Curtis Harding
Curtis Harding is an American singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist known for his distinctive "slop 'n' soul" style, which blends elements of soul, R&B, gospel, hip-hop, and rock.[1][2] Born on June 11, 1979, in Michigan to a gospel-singing mother and a retired veteran father, Harding was raised in Atlanta starting at age 14 and began his musical career singing and playing drums in church alongside his mother, Dorothy Harding.[3][1][4] Influenced by gospel groups like the Mighty Clouds of Joy, as well as Stax and Motown records, 1990s hip-hop, and alternative rock, Harding started rapping at age nine before teaching himself guitar and transitioning into songwriting.[1] After working in artist promotion at LaFace Records and providing backup vocals for CeeLo Green, he launched his solo career with the independent release Soul Power in 2014, a raw collection of retro-soul tracks that showcased his gritty, emotive voice.[1][5] His breakthrough came with the 2017 album Face Your Fear, co-produced by Danger Mouse and Sam Cohen on the Anti- label, which earned critical acclaim for its genre-blending production and landed on NPR Music's list of the 10 best R&B albums of 2017.[1][6] Harding followed this with If Words Were Flowers in 2021, a more introspective work exploring love and vulnerability, and released his self-produced fourth album, Departures & Arrivals: Adventures of Captain Curt, on September 5, 2025, featuring space-funk, psych-rock, and symphonic elements.[1][7][8] Throughout his career, Harding has toured extensively, including opening for Jack White and performing at festivals like Lollapalooza, and has been praised by outlets such as Uproxx for revitalizing modern soul music with his fearless experimentation.[1][9] His work often draws on personal themes of resilience and self-discovery, reflecting his journey from church performer to innovative artist in the contemporary music scene.[4][10]Early years
Childhood and family
Curtis Harding was born on June 11, 1979, in Saginaw, Michigan, to a mechanical engineer father and a gospel singer mother named Dorothy Harding.[11][4] He grew up with five siblings in a Mennonite family.[2][12] His father's profession involved rebuilding engines, which sparked Harding's early fascination with cars during his youth.[13] Harding's childhood was marked by frequent relocations across the United States, including moves to southern states like Mobile, Alabama, where his mother was from, as the family navigated various circumstances.[14] These travels between northern and southern regions exposed him to diverse environments, from small towns to urban areas, shaping a restless early life.[11] The family's dynamic revolved around his mother's involvement in gospel performances, which created an environment indirectly rich in cultural and artistic exposure, even as Harding initially pursued other interests like drawing and automobiles.[13][4] At age 14, the family settled in Atlanta, Georgia, providing Harding with his first period of stability during his teenage years.[1] This move marked a transition in his youth, where he began to engage more directly with the musical activities of his family.[1]Musical upbringing
Curtis Harding's musical upbringing was deeply rooted in the gospel tradition, beginning in his early childhood when he started singing and playing drums in church alongside his mother, Dorothy Harding, a dedicated gospel singer.[1][15] From a young age, Harding joined his family on gospel tours, performing across states in the South for church congregations and other audiences, which exposed him to diverse musical environments and honed his performance skills.[16] His mother's influence was pivotal, as she introduced him to seminal gospel artists like Mahalia Jackson and Mavis Staples, shaping his appreciation for the emotional depth and vocal power of the genre.[11] Through these family-led performances, Harding developed his vocal and drumming abilities in a gospel context, relying on immersive church experiences rather than formal training.[4] Despite his initial reluctance—Harding originally aspired to become an oceanographer and resisted the pull of music due to family expectations—he gradually became immersed in the tradition, contributing to group singing and instrumentation during tours.[15] This phase of active musical participation continued until Harding was 15 years old, when the family settled in Atlanta, marking a temporary shift as he pursued other interests away from the stage.[16]Career
Early collaborations (2000s–2010s)
