Aaliyah
1979 – 2001 (22)
She was fifteen when she walked into a recording studio and cut an album that sold two million copies. Aaliyah Dana Haughton was born in Brooklyn, raised in Detroit, and grew up watching her uncle Barry Hankerson run Blackground Records from the living room. She sang at her aunt's wedding at eleven, and the room went quiet.
By fourteen, she had a record deal. By fifteen, she was a star. She moved through the industry with a stillness that looked like confidence but may have been something else entirely -- the composure of someone who had seen too much too early and decided not to show it.

The album Age Ain't Nothing but a Number was produced by R. Kelly, who she married illegally at fifteen in a relationship that the adults around her enabled. She never spoke publicly about what that cost her. She simply erased it. She switched labels, switched producers, switched everything about her sound. She found Timbaland and Missy Elliott, two outsiders making beats nobody else understood, and together they built a new vocabulary for R&B. One in a Million sounded like nothing else on radio in 1996. The beats were off-kilter. The bass slid in places where bass was not supposed to go. Aaliyah did not fight the beat -- she floated on top of it, whispering verses that landed harder than any shout.

Are You That Somebody? was the announcement. That baby-cry sample, the stuttering rhythm, the way her voice slipped between the drums like a secret -- the track announced that R&B had a new direction and Aaliyah was already there. She followed it with her 2001 self-titled album, a record that perfected the sound she had been building since she was a teenager. Try Again became the first song to win a Grammy based on radio and video play alone.

She died on August 25, 2001, in a plane crash in the Bahamas. She was twenty-two. Three studio albums, ten years in the industry, and a catalog that R&B has been catching up to ever since. Every singer who learned to sing low instead of high, to trust the production, to let the silence between words mean as much as the words themselves -- they are all working in the space she cleared.

Aaliyah was profiled in the documentary, Aaliyah: The Princess of R&B, in 2021.

Image Credits

1,414 artist portraits across 5 genres (Rock, Jazz, Soul, Blues, Folk). 1,363 sourced from Wikipedia (Creative Commons / Public Domain), 50 from Deezer (promotional artwork).

Full attribution breakdown →

Aaliyah

1979 – 2001 (22)
She was fifteen when she walked into a recording studio and cut an album that sold two million copies. Aaliyah Dana Haughton was born in Brooklyn, raised in Detroit, and grew up watching her uncle Barry Hankerson run Blackground Records from the living room. She sang at her aunt's wedding at eleven, and the room went quiet.
By fourteen, she had a record deal. By fifteen, she was a star. She moved through the industry with a stillness that looked like confidence but may have been something else entirely -- the composure of someone who had seen too much too early and decided not to show it.

The album Age Ain't Nothing but a Number was produced by R. Kelly, who she married illegally at fifteen in a relationship that the adults around her enabled. She never spoke publicly about what that cost her. She simply erased it. She switched labels, switched producers, switched everything about her sound. She found Timbaland and Missy Elliott, two outsiders making beats nobody else understood, and together they built a new vocabulary for R&B. One in a Million sounded like nothing else on radio in 1996. The beats were off-kilter. The bass slid in places where bass was not supposed to go. Aaliyah did not fight the beat -- she floated on top of it, whispering verses that landed harder than any shout.

Are You That Somebody? was the announcement. That baby-cry sample, the stuttering rhythm, the way her voice slipped between the drums like a secret -- the track announced that R&B had a new direction and Aaliyah was already there. She followed it with her 2001 self-titled album, a record that perfected the sound she had been building since she was a teenager. Try Again became the first song to win a Grammy based on radio and video play alone.

She died on August 25, 2001, in a plane crash in the Bahamas. She was twenty-two. Three studio albums, ten years in the industry, and a catalog that R&B has been catching up to ever since. Every singer who learned to sing low instead of high, to trust the production, to let the silence between words mean as much as the words themselves -- they are all working in the space she cleared.

Aaliyah was profiled in the documentary, Aaliyah: The Princess of R&B, in 2021.

One in a Million (1996) One in a Million (1996)
Aaliyah (2001) Aaliyah (2001)
Age Ain’t Nothing but a Number (1994)
One in a Million (1996)
Aaliyah (2001)
Rare Recordings and DJ Remixes (2005)
Best of Baby Girl: Chopped & Screwed (2009)
The Definitive Collection (2011)
r&bsoulpop
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Image Credits

1,414 artist portraits across 5 genres (Rock, Jazz, Soul, Blues, Folk). 1,363 sourced from Wikipedia (Creative Commons / Public Domain), 50 from Deezer (promotional artwork).

Full attribution breakdown →

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The Sunday Drop One song. One story. Every Sunday.