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Five-time
Grammy-winner Alicia Keys has risen as the young fresh talent of a new
generation of soul since the release of her phenomenal 2001 debut, Songs
In A Minor. Filtered through her devout respect to vintage soul, modern
hip-hop, R&B, blues, and jazz, this classically trained pianist has
developed a fusion that leads critics to call her the new Roberta Flack
with a hip-hop edge. Though barely 23, it seems that her entire life has
been a nurturing experience, preparing her for a lifetime career in
music.
Born and raised in Harlem, New York, as Alicia Augello Cook, Keys was
introduced to the piano at the age of 7, a healthy escape to the hard
inner-city street life that existed right outside her door. She majored
in choir at the Performing Arts School Of Manhattan while committing to
piano lessons throughout her childhood and into her teens, studying
Beethoven, Mozart, and Chopin (her favorite composer) as well as jazz
greats like Marian McPartland, Fats Waller, Miles Davis, and Oscar
Peterson. She also grew up listening to the likes of Donny Hathaway,
Roberta Flack, Mary J. Blige, Biggie Smalls, Tupac, and Nina Simone. At
14, she wrote her first song, "Butterflyz," which is featured on her
debut album.
During this time, Keys trained and rehearsed intensely
with vocal coach Conrad Robinson until age 16, when she graduated as her
high school valedictorian and was accepted to attend Columbia
University. Robinson introduced the young songstress to his brother
Jeff, who eventually became her manager. It turned out Keys never
enrolled in college, as she instead ventured forth to pursue a career in
music, signing a record deal with Columbia Records.
Alicia later left Columbia due to creative differences after contributing "Dah
Dee Dah (Sexy Thing)" to the label's Men In Black soundtrack, and
followed Arista Records founder Clive Davis to his new imprint, J
Records, where she found her home along with a handful of other artists.
While Davis built up his new empire, Keys performed local shows in New
York to gain exposure. Davis, who had previously promoted artists like
Whitney Houston and Carlos Santana, catapulted Keys's career by securing
her exposure on BET, MTV, and The Oprah Winfrey Show, where she gave an
unforgettable performance of her future hit single, "Fallin'," with 40
million people watching before her debut album was even in stores. Songs
In A Minor then debuted at number one on the charts upon its June 26,
2001 release, and continued to remain in the top 20 after 29 weeks,
going platinum seven times over worldwide. The disc's first single, "Fallin',"
ended the year at number two on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.
Since her chart-topping success, Keys has won numerous awards, including an
MTV VMA, two Billboard Awards, two American Music Awards, two NAACP
Image Awards, three Soul Train Awards, two World Music Awards, one ECCHO
Award, and an astounding five Grammys for Best New Artist, Song Of The
Year, Best R&B Vocal Performance, Best R&B Song, and Best R&B Album,
tying Lauryn Hill's record for the most Grammys won by a female artist
in one year.
Keys certainly has had an overwhelming start in the music
industry, but she seems undeterred by the pressure of releasing her
much-awaited 2003 sophomore album, The Diary Of Alicia Keys. Keys is
also currently writing and producing for other artists through her
company Krucial Keys Enterprise, along with her partner Kerry "Krucial"
Brothers.
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