Alicia
Keys' Troubled Time Leads to Big Success
By Iain Blair Reuters
R&B singer Alicia
Keys is enjoying a
successful worldwide tour, a chart-topping album and will act in
an upcoming movie, but it might not have happened, she said, were
it not for a near breakdown two years ago.
Alicia Keys, whose current hits include "No
One," is
in the middle of her "As I Am" tour. The new "As
I Am" album
debuted on record charts at No. 1 and has sold over 3 million copies.
In October, she makes her film debut in "The Secret Life of
Bees," starring Queen Latifah and Jennifer Hudson. Based on
the best-selling novel of the same name, the movie is co-produced
by Will Smith and backed by indie powerhouse Fox Searchlight.
While Alicia
Keys seems to lead a charmed life
and has the sort of career that most other 26-year-olds could barely
imagine,
it hasn't always
been so rosy.
Two years ago, the singer
went through a troubled period that nearly derailed her life and
career. A workaholic
lifestyle and the death
of a close relative from cancer pushed her "very close" to
the breaking point, she admits.Instead of having a public meltdown,
Keys faced her demons in private.
"I knew I needed time away, so I went to Egypt for a month
-- on my own, which gave it a whole different perspective," she
told Reuters in a recent interview.
"It allowed me to see
things I'd never seen before -- all the temples on the Nile, the
Pyramids, the history.
It was so rich and
beautiful and strong, and it inspired me so much, and renewed me."
Time to Reflect
Keys said she felt like it was important to be alone so she could
reflect on her thoughts and examine her life, away from the media
spotlight. She also cut back her work schedule.
"I'm definitely a workaholic in some ways, although less than
I was before," she said.
Ultimately, she said, the near-breakdown brought about an artistic
breakthrough that helped shape the music on her third album and her
edgier stage persona.
Billboard magazine, in its
review of "As I Am," said Keys "takes
a step closer toward the soul revival popularized by John Legend,
with full band arrangements and bright horn hooks, only occasionally
falling back into the piano/melisma combination that drove the singles
off her first two albums."
Alicia Keys has always prided herself on being
in control of her career and music, producing her records and writing
songs,
but ironically,
she was able to push herself more on the new album by giving up some
of that control, she said.
"I purposely didn't have such a kind of controlling approach
about it and I allowed the music to flow," she said. "I've
come more into my own, and really, with experience comes confidence
and a little bit more of awareness of how I would like to do it,
having learned from the past."
She added that she is anxious to experiment even more and wants
to work with rock acts like the White Stripes, Green Day, U2 or Coldplay.
"Things that are not quite of the same world, or so you think," she
said, "but when you put them together it's just really interesting."
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