Alicia Keys album

Album   Released Publisher Rating
As I Am 2007 Sony BMG
Unplugged 2005 Sony
The Diary of Alicia Keys 2003 J
Songs in A Minor 2001 J
additional releases
Review by Marisa Brown, All Music Guide
Released:
November 13, 2007
Label:
Sony BMG
Rating:
Styles:
Adult Alternative Pop/Rock
Contemporary R&B
Neo-Soul
By now established as a major and talented force in the mainstream music world, Alicia Keys has perhaps earned the right to explore a little, to venture into new genres while still keeping a foot firmly planted in the R&B/neo-soul she grew out of. On her third full-length, As I Am, 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. Instead, here, as evidenced in "No One" -- which sounds all too ready to take on a "reggae dance mix" -- the guitar-driven "I Need You," "Wreckless Love," or "Where Do We Go from Here," which pays tribute to both Stax Motown ("All I can do/Is follow the tracks of my tears," she sings, after a sample of Wendy Rene's "After Laughter [Comes Tears]" crackles through the first few bars), this is music that owes as much to pop as it does R&B, highlighted no less by the fact that the queen of radio rock herself, Linda Perry, co-writes three of the songs with Keys, including the straight-from-the-Stripped-sessions "The Thing About Love" and "Superwoman." It is on the latter, in fact, that Keys, unsurprisingly, turns furthest away from the style that brought her initial success (more so even than on the John Mayer collabo, "Lesson Learned," which is actually not bad) toward the generic-pop world, sliding in between corny and sincere, sometimes even in the same breath. "When I'm breaking down/And I can't be found/...'Cause no one knows/Me underneath these clothes/But I can fly/We can fly," she sings in the bridge, flatly. Keys has never been a brilliant lyricist, but she's always been able to write simple yet affective and honest words that don't seem trite, something that is forgotten here, and makes the track one of the weakest on the album. Fortunately, this doesn't happen too often, and as As I Am weaves its way through the drums and various keyboards and vocal harmonies that make up the backbone of her work here, punctuated by the great, hooky melodies and strings, you get the impression that this is in fact the sign of an artist who's not content to only follow the path that's brought her previous acclaim, an artist who's looking to find more, both about herself and her music, and an artist who carries these developments, these insights, with her. And so even though As I Am is a flawed work -- a little too poppy, a little too clichéd -- it is also indicative of what Keys can and will do, and that she is someone, thanks to her curiosity, intelligence, and natural talent, who will be able to mature and grow for years to come.
Track # Track Time Composer
1 As I Am (Intro) 1:52 Brothers, Batson, Keys, Ambrosius Ringtone
2 Go Ahead 4:35 Brothers, Batson, Keys, Ambrosius Ringtone
3 Superwoman 4:34 Perry, Mostyn, Keys Ringtone
4 No One 4:13 Brothers, Harry, Keys Ringtone
5 Like You'll Never See Me Again 5:15 Brothers, Keys Ringtone
6 Lesson Learned 4:13 Mayer, Keys
7 Wreckless Love 3:52 Keys, Lilly, Splash
8 The Thing About Love 3:49 Perry, Keys Ringtone
9 Teenage Love Affair 3:10 Bridges, Hampton, Nixon, Keys, Lilly, Splash Ringtone
10 I Need You 5:09 Green, Batson, Keys, Lilly Ringtone
11 Where Do We Go from Here 4:10 Brothers, Frierson, Frierson, Keys, Lilly Ringtone
12 Prelude to a Kiss 2:07 Keys Ringtone
13 Tell You Something (Nana's Reprise) 4:28 Brothers, Stevenson, Green, Mostyn, Keys, Haney Ringtone
14 Sure Looks Good to Me 4:31 Perry, Keys Ringtone
Back to the topUnplugged
additional releases
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
October 11, 2005
Label:
Sony
Rating:
Styles:
Urban
Contemporary R&B
Neo-Soul
Forget that it's awfully hard to call this live recording Unplugged. Unlike the early installments of the MTV series, which focused on a performer accompanied only with an acoustic guitar, resulting in unsurprisingly simple affairs, Alicia Keys' Unplugged is big, splashy, and immodest -- even if her guitarist is playing acoustic and she plays a piano, not a synth, the extra vocalists, horn section, strings, and full rhythm section complete with electric bass makes this anything but "unplugged." But that doesn't really matter, since this is presented and marketed as a live album more than an acoustic record, and, as a live album, it's OK. Certainly, Keys and her 16 supporting musicians are professionals and they deliver tight, polished grooves, giving her plenty of space to improv and vamp, which is in contrast to her controlled studio albums. But that's not the only way Unplugged differs from Keys' other two albums. This, more than either Songs in A Minor or The Diary, illustrates why Alicia Keys fits into the post-hip-hop soul world: she places groove and feel above the song. Nowhere is this more evident than her version here of Prince's "How Come U Don't Call Me Anymore" (which she straightens out and truncates to "How Come You Don't Call Me") where she speeds along to the bridge after singing the first verse, then just dispenses with the song altogether, spending the rest of the time vamping, occasionally going back to the bridge. Since she sounds good and the band sounds good, this works pretty well on a sheer sonic level -- it's good late-night mood music -- but there's no sense of storytelling or momentum to her performances: she starts the song in one place and stays there riding in circles until the end. With the exception of her duet with Maroon 5's Adam Levine on the Rolling Stones' "Wild Horses" -- duets, by their very nature, necessitate that they be performed as complete songs -- that's true of nearly every cut here, whether they're originals or covers; the songs are stripped down to their hooks and grooves. Over these rhythmic vamps, Keys does have some impressive vocal runs where she departs from the original melody and glides by on the sheer sound of her voice, but when the songs are reduced to the their bare essence, her vocalizing doesn't become a way of telling a story, it becomes the reason she's playing music in the first place. While that doesn't make for a bad listen -- she has genuine talent as a singer and her band is sleek and skilled, so they can sell this supple, seductive sound quite well -- it doesn't make for a particularly compelling one, either.
Track # Track Time Composer
1 Intro Alicia's Prayer (Acappella) 1:11 Traditional
2 Karma 2:10 Brothers, Keys, Smith Ringtone
3 Heartburn 3:03 Mosley, Keys, Nelson, Rose, Millsap
4 A Woman's Worth 3:30 Isley, Jasper, Isley, Isley, Isley, Isley, Keys, Rose Ringtone
5 Unbreakable 4:34 Glenn, West, Keys, Lilly
6 How Come You Don't Call Me 5:23 Prince
7 If I Was Your Woman 4:04 Jones, McMurray, Sawyer
8 If I Ain't Got You 4:06 Keys Ringtone
9 Every Little Bit Hurts 4:01 Cobb
10 Streets of New York (City Life) 7:35 Griffin, Barrier, Keys, Jones, Smith, Martin
11 Wild Horses 6:04 Jagger, Richards
12 Diary 5:53 Brother, Keys Ringtone
13 You Don't Know My Name 3:35 Williams, Bailey, Kent, West, Keys, Lilly Ringtone
14 Stolen Moments 5:14 Brothers, Watson, Keys, Green
15 Fallin' 5:10 Keys Ringtone
16 Love It or Leave It Alone/Welcome to Jamrock 9:20 Davis, Khaleel, Williams, Kamoze, Marley, Murphy, Marley, DeChalus
Back to the topThe Diary of Alicia Keys
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
December 02, 2003
Label:
J
Rating:
Styles:
Urban
Contemporary R&B
Neo-Soul
Since Alicia Keys' 2001 debut album, Songs in A Minor, was ever so slightly overpraised, expectations for her second album, 2003's The Diary of Alicia Keys, were ever so slightly too high. Songs in A Minor not only kicked off a wave of ambitious new neo-soul songsters, it fit neatly into the movement of ambitious yet classicist new female singer/songwriters that ranged from the worldbeat-inflected pop of Nelly Furtado to the jazzy Norah Jones, whose success may not have been possible if Keys hadn't laid the groundwork with such soulful work as her hit "Fallin'." Such success at such a young age, even if deserved, can be too much too soon, since young songwriters showered with praise and riches may find it hard to see the world outside of their own cocoon. The very title of The Diary of Alicia Keys -- at once disarmingly simple and self-important -- suggests that Keys, like Furtado, took her stardom a little too seriously and felt compelled to present her worldview unfiltered, dispensing with artistic ambiguities and leaving each song as a portrait of Alicia Keys, the woman as a young artist. As she somewhat bafflingly says in her liner notes, "these songs are like my daily entrees," which likely means that these were indeed intended to play like unedited entries in a journal, a goal that she's fulfilled quite successfully, even if it does mean that the album often plays a diary, leaving listeners in the role of observers instead of seeing themselves in the songs. This was a problem on Furtado's nearly simultaneously released Folklore, but Keys trumps her peer in one key way -- musically, this is a seamless piece of work, a sultry slow groove that emphasizes her breathy, seductive voice and lush soulfulness. Tonally, this is ideal late-night romantic music, even when the tempos are kicked up a notch as on the blaxploitation-fueled "Heartburn," yet beneath that sensuous surface there is some crafty, complex musicality, particularly in how Keys blurs lines between classic soul, modern rhythms, jazz, pop melodies, and singer/songwriter sensibility. It's an exceptionally well-constructed production, and as a sustained piece of sonic craft, it's not just seductive, it's a good testament to Keys' musical strengths (which can even withstand Andre Harris and Vidal Davis' irritating squeaky voice production signature on "So Simple"). What the album lacks are songs as immediate as "Fallin'" or as compelling as "A Woman's Worth," and that, combined with her insular outlook, is where Diary comes up short and reveals that it is indeed merely a second album. Such is the problem of arriving with a debut as fully formed as Songs in A Minor at such a young age -- listeners tend to expect more from the sequel, forgetting that this an artist still in her formative stages. So, those expecting another album where Keys sounds wise beyond her years will bound to be disappointed by The Diary of Alicia Keys, since her writing reveals her age in a way it never did on the debut. Yet that is a typical problem with sophomore efforts, and while this is a problem, it's one that is outweighed by her continually impressive musical achievements; they're enough to make The Diary worth repeated listens, and they're enough to suggest that Keys will continue to grow on her third album.
