Beverley Knight MBE (born 22 March 1973 in Wolverhampton, West Midlands)
is a British soul and R&B singer, songwriter, and record
producer who released her debut album in 1995. Heavily influenced
by soul greats such as Sam Cooke and Aretha Franklin, Knight
has released six studio albums to date. Widely labelled as one
of Britain's greatest soul singers,[1] Knight is best known for
her hit singles "Greatest Day", "Get Up!", "Shoulda
Woulda Coulda" and "Come As You Are".
In 2006, Knight solidified her transmission into the mainstream
by starring in BBC One music TV show, Just the Two of Us, a role
she reprised in 2007. After releasing a platinum-selling compilation
album in 2006, Knight went on to tour the UK with a reformed Take
That. She has also hosted 4 series of the Radio 2 show Beverley's
Gospel Nights, which explores the origins and impact of gospel music.
To date the show has run for four seasons and has featured interviews
with stars such as Destiny's Child and Shirley Caesar.
Knight is an ambassador for many charities such as Christian Aid
and has travelled to areas affected by disease and poverty to help
raise awareness. She is an active campaigner for anti-Aids organisations
such as the Stop AIDS Campaign and The Terrence Higgins Trust and
is also a vocal campaigner against homophobic lyrics in urban music.
On Saturday 15 August 2009 she performed live at the 4th annual UK
Black Pride event in Regents Park.
On Friday 4 December 2009, at the invitation of Sarah Brown, wife
of Prime Minister, Knight performed 2 songs "Shoulda Woulda
Coulda" and "Gold" to an invited audience at 10 Downing
Street in support of the White Ribbon Alliance for Safe Motherhood
Million Mums charity.
After more than a decade in the industry, Knight was made an MBE
by Queen Elizabeth II in February 2007 in recognition of her charitable
work and the contribution she has made to British music. In September
2005, Knight was made an honorary Doctor of Music from the University
of Wolverhampton.[2] After receiving a host of awards, including
three MOBO Awards, Knight was presented with a Lifetime Achievement
Award in 2004 at the Urban Music Awards in London.[3]
Contents
[show]
[edit] Biography
[edit] 1973–1993: Childhood
Knight attended Woodfield Infants and Junior School and Highfields
School In Wolverhampton. Knight was born of Jamaican parents, and
she grew up in a strict Pentecostal household where church attendance
was commonplace. It is here where she began her singing career: "The
first time I heard music would have been in church. My mum was often
called upon: 'Come on sister Dolores. Lead us in song!' Singing was
the most natural thing in the world. I thought, doesn't everybody's
mum lead the congregation at church in song?"[4] Knight continued
singing in her local church throughout her childhood, and her musical
education was continued at home where she was often exposed to gospel
music. Due to her parents' religious beliefs, secular music was largely
frowned upon, but artists such as Sam Cooke and Aretha Franklin played
a big part in her childhood.[4]
Knight began writing her own songs – with varying degrees
of success – at the age of thirteen. It was not until she turned
seventeen, though, that she began to take her craft seriously. Knight
began performing the songs that she had written on stage in local
clubs in her hometown. At the age of nineteen, she was heard singing
at a local nightclub by a record company executive and was offered
a recording contract. She was adamant that her education should come
first and that she should have something to fall back on, and so
went to Cheltenham & Gloucester College of Higher Education to
study Religious Theology and Philosophy.[5]
[edit] 1994–2000: Early success
In late 1994, Knight signed a record deal with Dome Records, a small,
independent label. Shortly after, she went in studio to write and
record her debut album. The backbone of the project was produced
by London production trio 2B3, with additional beats provided by
Don E (Knight’s cousin), Ethnic Boyz and hip-hop act Blak Twang.
Also Klarmann/Weber the German songwriter/producer team (Chaka Khan,
Randy Crawford) contributed two songs. The result was the album The
B-Funk – hailed as "the best British soul album ever"[6]
by critics when it was released in November 1995. Knight went on
to win two Black Music Awards in 1996 ("Best R&B Artist" and "Best
Producer" for 2B3) and was named Best R&B Act by Blues and
Soul Magazine, beating a host of American stars. However, the commercial
success of the album failed to match its critical success and the
album peaked on the UK album chart at number one-hundred-and-forty-five.
Several singles were released from the project, the biggest being "Flavour
of the Old School", which peaked at number thirty-three in March
1996 when it was re-released.
