She may be beautiful, but Alicia Keys is a musician first and foremost. She plants herself firmly behind the piano keys on her debut, unlike many of the booty-waggin' junior divas who are crowding the R&B videoscape these days. Though many of the tracks on Songs in A Minor are embellished with adolescent angst, this 20-year-old's substantial, gorgeously soul-drenched alto putties the cracks between notes with astonishing ease. "Fallin'," the album's first single, showcases Keys at her best. She wails plaintively and passionately over rolling blues chords, in the tradition of the greats that this young talent clearly wants to align herself with--Stevie Wonder, Donny Hathaway, and Aretha Franklin. She swoops and soars over the spicy, flamenco-fueled melody that opens "Mr. Mann," one of the many winning tracks gathered here. And she digs deep into a remake of the beloved Prince B-side, "How Come U Don't Call Me Anymore?" packing more heat into her melismatic wails than most singers twice her age. --Sylvia W. Chan
Songs in A Minor,Alicia Keys,J-Records,Contemporary R&B,Hip-Hop,Neo-Soul,Pop,R&B,R&B/Soul,Soul/R & B,Soul/Reggae/Rhythm & Blues,Urban
Christian Music:
- Soulife
- Stevie Wonder - Song Review: Greatest Hits
- Subject
- Talking Book [Original recording remastered]
- The #1's [Original recording remastered]
- The Definitive Collection [Original recording remastered]
- The Essential Michael Jackson
- The Hits/The B-Sides [Explicit Lyrics]
- The One
- The Score [Explicit Lyrics]
Christian Music
Roberto Capello: Ticket to Concert