Music is timeless. It never expires. R&B singer Case knows and believes this. When he makes music, he draws from the inspiration that greats like Marvin Gaye or Michael Jackson have instilled in him. Knowing the influence these singers have had on his life and career, Case Woodard doesn t take his purpose in music lightly. He states: We have a responsibility to the artists that came before us. Having released four albums, three on Def Jam Records, and one independently, the Grammy-nominated Case Woodard had success in the 90s, with his self-titled debut album, which featured the Platinum-selling smash hit Touch Me Tease Me, and his Platinum sophomore album Personal Conversation, which spawned big hits like Happily Ever After and Faded Pictures. In 2001, he scored his first number one hit with Missing You from his third album the Gold selling Open Letter. As one of very few R&B artists on the legendary hip-hop label at that time, Case was in the wedding when hip-hop officially married R&B, helping to pioneer a sound at the height of the label s success in that musical genre. His musical contributions to that specific time period can t be denied. But in 2015, when strip club music dominates the R&B charts and the traditional sound of the genre is overshadowed by a song s twerk potential, Case hasn t lost sight of his musical mission. With his fifth album Heaven s Door, Case revisits a time when artists spoke truth in their music. He also states: Our music has always been the story of us, and with this album, I m on the doorstep of my own personal heaven.