In February 1997, Knight left Dome Records after disagreements,
and signed a new four-album deal with EMI-controlled Parlophone.
After returning to the studio with 2B3 and Don E and teaming up with
new producers Dodge and Carl McIntosh, Knight released her second
album Prodigal Sista in August 1998. Peaking at number forty-two
in Britain, the commercial success of the album proved to be much
greater than her debut. The album went on to sell 150,000 copies
in Britain[7] and be certified Gold in 1999.[8] It contained five
top forty hits – the biggest of which were "Greatest Day",
peaking at number fourteen, and "Made It Back 99" featuring
US rap star Redman, which peaked at number nineteen.
The commercial success of Prodigal Sista marked a big step forward
in Knight’s career and was reflected in the widespread critical
acclaim of the project. Q Magazine called the album "a triumph
not only of Knight’s musical vision but also of the strength
in her character" while The Times remarked "Prodigal Sista
is a joy to hear – her vocal and intricate self devised and
performed harmonies can make you catch your breath in wonderment".
Labelled as one of the greatest British soul albums of all time,
the album won three MOBO (Music Of Black Origin) Awards with "Made
It Back" and "Greatest Day" winning Best R&B Act
in 1998 and 1999 respectively, and Prodigal Sista winning the Best
Album Award.[9]
[edit] 2001–2005: Mainstream breakthrough
Throughout 2001 Knight returned to the recording studio to write
and record her third studio album. She was accompanied by a different
array of writers and producers handpicked largely by Kevin and Bev
from Britain and the United States, which included James Poyser,
Che Guevara, Derrick Joshua & Derrick Martin, D’Influence,
Mike Spencer and Colin Emmanuael. The result was Who I Am, which
was released in March 2002. It was preceded by two singles, "Get
Up!" and "Shoulda Woulda Coulda" which was a first
in that it introduced Knight to the world of Nashville and one of
its most famous son's Craig Wiseman a giant in the country music
business. This partnership became Knight’s most successful
single up to that point, peaking at number ten on the UK singles
chart. The success of the singles, together with wide critical praise,
propelled the album to number seven on the album chart making Who
I Am her most commercially successful album to date. It was re-released
with new versions of the singles "Gold" and "Shape
Of You (Reshaped)" and has sold 215,000 copies in Britain,[7]
earning it a Gold sales certificate.[10]
The critical response to Who I Am was largely positive, with The
Guardian stating "every song bubbles with the kind of expensive,
polished confidence that often eludes British contenders, and she
sings with the poise of an artist at the height of her powers"[11]
whilst the BBC remarked "Who I Am marks a significant change
in direction for this tenacious 28-year-old singer, signifying her
own personal growth as a true artist and developing songwriter....on
this her most personal work to date, she takes us on an intimate
journey where she bares her soul with such raw honesty that you get
the distinct impression a healing process is taking place".[12]
Although the album failed to match the widespread and unanimous acclaim
of Knight’s first two albums, it still earned her two BRIT
Award nominations ("Best Female", "Best Urban Act")[13]
and the album was nominated for the Mercury Music Prize in 2002.[14]
After touring Britain in 2002, Knight set about creating her fourth
album and entered the studio in the summer of 2003. Without the architect
of her most successful song in her camp her new A&R team attempted
to appeal to a larger mainstream audience, they enlisted the help
of pop producers such as Guy Chambers and Peter-John Vettese as well
as collaborating with R&B producers such as DJ Munro. The result
was Affirmation, which was released on Parlophone in June 2004. The
album entered the charts at number eleven and was preceded by the
single "Come As You Are" – a rock/pop orientated
song written with and produced by Chambers. The song marked a more
mainstream pop sound that alienated Knight’s largely urban
fan base and the song was not well received by urban radio stations.
Nevertheless it became her biggest hit to date, peaking at number
nine on the singles chart. The song was followed by two more singles, "Not
Too Late for Love" and "Keep This Fire Burning", which
helped boost album sales and resulted in the album being awarded
a Gold sales certificate in December 2004.[15]
The themes running throughout the album, which were influenced by
the events she had witnessed over the previous two years, marked
a milestone in Knight’s career as a lyricist. The main essence
of the project was centred on Knight’s relationship with Tyrone
Jamison – a gay man whom she described as her "soul mate" and
who died of an AIDS-related disease in 2003. Throughout the album,
lyrics on tracks such as "Remember Me" ("One day we
will be reunited, least I hope that is our destiny, so while you
chill in the arms of angels, remember me, remember me") and "No
One Ever Loves In Vain" clearly point to her close relationship
with Tyrone and rank as her most personal work to date.
