

Latest Release

- NOV 27, 2023
- 1 Song
- Confessions (Expanded Edition) · 2004
- The Diary of Alicia Keys · 2003
- As I Am (Expanded Edition) · 2007
- The Element of Freedom · 2009
- The Hits Collection, Vol. One (Deluxe Edition with Videos) · 2009
- The Diary of Alicia Keys · 2003
- Girl On Fire (Remixes) - EP · 2012
- The Hits Collection, Vol. One (Deluxe Edition) · 2009
- Girl On Fire · 2012
- City of Gods - Single · 2022
Essential Albums
- Alicia Keys went from teenage prodigy to 21st Century Soul Queen almost instantly after the release of her 2001 debut, and she continues to wear her crown with confidence on her follow-up, The Diary of Alicia Keys (2003). Keys reaches back two decades for inspiration, giving special attention to R&B balladry with a smoldering cover of Gladys Knight’s “If I Was Your Woman,” and invoking the lush elegance of Philly soul with “You Don’t Know My Name.” Better still: “Heartburn,” a sweat-drenched throwback to ’70s funk co-produced by hip-hop mastermind Timbaland. And Alicia displays a definite Aretha Franklin influence on “Wake Up,” a strutting number with a provocative lyric. As on her first album, Keys’ grasp of songwriting craft and classically-trained piano lend these tracks uncommon substance. Her innate poise as a singer only makes the erotic longing of her lyrics all the more effective—tracks like “Karma” and “Samsonite Man” carry an especially potent charge. Instrumental interludes help frame these sonic vignettes of loneliness and desire. It all adds up to make Keys’ Diary a must-hear work.
- New York wunderkind Alicia Keys flaunts her prodigious vocal talent and piano proficiency on this 16-track debut. The deep, purring blues groove and towering, Aretha Franklin-indebted vocal of “Fallin’” paved the way for a collection that takes in tight, retro arrangements, hip-hop flourishes (as on the ODB-sampling “Girlfriend”), and jazz-flecked neo-soul melodies. And the ‘70s-styled funk of “How Come You Don’t Call Me” nods to Keys’ precocity and impending career longevity.
Albums
- 2022
- 2021
- 2016
- 2012
- Crucial tracks from a queen of contemporary R&B.
- Apple Music's live series continues with Alicia Keys in New York City.
- NYC street scenes, soaring vocals, and expert piano playing.
- Find your workout state of mind with the singer’s most inspiring songs.
- The classical music and classic soul she loves.
- The pop-soul maven stretches out with funk jams.
Live Albums
Compilations
- 2008
Appears On
- Saluting 20 years of Alicia Keys’ second studio album.
- Featuring conversations with Alicia Keys, Muni Long, and H.E.R.
- Alicia Keys takes the stage in NYC for a masquerade ball.
- She channels Eartha Kitt for her Christmas album debut.
- Previewing her Apple Music Live Holiday Masquerade Ball.
- Ebro talks to the R&B queen about her album 'KEYS.'
- Nourishing the soul with some Alicia Keys vibes.
About Alicia Keys
As R&B hurtled toward the future in the early 2000s and pop was achieving new levels of gloss, Alicia Keys stood out not just as a torchbearer for organic, old-school soul, but as a quadruple threat—captivating singer, skilled keyboardist, pop-savvy songwriter, and ambitious producer—rarely seen since the heydays of Stevie Wonder and Prince. The artist born Alicia Augello Cook in 1981 was classically trained but a product of the streets, raised by a single mother in a rough Hell’s Kitchen neighborhood from which piano-playing offered sanctuary. Keys’ combination of elegant songcraft and raw attitude would give hits like “Fallin’” (2001) and “No One” (2007) ample crossover appeal among pop, R&B and adult-contemporary audiences, and she carved out a place in the rap canon thanks to her skyscraping chorus on JAY-Z’s ubiquitous 2009 anthem “Empire State of Mind”. She’s continued to put up hall-of-fame numbers: in her first two decades, Keys never had an album chart lower than No. 2 on the Billboard 200. But from her lofty position, she’s been eager to dismantle the oppressive, male-gaze-oriented beauty standards applied to pop divas—after appearing on the cover of 2016’s Here without makeup, Keys made that natural look her red-carpet signature. And while she’s won so many Grammys (15) that she eventually took over the ceremony as host in 2019 and 2020, Keys invested the normally scripted role with the same sort of casual cool and off-the-cuff intimacy that have made her America’s most down-to-earth R&B queen. In 2022, she performed an Apple Music Live session at her Holiday Masquerade Ball in New York.
- HOMETOWN
- New York, NY, United States
- BORN
- January 25, 1981