurt my spirit. They may have hurt my feelings on occasion, but they were the type that if I wanted to be a lawyer, a clown or an actor that they would always encourage me. They didn't remind me that we didn't have the money to do what I felt were my dream in life. They were the type that said, if this is what God has in store for you, He will make a way and He will provide. You do the best you can do and leave the results up to God. That is the essence of what happened to me as a child and I want to pass that onto my children now," said Mullen. I had intended at the start
of my interview with Nicole C. Mullen to focus on the CD Sharecropper's
Seed Volume 1, however as we began to talk I realized there was a more
important story that needed to be told and that is about the woman who
describes being a singer as something that she just does but being a wife,
mother, daughter,
Visit: http://www.nicolecmullen.com
By Joe Montague, exclusive rights reserved Joe Montague is an internationally
published journalist / photographer and the publisher of Riveting Riffs,
www.rivetingriffs.com . His
ministry is dedicated to the memory of his late son Kent David Montague
who went to heaven at the age of 18. All copyright and distribution rights
remain the property of Joe Montague.
.
|
|
|
|