In the early 2000s, Curtis Harding co-founded the Atlanta-based hip-hop group Proseed, where he contributed as a rapper and vocalist amid the city's burgeoning Dirty South scene.[17] While involved with Proseed, Harding took on promotional duties for LaFace Records, the influential Atlanta label home to acts like OutKast, which helped him navigate the local music industry.[1] During this period, Harding met CeeLo Green through his LaFace work and began collaborating closely with the artist, providing backing vocals and rapping on tracks from Green's debut solo album, Cee-Lo Green and His Perfect Imperfections (2002).[18] He toured extensively as a backing singer for Green throughout the 2000s, including the 2002 Smokin' Grooves Tour alongside OutKast, Cypress Hill, Lauryn Hill, and The Roots.[19] This partnership extended into the 2010s, with Harding contributing backing vocals and co-writing the bonus track "Grand Canyon" for Green's album The Lady Killer (2010). In 2009, Harding formed the short-lived garage soul band Night Sun with Black Lips members Cole Alexander and Joe Bradley, as well as Night Beats' Danny Lee Blackwell, blending psychedelic rock elements in Atlanta's underground scene; the project dissolved quickly without a full release, though it produced a few recorded tracks.[20] Parallel to these efforts, Harding engaged in session work and songwriting for various hip-hop and R&B artists in Atlanta, forging key connections that shaped his early professional network.[1]Solo music career (2014–present)
Harding launched his solo career with the debut album Soul Power, released on May 6, 2014, by Burger Records. The record marked a departure from his earlier backing roles, establishing his independent voice through a raw, genre-blending style he termed "slop 'n' soul," which draws from soul, gospel, rock, and psychedelia as a mix of musical "leftovers."[21] His breakthrough came with the 2017 album Face Your Fear, released on Anti- Records and co-produced by Danger Mouse and Sam Cohen. The album peaked at number 21 on the Billboard Heatseekers Albums chart and featured the single "Need Your Love," which gained attention for its soulful, retro-infused vibe. NPR Music included Face Your Fear among the ten best R&B albums of 2017, praising its genre-bending depth and Harding's versatile songwriting.[22] In 2021, Harding released If Words Were Flowers on Anti- Records, an album shaped by the COVID-19 pandemic that explores themes of isolation, connection, and resilience amid global turmoil. Written and recorded during lockdowns, the record incorporates elements of vintage soul, R&B, hip-hop, and garage rock to convey messages of hope and emotional recovery. Critics noted its kaleidoscopic mix as a response to personal and collective hardships, with Uncut awarding it an 8/10 for embracing diverse influences like psych rock and jazz.[17] [23] Harding's most recent work, Departures & Arrivals: Adventures of Captain Curt, arrived on September 5, 2025, via Anti- Records, functioning as a concept album framed as a sci-fi narrative about a pilot navigating space, symbolizing themes of longing for home, personal growth, and the unease of constant travel. Self-produced by Harding, the album expands on road-life reflections into an elaborate story of search and self-discovery, blending classic soul with expansive, opera-like scope. The lead single "Time," released in July 2025, features smoldering horns and call-and-response vocals offering reassurance against doubt. PopMatters described it as his most cohesive effort yet, a "grower" that highlights his evolution in retro soul and indie influences.[24] [25] [26] Throughout his solo tenure, Harding has built a robust touring presence, including opening for Jack White on select dates in 2014 and for Lenny Kravitz on his 2018 North American and international dates, which elevated his profile through shared stages at venues like the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium. In 2025, he headlined his own European tour, with dates in November including Dublin's Opium on the 9th, Glasgow's Oran Mor on the 10th, Manchester's Gorilla on the 11th, and London's O2 Shepherd's Bush Empire on the 12th, showcasing material from his latest release amid growing recognition for his genre-defying soul. NPR has consistently featured Harding, from early video spotlights like "Keep On Shining" in 2014 to in-depth sessions on World Cafe for Face Your Fear, underscoring his role in modernizing soul traditions.[27] [28] [29]Acting and other pursuits
