How Old Is Keyshia Cole
How Old Is Keyshia
Cole
Keyshia Cole
(born October 15, 1981) is an American R&B
singer-songwriter known for her soulful voice. She released her
platinum selling debut album The Way It Is in 2005, and is
preparing to release her second album Just Like You in
2007.
Keyshia Cole is
the real deal. Like many young people raised in a tough
neighborhood, the 21-year-old songstress endured a
tumultuous childhood in Oakland, California, and has
fought all her life to keep her dream of a music career
alive. Now she's realizing that dream on her own terms
with her first album for the A&M label, The Way It Is.
It's been a long road for Keyshia, but it's her powerful
voice-- a bell-like instrument whose soaring clarity is
topped off with a tantalizing touch of soulful grit --
that's carried her through, not to mention the diminutive
singer's personal combination of sugar, spice, sass and
sex appeal, along with a solid-steel spine.
 "Being young, you
have to be really dedicated to doing it for yourself,"
says Keyshia, who co-wrote most of the songs on her new CD
and cites artists like Mary J. Blige and Brandy as
inspirations. "There's a lot of trials and tribulations
you have to go through to get what you want, especially if
you feel like it belongs to you."
Keyshia's talent,
personality, and faith have won her fans and supporters
within the notoriously picky entertainment industry since
she was a young girl. While still a pre-teen she convinced
then-superstar MC Hammer that he should put her on, and
she even got a chance to do some recording with the rap
star before she was 12 years old. She also scored sessions
singing hooks with other Bay Area artists, including Messy
Marv's "Nubian Queen" remix, which was a regional hit for
the rapper, and with Tony Toni Tone's Dwayne Wiggins, who
featured her on his soundtrack for the indie film Me &
Mrs. Jones.
50
Cent / Keyshia
Cole /
Plies / Fabolous / Soulja
Boy /
Akon / T.I. / Kanye
West /
T-Pain
Within minutes of catching her
boyfriend cheating, Keyshia was in her car driving to Los
Angeles in the middle of the night to start a brand-new life.
It only took the determined singer a few months of making
connections to snag an introduction to A&M Records
President Ron Fair, who immediately signed her to her first
solo recording deal. For her first album, Keyshia has garnered
the support of none other than reigning hip-hop star Kanye
West; producer and songwriter DaRon of R&B group 112;
rapper Chink Santana, whose gruff stylings have graced hits by
Ashanti and The Inc.; and popular producer E-Poppi. She also
got a chance this past Spring to collaborate with Eve for her
debut single, "Never," on the Barbershop 2
soundtrack.
So what's everybody raving about?
Check Keyshia's first single with West, "I Changed My Mind."
The tune is a perfect fit for Keyshia's longing soprano and her
distinct stance as a performer: Like many young women, she's
looking for love, but she's not so desirous of romance that
she'll sacrifice her own needs. Having been devoted to her man,
she quickly realized that he is devoted to himself. What's a
girl to do? She simply changes her mind about being involved
and walks away.
Keyshia easily admits that the
song reflects her romantic philosophy. "That song was actually
about being focused and dedicated to what you want and what
you're trying to be. It's about the things you're trying to
accomplish in life and dealing with somebody, a significant
other, who comes in between that, especially with their ways. I
want to be an example for young girls in following your goals
and dreams and making it happen and checking him out later if
you have to."
A twist on that philosophy is on
display in "I Should've Cheated," which was crafted by DuRon, a
producer whose songs Keyshia admired so much she chased him
down in Atlanta to work with him. On the track, Keyshia sings
of being a devoted girlfriend who is constantly accused of
cheating by her man. It seems that two can play that game, and
Keyshia has no trouble letting Mr. Suspicious know what's up.
"That song has a lot of emotion, because I feel every girl and
every guy can relate to that," she says. "If somebody is doing
you wrong or saying that you're doing something and you're
being the best that you can be in the relationship, then you
get home and they're like 'Where you been?' "Well, where I
could have been is ...' Don't start! It could get real
ugly."
At the same time, Keyshia's
songcraft reveals that the plucky artist isn't afraid to let a
man know she's interested. On the flowing "We Could Be," she
fearlessly lays out all a former friendship could blossom into.
On the mid-tempo "Down N Dirty," she has no trouble expressing
what she'd like to do, while on the spare, deep groove "Talk To
Me," co-written by singer Mya, Keyshia lets a guy know that his
seeming disinterest is just a front. And Chink Santana lends
his gritty rhyming skills to "Situations," another love song
with a twist.
On the feel-good,
old-school-styled ballad "Love," Keyshia's powerful vocal
intensifies a straight-ahead plea to the object of her
affection, who's involved with someone else. It was a real-life
situation that compelled Keyshia, who admits ballads are not
her favorite style, to come up with the lyrics to "Love" in
five minutes flat. At a Malibu restaurant, she spied the same
guy who years earlier had told her he wasn't interested in a
committed relationship with her dining with his girlfriend. "So
I was looking at the girl and I was like, 'What is it about
her? You know, like seriously, what are you thinking?'" Keyshia
remembers. "And I just wrote about it, it came out really
quick." She immediately headed into the studio with producer
Greg Curtis: "After I wrote the song, I went to the studio
about 4 in the morning, and by 5 or 6 I was done with the song
and that's what you hear."
Ms. Cole even applies her
keep-it-real aesthetic to the tune "You've Changed," in which
she takes on none other than Jay-Z for the lyrics to his tune
"Song Cry." The tune is from the point of view of a neglected
wife who's had enough.
The realities surrounding where
she was raised and the hurdles she overcame are never far from
her mind. She says she recorded the tune "Streets Is A
Mothafucka" because the lyrics reflected some true-to-life
scenarios, including crime, drugs, and the hustles that come
with survival. "It's just different things that we see in the
'hood that we never see in Hollywood. I liked the contents of
the song, because I felt like no girls talked about it," she
says.
A self-described "hard worker"
who can sometimes be "goofy" and "fun" yet says she would never
kiss a guy she doesn't know for a video, Keyshia is passionate
about providing inspiration to young girls, and young people in
general, who come from troubled backgrounds. "I want to be an
example for young people, especially growing up in the 'hood,
because it's already hard enough to not be focused, not to be
trying, to be doing something," she says, adding that hope and
faith and holding on to a dream can carry anyone far. The
tattoo on her right shoulder -- a cross, a heart, and a star--
truly reflects her belief that goals can be realized, despite
the circumstances. "It's really possible," she says with a
grin. And those are her thoughts -- just the way it
is.
How Old Is Keyshia
Cole
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