Compared to the praise of her previous albums, the critical response
to Affirmation was mixed. The mainstream press such as The Guardian
praised her for branching out, whilst the black music press such
as The Voice and Blues and Soul accused Knight of selling out and
being manipulated away from urban music by her record label, a claim
she flatly denies: "Everything I’ve done musically has
been completely me. I write my own songs so I’m not just a
vocalist who can easily be dictated to."[16]
[edit] 2006–2008: Consolidating success
In February 2006 Knight consolidated her move into the mainstream
audience by appearing on BBC1 music show, Just the Two of Us. The
show, featuring celebrities who duet with established singers, ran
for two weeks and proved to be a relative disappointment in terms
of audience figures – averaging between fifteen and twenty-five
percent audience shares.[17] Nevertheless it provided a platform
for Knight to reach out to a bigger audience and demonstrate her
talent by performing a different array of songs than she would otherwise
be known for. Reaching out to new audiences was also a driving force
behind Knight’s decision to join Take That on their reunion
arena tour. Take That - The Ultimate Tour 06, which ran from April
to July 2006, sold 270,000 tickets in less than four hours on sale
at the box office and featured Knight as a support act.[18]
In March 2006 Knight released her fifth album, a compilation set
featuring the majority of her top forty UK singles entitled Voice
- The Best Of Beverley Knight. The album, which was certified Gold
less than a month after its release,[19] became her second highest
charting of her career when it entered the UK albums chart at number
ten and rose to number nine a month later. It was preceded by the
single "Piece of My Heart" – a cover of the Erma
Franklin classic made famous by Janis Joplin and entered the singles
chart at number sixteen, spending eleven weeks inside the UK top
75 singles chart and becoming her longest-running chart single to
date.
In October 2006, Knight recorded her fifth studio album, Music City
Soul, in Nashville. Completed in less than five days, the album was
released on 7 May 2007 and features collaborations with musicians
such as Ronnie Wood and Scotty Moore. It spawned three singles, "No
Man's Land", released on 16 April 2007, "After You",
released on 2 July 2007 and "The Queen of Starting Over",
released on 15 October 2007. This turned out to be her final album
for Parlophone.
[edit] 2009: Going independent and "100%"
On 23 March 2009 Knight announced via her official web site that
she had left Parlophone records after eleven years and would be releasing
new material through her own label, Hurricane Records. Knight also
announced that her sixth studio album would be released in summer
2009, having a more contemporary feel in comparison to previous retro
soul album Music City Soul. New songwriters and producers associated
with the project include Jam & Lewis, (whose previous credits
include Janet Jackson, Usher and Mariah Carey) and The Rural along
with previous collaborators Guy Chambers and DJ Munro.[20]
On 31 March 2009 Knight confirmed that she would be releasing her
sixth studio album in September through her own record label, Hurricane
Records. In a video blog on her website she said that "for the
past year, I've been writing for the record. I've been working with
some new names and some old names for the album." She also confirmed
that she is expecting to go on tour in support of the album later
this year.
The album is titled 100%. The first finished track revealed from
the album was Knight's collaboration with US producers Jimmy Jam & Terry
Lewis, titled "Every Step". The lead single from the album
was "Beautiful Night", co-written with Amanda Ghost and
produced by The Rural. The album was released the same week on 7
September 2009 and entered the UK Albums Chart at number 17. The
second single "In Your Shoes" premiered on BBC 1Xtra on
5 October. The radio remix features UK rapper Chipmunk.
In 2010, Knight made 6 guest appearances as a panellist on ITVs
flagship show Loose Women.
[edit] 2011: Seventh studio album "Soul UK"
Beverley announced in early 2011 that she would be releasing a new
album in 2011. She then announced on Twitter and YouTube in March
2011 that the album would be a collection of British Soul covers,
she also confirmed that the album would be released in Summer 2011.
In March Beverley also announced (via her official mailing list)
a one-off gig to be held at the Porchester Hall, London to record
a live DVD which will be included in the album's release. She also
confirmed that the album would be released on 27 June (later changed
to 4 July). Whilst performing the one-off gig at the Porchester Hall
Beverley confirmed the album would be titled "Soul UK".
