The Province

‘NOT SO PRECIOUS ANYMORE’

Alicia Keys is revelling in her new-found freedom

- NEIL MCCORMICK

Alicia Keys arrives for our interview in London only days after performing at U.S. President Barack Obama’s second inaugurati­on ball.

Seated at a piano, playing her recent hit Girl On Fire, she had laughed as she threw in mischievou­s improvised lines, such as “Obama’s on fire!” and “Everyone knows Michelle is his girl / Together they run the world!”

In stark contrast with Beyonce’s controvers­ial rendition of the national anthem on the same day, there was never any doubt that Keys was singing live.

“That’s my style and that’s what I love,” she says, carefully avoiding criticism of her contempora­ry.

“Even when I’m singing on record there’s a lot of times when I’ll fight for a bit of imperfecti­on.

“I might not have quite hit the note to the perfect pitch but there was a soul in there and feeling that to me, delivers the emotion of that moment. For me, doing a show, the excitement of singing live and the possibilit­y that you’re not gonna be perfect — that’s the thrill of it.”

There is a deeper issue for Keys, and one that she, as a pop star and public figure, feels keenly.

“The problem is that we live in a world where everybody feels they have to be too damn perfect. You’re supposed to look perfect, sound perfect, act perfect, do everything perfect or God forbid. I don’t know where that kind of mentality has begun to leave all of us.”

It has to be said that Keys herself embodies a kind of ideal of perfection. She practicall­y glides into the room, dressed in high-heeled boots and an elegant dress, her hair cut into an asymmetric­al bob.

She is a woman who has always given an impression of control and assurednes­s, only ever hinting at self-doubt or insecurity in the lyrics to her songs.

She laughs when I point this out, confessing that she deliberate­ly cultivated a strong image, and has had cause to regret it.

“When I first started getting into the business, a young woman in a music game that was mostly men, I did feel inadequate,” she says. “How much could I possibly know? It was an experience that was so new and wildly different, it was frightenin­g.”

Now, of course, Keys is a huge star, one of the great talents of contempora­ry music: she has achieved global hit singles and sold tens of millions of albums without ever pandering to the lowest common denominato­r.

She’s a virtuoso pianist, a sensitive singer-songwriter and a soulful, emotional vocalist; like a cross between Carole King and Aretha Franklin with a dash of hip-hop bravado thrown in.

She attended the Profession­al Performing Arts School in New York, and was, in some ways, hot-housed for stardom, after coming under the tutelage of record industry mogul Clive Davis while still a teenager.

Her debut album, Songs in A Minor, released in 2001, won five Grammy Awards and sold 12 million copies worldwide. Her career seems to have progressed so smoothly in the years since that it is a surprise to hear her talk about it in terms of struggle.

“I had a vision for myself and felt I wasn’t allowed to express it, because people always want to tell you, ‘Do it like this, don’t do that, you should do this, you can’t do that’. So I did feel like I had to control it. I had to claim my space,” she says.

“It was about demanding respect, saying, ‘Here’s what I want’, and pushing people as opposed to being pushed around. I found that if you acted like you knew what you were doing, people would believe you knew what you were doing.”

Her profession­al success came at a personal cost which, she says, took her years to recover from.

“I moved at such a speed I tended to feel like I was on a hamster wheel and I was just running in circles. I felt a little bit encaged. I was really not happy but I didn’t understand why, because here’s this big dream and I’m living it, so what’s wrong with me?”

She talks about the pressure she was under to create, perform and promote, with the subtle, bullying implicatio­n that if she didn’t do certain things, she was putting her career at risk, “So everything was kind of based on fear.”

You cant race Keys’s journey towards greater self-awareness and fulfilment through her albums such as As I Am (2007) and The Element of Freedom (2009), which contained her blockbuste­r duet with Jay-Z and ode to her hometown, Empire State of Mind.

“I was searching for myself, really recognizin­g the things that were working in my life, stepping into my own womanhood,” she says.

“Then when I became a mother it took on a whole other level of importance.”

Our talk turns to parenthood and the demands of raising a child incomplete­ly different circumstan­ces from her own upbringing.

Keys was brought up by a working single mother in straitened circumstan­ces in Hell’s Kitchen, New York. Her son Egypt, by contrast, is the privileged child of wealthy show business stars.

“I’m always thinking about his well-being and understand­ing, how he processes important things,” she says. “Things can be really empty in this world, and I don’t just mean the music world. It can become a very meaningles­s place if you don’t really understand: who am I? Why am I here? What am I doing? To feel fulfilment and have a deeper level of understand­ing, personally, that is the most important thing. But he’s only two, and the world is a wonder to him.”

“He’s excited about the moon and airplanes and things that are beautiful and interestin­g. If I can teach him how to be grateful and in awe of the beauty of the world, that’s my goal.”

Musically, Keys is revelling in her sense of new-found freedom. Her latest album, Girl On Fire (which came out last November) is sensitive and soulful, but it is also poppy, funky and playful.

“I don’t care so much anymore, to be honest. I don’t want that to be taken wrongly — I’m very serious about my craft, I want to make the best music that people have ever heard. I want to make music that goes down from generation to generation and people never forget. But I’m not so precious anymore. I want to feel that excitement that comes with something that you have no idea how it’s going to turn out.”

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 ??  ?? For singer Alicia Keys, profession­al success hasn’t always been easy. She says it took her years to recover from an environmen­t in which she was demanding respect so other people would believe in her.
For singer Alicia Keys, profession­al success hasn’t always been easy. She says it took her years to recover from an environmen­t in which she was demanding respect so other people would believe in her.

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