Sarah White has a great track record for generating buzz. She's now four-for-four when it comes to starting new music projects that people quickly latch onto.
Problem is, she's zero-for-three in keeping her acts together more than a couple of years.
"This one's gonna stick," White promised with a laugh, "because it's me."
Known from the fondly remembered bands Traditional Methods, Black Blondie and Shiro Dame — all of which ended too quickly — White is stepping out under her own, birth-certificated moniker. She dropped her debut solo EP on March 2, the day she also played a captivating coming-out set opening for Poliça at the Turf Club. Now, she's taking over Icehouse next Thursday for the EP's official release party.
Along with Lizzo, Dessa and her release party's opening acts Dizzy Fae and Lady Midnight, White's five-song collection, "Laughing at Ghosts," marks an exciting new era in Twin Cities music. She and her peers are all blending and expanding the realms of hip-hop, R&B, electronic dance music and neo-soul in a tender, personalized way that strips out the machismo of those first three genres.
Trying to fit White's EP into just one of those categories is like calling the Midtown Global Market on her native South Side simply a great taco joint. There's so much more to bite into here.
In an interview last week between a gym session, business meeting and school pickup, White raised another music term to apply to her new songs: Afro-punk, which is also the name of the New York-based music blog that posted an exclusive stream of "Laughing at Ghosts" (afropunk.com).
"Afro-punk, to me, simply means music that radical black people are making," she said, pointing to the '80s punk band to which the term was first widely applied. "I was really influenced by Bad Brains, but I was also into the Deftones, Björk, Portishead, Lenny Kravitz. I didn't just sit in my room listening to India.Arie all the time, in other words."