In addition to his musical endeavors, Curtis Harding has ventured into acting with two credited roles. He portrayed the blues musician L.C. Soothe in the third season of the Sundance TV series Hap and Leonard, which aired in 2018. In 2021, he appeared as a minister in the thriller film The Gateway.[30] These acting appearances represent Harding's exploration of performance beyond music, serving as a creative outlet that aligns with his expressive style, though he has not pursued further roles as of 2025.[31] Beyond acting, Harding has engaged in production work on his own recordings, co-producing his 2017 album Face Your Fear alongside Danger Mouse and self-producing his 2025 release Departures & Arrivals: Adventures of Captain Curt at Electric Deluxe Recorders.[1] The latter album introduces the "Captain Curt" persona—a space-faring pilot navigating dimensions—drawing visual inspirations from sci-fi world-building, such as Ridley Scott's films, to conceptualize its thematic scope without delving into standalone visual art creation.[25] These pursuits highlight Harding's multi-hyphenate approach, where non-musical elements enhance his artistic identity while remaining secondary to his primary focus on soul music.[1]Musical style and influences
Musical style
Curtis Harding's musical style is defined by his self-coined term "slop 'n' soul," a fusion of soul, R&B, blues, psychedelia, and rock characterized by raw, unpolished edges that evoke a sense of organic flow amid eclectic mixtures.[4][15] This approach draws from the idea of "slop" as musical leftovers—diverse elements blended imperfectly yet compellingly, rooted in soul as the foundational genre while incorporating gritty, improvisational textures.[4] Harding's sound often features vintage synthesizers and subtle psychedelic synth layers that add eerie, spacey overtones, paired with live instrumentation like punchy horns, bass grooves, and guitar riffs to create a retro-futuristic atmosphere.[32][33] Central to this style are Harding's strong baritone vocals, which deliver emotive depth reminiscent of Otis Redding's gospel-infused intensity, often shifting to falsetto for dynamic contrast and conveying a full spectrum of emotions from tenderness to sass.[34][35] His production choices emphasize live-band energy with orchestral digressions, mild psychedelia, and effects like haunting strings or Theremin-like sounds, fostering an unrefined yet immersive sonic palette.[33] This evolves from his gospel upbringing, where soul and blues formed the core, toward bolder psychedelic experimentation evident in reverb-infused arrangements and tape-like warmth that bridges traditional roots with modern edge.[15][32] Lyrically, Harding explores themes of love, introspection, and social commentary through narrative-driven songwriting that feels personal and urgent, often using metaphors of distance, resilience, and hope to reflect emotional and societal struggles.[36][37] Songs like those on his 2017 album Face Your Fear—hailed as a "genre-bending powerhouse"—exemplify this with poignant reflections on relationships and perseverance, delivered in a way that stirs raw feeling.[38][33]Influences
Curtis Harding's musical foundations were deeply rooted in gospel, shaped by his mother Dorothy's performances and her introduction to artists like Mahalia Jackson, whose powerful vocals and spiritual delivery informed his emotive singing style and thematic depth.[39] Growing up traveling with his family's gospel group, Harding absorbed the raw intensity of church music, which instilled a sense of vocal power and emotional authenticity that permeates his work.[40] His influences expanded through Southern soul icons such as Otis Redding, whose passionate delivery and raw soul expression influenced Harding's approach to conveying personal pain and joy in performance.[41] Bob Dylan also played a key role in his songwriting, providing a model for introspective lyrics and narrative structure that Harding adapted to his soulful compositions.[42] Additionally, figures like Albert King and the Everly Brothers contributed to his blues-inflected guitar work and harmonic sensibilities.[42] Early exposure to hip-hop in Atlanta, including his time with the group Proseed and the local scene featuring OutKast and the Dungeon Family, added rhythmic complexity and storytelling elements to his sound.[43] Artists like Melle Mel, Rakim, and MC Lyte from the old-school and '90s eras inspired his initial rap writing, later blending into soul through sampled influences from Isaac Hayes, B.B. King, and James Brown.[44] Harding's style evolved to incorporate psychedelic rock elements, drawn from broader experiences like travels and collaborations, echoing the experimental vibes of Parliament-Funkadelic and Sun Ra in his Afrofuturist leanings.[14] Non-musical inspirations, such as James Baldwin's writings on identity and resilience, and filmmaker Ridley Scott's epic visuals, shaped conceptual albums like his 2025 release Departures & Arrivals: Adventures of Captain Curt, which explores adventure and cosmic themes through a lens of heroism and exploration.[13][45] This progression from youthful gospel roots to an eclectic fusion of soul, rock, and psychedelia reflects Harding's nomadic life and diverse cultural encounters.[40]Discography
Studio albums
