Imperial Valley Press

For Kelly Rowland, good things come in threes

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NEW YORK (AP) — If good things come in threes, then Kelly Rowland is basking in her current moment of bliss.

Less than a month ago the Grammy winner birthed her second child, Noah; she celebrated her milestone 40th birthday last week; and on Friday she’s dropping a new EP, simply titled “K.”

“A couple of months ago, I said I’ll have two births: the birth of the baby and the birth of an album,” said Rowland, after cautioning that her 6-year-old son Titan or the cries of her newborn might interrupt the interview. “Some songs I’ve had for years, some of the songs I’ve had for maybe a year or a couple of months, but it’s all come together so beautifull­y.”

The result of her musical labor of love is a six-track project heavily influenced by Afrobeat rhythms. So how was it recording with a growing womb?

“(I was) out of breath!” Rowland laughed.

“K” features the toe-tapping, dance track “Crazy,” as well as the sultry “Hitman,” a song that should be a staple in the type of sweaty, basement parties the pandemic can’t allow.

On the island-flavored “Better,” Rowland emotionall­y sings: “You better love me/’Cause I’m not going nowhere.”

“I definitely tell you some of me and Tim’s business,” she said with a laugh, adding that she’s fallen more in love with husband Tim Weatherspo­on during the forced-closeness of the pandemic. “When I hear a song, I don’t hear it for, ‘Is this going to be a hit record?’ I hear it for how it makes me feel … and with the records that everyone will hear on the (EP), there’s a connection to all of them.”

The single “Black Magic,” which features rhythmic percussion and triumphant horns, is an ode to being “unapologet­ically Black and proud and full of joy,” Rowland explained. It’s a track exuding self-love and pride by a woman whose name, thanks to a Kanye West lyric, has become an adjective for a beautiful darker-toned Black woman. But Rowland didn’t always possess that “Black Magic” confidence.

“I did notice it with certain photo shoots or with people being honest and saying, ‘ Well, we can’t have her for this campaign. She’s a bit too dark,’” she revealed. “Did it affect me? For a while it did because I was thinking, ‘Well, if I’m darker, then does that mean I’m (not) going to get the same opportunit­ies?’”

But Rowland found comfort in the successes of artists like Janet Jackson, Whitey Houston and Brandy, along with encouragem­ent from older women close to her, and became confident in her complexion. She’s continued to breathe that esteem into girls who look to her.

“My confidence took a while (and) there was some times I was faking it until I made it,” said Rowland, who was also celebrated in Beyoncé’s “Brown Skin Girl” song and music video. “The girl who would possibly feel like (I did), I have to bring her along for the journey (and) I have to stand up for her.”

 ?? Photo by Richard Shotwel/Invision/AP ?? In this 2019 file photo, Kelly Rowland attends the premiere of “What Men Want” in Los Angeles.
Photo by Richard Shotwel/Invision/AP In this 2019 file photo, Kelly Rowland attends the premiere of “What Men Want” in Los Angeles.

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