Track # Track Time Composer
1 Harlem's Nocturne 1:43 Mosley, Keys, Nelson, Millsap
2 Karma 4:16 Brothers, Keys, Smith Ringtone
3 Heartburn 3:28 Mosley, Keys, Nelson, Millsap
4 If I Was Your Woman/Walk on By 3:06 Jones, McMurray, Bacharach, David, Sawyer
5 You Don't Know My Name 6:06 Williams, Bailey, Kent, West, Keys, Lilly Ringtone
6 If I Ain't Got You 3:48 Keys Ringtone
7 Diary 4:44 Brothers, Keys Ringtone
8 Dragon Days 4:36 Keys
9 Wake Up 4:27 Brothers, Keys
10 So Simple 3:49 Brothers, Hopkins, Harrison, Keys, Lilly, Smith
11 When You Really Love Someone 4:09 Harris, Davis, Keys, Lilly Ringtone
12 Feeling U, Feeling Me (Interlude) 2:07 Brothers, Keys
13 Slow Down 4:18 Keys
14 Samsonite Man 4:12 Keys, Green, Rose
15 Nobody Not Really (Interlude) 2:56 Keys, Rose
Back to the topSongs in A Minor
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
June 05, 2001
Label:
J
Rating:
Styles:
Urban
Contemporary R&B
Neo-Soul
Alicia Keys' debut album, Songs in A Minor, made a significant impact upon its release in the summer of 2001, catapulting the young singer/songwriter to the front of the neo-soul pack. Critics and audiences were captivated by a 19-year-old singer whose taste and influences ran back further than her years, encompassing everything from Prince to smooth '70s soul, even a little Billie Holiday. In retrospect, it was the of Alicia Keys that was as attractive as the record, since soul fans were hungering for a singer/songwriter who seemed part of the tradition without being as spacy as Macy Gray or as hippie mystic as Erykah Badu while being more reliable than Lauryn Hill. Keys was all that, and she had style to spare -- elegant, sexy style accentuated by how she never oversang, giving the music a richer feel. It was rich enough to compensate for some thinness in the writing -- though it was a big hit, "Fallin'" doesn't have much body to it -- which is a testament to Keys' skills as a musician. And, the fact is, even though there are some slips in the writing, there aren't many, and the whole thing remains a startling assured, successful debut that deserved its immediate acclaim and is already aging nicely.
Track # Track Time Composer
1 Piano & I 1:52 Keys
2 Girlfriend 3:34 Dupri, Thompson, Keys
3 How Come You Don't Call Me 3:57 Prince
4 Fallin' 3:30 Keys Ringtone
5 Troubles 4:28 Brothers, Keys
6 Rock Wit U 5:36 Brothers, Keys, Smith
7 A Woman's Worth 5:03 Rose, Keys Ringtone
8 Jane Doe 3:48 Brothers Jr., Burruss, Keys, Smith
9 Goodbye 4:20 Keys
10 The Life 5:25 Brothers, Burruss, Keys, Smith
11 Mr. Man 4:09 Keys, Cozier
12 Never Felt This Way (Interlude) 2:01 McKnight
13 Butterflyz 4:08 Keys Ringtone
14 Why Do I Feel So Sad 4:25 Campbell, Keys
15 Caged Bird (Outro) 3:02 Keys
16 Lovin' U 3:49 Keys