Sweat, who appeared Saturday at Riverwind Casino in Norman, has been cultivating relationships with fans for years, since debuting solo with the monster hit I Want Her, ushering in the new jack swing style of the late 1980s. Twisted and Nobody came with the second wave in the mid 1990s, both Billboard hits which likely played at your junior high or wedding dance.
Its a norm when people have grown up with you, said Sweat, now 50. Its normal for people to feel like they are a part of their childhood or part of their first love or when they first got married or whatever.
With that rapport solidified, his current station has him touring; producing his most recent album, last years Til the Morning; and hosting The Sweat Hotel, a syndicated, call-in radio show where listeners bring confessions and stories to the man behind the mic.
Listen to Nobody again. Who wouldnt want to hear his advice on relationships?
A lot of times relationships break up because two people do not know how to communicate, Sweat said. They talk at each other, not to each other. That destroys many relationships. If I got a woman yelling at me, as opposed to saying, Can I talk to you a minute? This is bothering me you might say the same thing, but its the way you say it that makes me more receptive or not receptive.
STILL IN THE GAME
Hes listening to his listeners.
They want to fix whatevers broken. [Their relationship is] not what it used to be in the very beginning, he said. Theyre trying out ways to fix what has been broken or what has been messed up, so they try and find ways to fix it.
But can he fix them?
Most definitely, Sweat said. Its not even a problem.
Just dont call him a doctor in the field.
No, I dont feel like a love doctor, he said. I feel like Keith Sweat, who will let people call on me and ask for advice.
Sweat, who grew up in Harlem listening to The OJays and The Isley Brothers on the radio, approaches his music the same cavalier manner: Its just business-as-usual.
Basically, I have a built in audience. Im already established from back in the day. Its not hard at all for me. Its an audience thats been very loyal to me, he said. I have a catalog thats very wide and long. Its been one of those things Ive been able to sustain from back in the day until now.