Curtis Harding's studio discography consists of four full-length solo albums as of 2025, beginning with an independent release and transitioning to the Anti- label for subsequent works. None are compilations or live recordings.[5] Soul Power was released on May 6, 2014, by Burger Records as Harding's debut album, initially issued on cassette and vinyl formats. The 12-track record features raw, garage-infused soul tracks blending Motown, blues, gospel, and rock elements, which Harding described as his signature "slop 'n' soul" style—a term he coined for the genre's eclectic, leftover-inspired fusion of sounds. Critics praised its fresh take on classic soul, with tracks like "Keep On Shining" evoking spirited R&B grooves.[4][46] Face Your Fear, Harding's major-label debut, came out on October 27, 2017, via Anti- Records, produced in collaboration with Danger Mouse. The 11-song album expands on psychedelic soul with orchestral touches and introspective lyrics, highlighted by singles "On and On" and "Need Your Love." It received strong acclaim for Harding's versatile vocals and genre-blending conviction, earning an 8.3/10 rating on AllMusic and positive reviews from NPR for its deep R&B roots. The record peaked at number 21 on the Billboard Heatseekers Albums chart.[47][48][49] If Words Were Flowers was issued on November 5, 2021, by Anti-, comprising 11 tracks written and recorded during the tumultuous period encompassing the COVID-19 pandemic. The album reflects on resilience, hope, and companionship amid isolation, with psychedelic-gospel elements in songs like the title track and "Hopeful Now." Reviewers lauded its vibrant, diverse soul sound and emotional depth, calling it a "lockdown rethink" full of uplifting introspection, as noted in Uncut (8/10) and Exclaim!.[50][17][51] Departures & Arrivals: Adventures of Captain Curt, released on September 5, 2025, by Anti-, marks Harding's fourth studio album and a concept-driven exploration of personal journeys, love, and departure framed as a soul-infused space opera. The 11-track suite merges classic soul with progressive rock and gospel influences, earning critical acclaim for its cohesive narrative and audacious scope, with PopMatters describing it as an "excellent journey" that seamlessly weaves influences, and Album of the Year aggregating a 74/100 score from reviewers.[52][24][53]Singles
Curtis Harding's singles primarily serve as lead tracks from his studio albums, with additional promotional releases issued digitally or as advance singles to build anticipation. These releases highlight his soulful sound and have received acclaim in niche genres like alternative R&B and neo-soul, though they have not achieved widespread mainstream chart dominance. For instance, his work has seen modest placements in sales charts and gained traction through media placements and streaming platforms.[5][54] Early in his career, Harding issued several promotional singles ahead of his debut album Soul Power. These included digital releases like "Next Time," "Surf," and "Heaven's On The Other Side" in 2014, which were distributed via Anti- Records to promote his emerging style.[5] A follow-up promo, "Castaway," arrived in 2015.[5] His breakthrough came with "Keep on Shining," released on March 11, 2014, as the lead single from Soul Power. The track showcased Harding's raw, retro-soul vibe and helped establish his presence in the indie music scene.[55] From his second album Face Your Fear (2017), key singles included "On and On," released June 27, 2017, which peaked at number 80 on the UK Official Singles Sales Chart for one week and later featured in the Marvel series The Falcon and the Winter Soldier.[54][56][57] "Need Your Love," also from Face Your Fear and promoted heavily with a music video in October 2017, became one of his most streamed tracks, amassing significant plays on platforms like Spotify and gaining viral attention through social media shares and user-generated content.[58][59][60] The 2021 album If Words Were Flowers was preceded by singles "I Won't Let You Down" and "Hopeful," both released as digital singles to herald the record's introspective themes.[7][5] In 2025, Harding returned with "Time," issued as the lead single on July 14 from his album Departures & Arrivals: Adventures of Captain Curt, emphasizing upbeat, journey-inspired soul. An additional single, "There She Goes," was released earlier that year as a standalone track.[38][61][7]| Title | Year | Album | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Keep on Shining | 2014 | Soul Power | Debut single; introduced Harding's slop 'n' soul style. |
| On and On | 2017 | Face Your Fear | Peaked at #80 (UK Singles Sales); featured in The Falcon and the Winter Soldier. |
| Need Your Love | 2017 | Face Your Fear | Gained viral traction via streaming and social media. |
| I Won't Let You Down | 2021 | If Words Were Flowers | Lead promotional single. |
| Time | 2025 | Departures & Arrivals | Lead single; released July 14. |