
She's true to style. Ever since defining the look and sound of
street-but-sweet over two years ago, Aaliyah has personified
originality with her enigmatic, smooth vocal delivery, sophisticated
musical sensibilities, and a masterful sense of independence. The
New York-born singer's 1994 debut album, "AGE AIN'T NOTHING BUT A
NUMBER," went platinum and spawned a pair of gold singles: "Back
& Forth" and "At Your Best (You Are Love)". "I still remember
how nervous I was right before 'Back & Forth' came out," says
the charismatic vocalist, who recorded her debut album at age
fourteen. "It was my first single, and I kept wondering if people
would accept it. When it went gold, I had my answer, and it was just
such an incredibly satisfying feeling." She spent much of a
whirlwind '94-'95 on the road, with tours that took her across
Europe, Japan, and as far as South Africa.
The release of "ONE IN A MILLION," her second album (and
her first for Atlantic), comes just as Aaliyah begins her senior
year as a student at Detroit's Performing Arts High School. "School
is a big priority for me," says the dance major. "My principal
hasreally been there to help me keep my goals as a student in hand
as I work to grow as an artist."
Aaliyah began performing at a young age, and by the time she was
eleven, she was singing on stage in Las Vegas for a five-night stand
with Gladys Knight's troupe. From there, the dedicated singer would
emerge from a non-stop vocal training regimen with a sound and
vision completely her own. "It came out of nowhere, yet it felt
totally natural," recalls Aaliyah. "I was tripped out. As that first
album was coming to a finish, I waslistening back to the tracks
thinking, 'Wow, that's really me. This is how I am and how I sound.'"
RELEASE TITLE: One In A Million
RELEASE BLURB:
On Aaliyah's new album, "ONE IN A MILLION," the now
seventeen-year-old artist steps out into "the new world of funk,"
delivering a fresh set of soulful romantic ballads and dope up-tempo
tracks. She offers a solid nod to hip-hop inspiration in duet
fashion, with the help of mic rockers Treach on "A Girl Like You"
and Slick Rick on a playfully bad house party take on Marvin Gaye's
"Got To Give It Up."
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