The first single to be released from the album will be "Mama
Used to Say", a hit single originally recorded by Junior Giscombe.
The single will be released on 27 June. Other artists whose songs
are covered on "Soul UK" include: Soul II Soul; Loose Ends;
Omar;[disambiguation needed] Jamiroquai; George Michael; Princess;
Lewis Taylor; Heatwave; and Jaki Graham.[21]
[edit] Creativity and influences
Growing up in a Pentecostal environment of Jamaican descent, music – especially
gospel music – became a staple part of Knight’s childhood.
She entered the gospel choir of her local church at the age of just
four years old and eventually became the musical director before
she left in her late teens. Her musical education continued at home
where her family would often sing together around the piano and listen
to music from their favourite gospel and soul artists such as Sam
Cooke. In 2005, Knight revisited her childhood when she hosted Beverley’s
Gospel Nights, a BBC Radio 2 series exploring gospel music. Featuring
interviews with artists such as Shirley Caesar, Percy Sledge and
Destiny’s Child stars Kelly Rowland and Michelle Williams,
the six-part series explored the roots of gospel music and the impact
it had upon the black community. Such was the success of the show
that a second six-part series was commissioned and began in March
2006 and featured new interviews with artists such as Candi Staton,
David McAlmont and Marvin Winans. Knight's interview technique and
her ability to get her guests to open up and discuss issues in their
personal lives such as domestic violence and depression received
favourable reviews and led the Radio Times to comment "Knight's
passion for the music is obvious - but so is her warmth, which makes
her a rarity among interviewers."[22]
The first artist to make an impact upon Knight was one of the true
founders of contemporary gospel and soul music, Sam Cooke. Despite
his untimely death in 1964, his music endured and became a staple
part of Knight's childhood:
“
My mother played Sam Cooke and he was the first voice I ever heard
on record. His was the first voice that directly had a big impact
on me, vocally. He still makes me cry. He'd take the very simple
Bible stories that I grew up with and just make them into a two-and-a-half-minute
song and yet with an intensity and a passion that the world had never
heard before. He really was a major influence on my life.[23] ”
Indeed the impact of Cooke can be seen throughout Knight’s
career as she has often performed and recorded Cooke classics, the
most notable of which is "A Change Is Gonna Come". The
track, which came to exemplify the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s,
has featured in many of Knight’s live performances (usually
with the aid of the London Community Gospel Choir) and she even recorded
a studio version with musician Jools Holland, which featured on his
Small World, Big Band Volume 2 album.
In addition to Cooke, another major influence in Knight’s
childhood was Aretha Franklin. Besides leading a tribute to Franklin
at the BBC's Music of the Millennium concert in 1999, Knight has
recorded several of Franklin’s tracks, most notably "Do
Right Woman, Do Right Man" and "Think", both of which
were released as B-sides on Knight's singles "Rewind (Find a
Way)" and "Made It Back 99" respectively. It was Franklin’s
vocal delivery that has most had an impact upon Knight:
“
Aretha taught me my phrasing and the way I carry emotion. She makes
me cry and then she brings me into the throes of musical ecstasy
- with the same voice! I Never Loved A Man hurts, and the Amazing
Grace album, which is the epitome of my childhood, will stay with
me for ever."[24] ”
Knight has also recorded songs from of other artists such as Stevie
Wonder ("Love's in Need of Love Today", which featured
on the Warchild album Hope) and Curtis Mayfield ("Hard Times",
which appeared on Courtney Pine’s Back in the Day album). But
this influence has also manifested itself on stage where Knight often
incorporates songs by her heroines such as Nina Simone ("Feelin’ Good"),
Chaka Khan ("I Feel For You" and "Sweet Thing")
and Billie Holliday ("God Bless the Child") into her live
performances.
In addition to the pioneering soul and gospel artists of the mid-twentieth
century, modern artists such as Mary J. Blige and D'Angelo have also
played a role in shaping Knight’s musical outlook. The most
significant of her contemporary peers comes in the form of Prince,
a man she describes as one of her heroes: "Prince goes back
to me listening to preachers when I was a child, who tell a story
to illustrate a point...the first song I heard by him was "Little
Red Corvette", when I was nine. Of course, I didn't have a clue
about what he was singing about; the sexuality is implicit and I
love that."[24] The influence of Prince, whom Knight even mentions
on her Prodigal Sista and Who I Am album sleeves, can be seen throughout
her back catalogue with songs such as "Get Up!", "Hurricane
Jane" and "Supersonic" being compared to Prince due
to their mix of funk and soul.
