Alicia Keys (Alicia Augello Cook) was born on this day in 1981 in Hell's
        Kitchen, Manhattan, NYC, and celebrates her 42nd birthday. She is a
        classically trained pianist who started composing songs from the age of
        12 and was signed by Columbia Records when she was only 15. Following disputes with the label she was signed to Arista by Clive Davis and released
        her critically acclaimed debut album "
Songs in A Minor" on Davis' J
        Records in 2001. It has gone on to sell over 12m copies worldwide with
        the debut single, "
Fallin'", reaching #1 and went triple platinum. To
        date she has achieved four #1 and another five Top 10 Billboard Hot 100
        #1 hit singles and has released nine albums with the first seven all
        reaching Top 10 (four #1, two #2 and another #4). Only the Christmas
        album failed to get into the top 100 with her last 'proper' album "Keys"
        (2021) reaching #41. Her albums have sold in excess of 20m copies with her single sales estimated at 38m.
      
 
      
         
       
      
        Alicia is one of three mixed race children from her Afro-American father
        and Italian, Irish, Scottish mother who raised her as a single parent
        when her father left when she was 2 years old. Her surname is a
        combination of her mother's name, Augello, and her father's, Cook. She
        contemplated making her stage name to Alicia Wild and settled on Keys to
        represent the piano keys and also stating that keys open many doors.
      
      
      
        She discovered a passion for the piano by the age of 6 and began
        classical piano training aged 7 and later received a gift of an upright
        piano from a neighbour who was moving when 10 which enabled her to
        practice. Keys wrote her first song on her piano by age 12 and also
        began studying jazz.
      
      
      
        In 1994 aged 13 she was a member of a girl group trio formed in The
        Bronx. Her vocal coach suggested that his brother Jeff Robison should
        listen to her when she performed in Harlem. He considered her the 'total
        package' and took her under his wing becoming her manager and helped her
        to record some demos to showcase at labels. Robinson introduced her to
        Warner Bros A&R executive Peter Edge who wanted to sign her but at
        the time was on the verge of leaving Warner's to join Clive Davis at
        Arista so Columbia stepped in and signed her in 1995. Her time at
        Columbia was a tribulation as they wouldn't allow her to be creative and
        wanted to mould her image and music and bring in producers to tinker
        with it. She broke free and produced her own album and presented it to
        Columbia who didn't like it. Inevitably she wanted to leave and was
        reintroduce to Edge (who by now was working at Arista) who in turn
        introduced her to Clive Davis in 1998. Davis was impressed and helped her
        negotiate her way out of Columbia, crucially along with the songs she
        had created whilst there and signed her to Arista in late 1998. Davis allowed Keys the creative freedom and control she wanted and encouraged her to
        be herself, exactly the opposite of Columbia. 
      
      
      When Davis left Arista in 2000 he set up his own label J Records taking Keys
        with him. Rather than releasing her album straight away, Davis thought
        it better to showcase her performances live and got her prime time TV
        shows and persuaded Oprah Winfrey to agree to Keys performing her debut
        single "Fallin'" on her show a week before release which then went to #1 and stayed
        there for six weeks.
      
      
      
        The debut album "Songs In A Minor", which contained much material rejected by Columbia, was released in
        June 2001 and debuted straight into the album chart at #1. It received six
        Grammy Award nominations at the 2002 Grammy Awards winning five: Song of
        the Year, Best Female R&B Vocal Performance, and Best R&B Song
        for "Fallin'", Best New Artist, and Best R&B Album.
      
      
      
        The follow up "The Diary of Alicia Keys" arrived in Dec 2003 which produced two of her best singles, in my
        view, "You Don't Know My Name" and  "If I Ain't Got You" along with "Diary" and "Karma". Interspersed she had a #1 hit with Usher on "My Boo" from his 2004 album "Confessions".
      
      
      
        The next album was a live album recorded from MTV "Unplugged" in Oct. 2005 which contained a couple of previously unreleased songs
        including a cover of Brenda Holloway's "Every Little Bit Hurts" covered by many before her by the likes of Aretha Franklin, Gladys
        Knight, Etta James and Teena Marie including by many British artists
        i.e. Cilla Black, Petula Clark, The Tremeloes, Spencer Davis Group, Ruby
        Turner, Elkie Brooks and Jaki Graham, even The Clash and The Jam had a
        go at it!
      
      
      
        In 2007 her third studio album "As I Am" provided the singles "No One", "Like You'll Never See Me Again", "Teenage Love Affair" and "Superwoman". It was a mixed bag with some rock oriented tracks and the 60s
        throwback "Saviour" featuring on The Super Edition and a cover of Little Anthony &
        The Imperials "Hurt So Bad" featured on the Japanese bonus edition (which unfortunately isn't
        available on Spotify)
      
      
      
        Then followed "The Element of Freedom" in Dec 2009 from which six singles were released ("Doesn't Mean Anything", "Try Sleeping with a Broken Heart", "Put It in a Love Song", "Put It in a Love Song" (featuring Beyoncé), "Empire State of Mind (Part II) Broken Down", "Un-Thinkable (I'm Ready)" and "Wait Til You See My Smile"). It was not one of her best with none of the singles faring well,
        two not charting at all and none making top 20.
      
      
      
        The singles from her next album, "Girl On Fire" (Nov 2012) didn't fare any better with only one of the five singles,
        the title track, entering the Hot 100. The singles being "Girl on Fire", "Brand New Me", "New Day", "Fire We Make" (with Maxwell) and "Tears Always Win".
      
      
      
        After "Girl On Fire" a decline has set in with none of her subsequent
        albums selling particularly well in comparison to her earlier work. All her first five albums were
        platinum sellers but her next album "Here" (Nov 2016) sold only 42k, "Alicia" (Sep 2020) 50k,
        "Keys" (2021) 21k. No singles from the
        remaining albums charted except for two lowly charting ones from
        "Alicia" (#69 and #90).
      
      
      
        The playlist below has been stripped down from a short list of 35 tracks
        cherry picked from her albums which represents her absolute best work
        from a soul perspective (in chronological order of release) as much of
        her music has been pop/urban.
      
Keys has won fifteen Grammy awards from twenty nine nominations, five American Music awards, ten MTV awards, seven BMI Urban awards, eight ASCAP awards, thirteen various BET awards, sixteen various Billboard awards and countless others, far too many to list but if you're interested they are listed on 
Wikipedia.
Studio Album Discography
      2001 - Songs in A Minor
      2003 - The Diary of Alicia Keys
      2007 - As I Am
      2009 - The Element of Freedom
      2012 - Girl on Fire
      2016 - Here
      2020 - Alicia
      2021 - Keys
      2022 - Santa Baby