Throughout her childhood, Knight’s musical exposure developed
as she got older. Gospel led to soul, which led to funk which led
to R&B[25] – but growing up in the Midlands meant that
she was exposed to lots of other different influences too: "It
wasn’t a case that there was a huge black community who all
stuck together and only listened to reggae or R&B or strictly
black music. I find that London is a bit more segregated. In Wolverhampton,
black people weren't so segregated and I think that had a massive
impact on my musical influences."[16] This diversity is illustrated
best by Knight’s fourth studio album, Affirmation. After working
with Guy Chambers, the album had a more mainstream flavour compared
to her previous albums and was led by the rock guitar driven single "Come
As You Are". Although the song became her highest charting single
to date, Knight was largely criticised by urban radio and media for
moving too far away from her urban sound. Nevertheless the song illustrated
Knight’s determined effort not to become boxed in and "ghettoised".
[edit] Achievements
[edit] Accolades
In 2006 it was announced that Knight was to be awarded an MBE in
acknowledgement for her services to music and the work she does on
behalf of several charities. She was presented with the accolade
by Queen Elizabeth II at a ceremony at Buckingham Palace in February
2007. After the ceremony Knight remarked that the recognition "reflects
not only on my whole career but the work I do for charities which
is immensely important to me. I do not do that to be awarded for
it, I just do it because it's in my heart, but to be recognised for
it, hopefully will put the magnifying glass on to them as well".[26]
In September 2005 Knight was presented with an honorary degree from
the University of Wolverhampton "in recognition of her outstanding
contribution to music and the local community, and in recognition
of her extensive charity work."[2] Upon being made a Doctor
of Music, she stated she was proud to be black, female, and British,
adding: "it is still all me, I have not forgotten my roots."[27]
On 7 January 2010 Knight won an edition of the BBC's television
quiz series Celebrity Mastermind, answering questions on 'The Life
and Times of Prince'. Knight's chosen charity for the show was the
Terrence Higgins Trust.[28][29]
[edit] Awards and nominations
Year Institution Award
Won
1996 Black Music Awards Best R&B Act
1996 Black Music Awards Best Producer
1998 MOBO Awards Best R&B Act
1999 MOBO Awards Best R&B Act
1999 MOBO Awards Best Album (Prodigal Sista)
1999 E.M.M.A Awards Best British Music Act
2004 Urban Music Awards Lifetime Achievement
Nominated
1998 MOBO Awards Best Single (Made It Back)
1999 MOBO Awards Best Single (Greatest Day)
2000 BRIT Awards Best British Female Solo
2002 MOBO Awards Best British Act
2002 Mercury Music Prize Best Album (Who I Am)
2002 E.M.M.A Awards Best British Music Act
2003 BRIT Awards Best British Female Solo
2003 BRIT Awards Best British Urban Act
2003 Capital FM Awards London's Favourite Female Vocalist (Solo)
2004 Capital FM Awards London's Favourite Female Vocalist (Solo)
2006 MOBO Awards Best British Female
2007 MOBO Awards Best British Female
2009 MOBO Awards Best R&B/Soul Act
2009 MOBO Awards Best UK Act
[edit] Discography
Main article: Beverley Knight discography
Studio albums:
The B-Funk (1995)
Prodigal Sista (1998)
Who I Am (2002)
Affirmation (2004)
Music City Soul (2007)
100% (2009)
Soul UK (2011)
Compilation albums:
Voice - The Best of Beverley Knight (2006)
The Collection (2009)
[edit] Tours
2002 - Who I Am Tour
2002 - Beverley Knight Tour
2005 - Affirmation Tour
2006 - Voice - The Best of Tour
2007 - Music City Soul Tour
2009-10 - 100% Tour
[edit] Personal life
Beverley Knight is a keen supporter of home city football club Wolverhampton
Wanderers. It had emerged in 2010 that Beverley Knight got engaged
to boyfriend, James O'Keefe.[30] On 30 June 2011, Knight performed
at Abigail Clancy and Peter Crouch's wedding.