
Starting only at 18 years of age, popRB singer Jamelia swept UK RB fans off their feet, and following her second album, Thank You, she made herself a star, winning over many more fans, as well as some critics, across the rest of the European continent. The numerous charttopping singles and musical nominations and awards rivaled the stardom and exposure of her American contemporaries, allowing many to dub her Britains own Beyoncé. Perhaps other than her close friends and family, not many would have guessed that a young teen who liked to make a fool of herself singing Karaoke could become a popular recording artist. Jamelia, born Jamelia Naila Davis on January 11, 1981 in Birmingham, England, obtained her first Karaoke machine at 12. A few years later, Jamelias cousin sent in one of those recordings to representatives of Parlophone Records, and after the ARs heard her sing a cappella, they signed her at 15 years of age. Parlophone (a subsidiary for EMI) patiently prepared her until she was 18 to release her first single, So High. Although the song fell on deaf ears, it did set the stage for her next four hit singles from her debut album, Drama, in 2000. Each of them fell somewhere on the charts with Money, featuring reggae artist Beenie Man, placing in the UKs Top Five. Earning five MOBO nominations (and winning one for Best Video), it was clear that Jamelia had the potential to develop into an RB star. Nevertheless, Jamelia had to withdraw from the spotlight for two years on account of her pregnancy and tending to her baby daughter. In 2003, the single Bout, featuring U.S. rapper Rah Digga, barely signaled the return of a fivetime, MOBOnominated artist, entering at the bottom of UKs Top 40, but the next single, Superstar, turned into an international smash hit. It reached number three on the UK pop charts, was number one in Australia and New Zealand, and gave the singer more legions of fans across Europe. With the arrival of her platinumselling, second album, Thank You, a few weeks later that September, Jamelias success was just getting started.
Spilling into 2004, the albums title track, an autobiographical song about domestic abuse, debuted at two on the UK pop charts and won a MOBO award for Best Single. In March 2004, due to the widespread popularity of Thank Yous singles, Parlophone reissued an altered version of the album where some tracks were rearranged and new songs added, including the Top Five single See It in a Boys Eyes, which was cowritten by labelmate and Coldplay leader Chris Martin. In tandem with the reissue and Chris Martin single, she embarked on her first tour as the headliner that summer in the UK, cementing her stellar run in 2004. The new found fame propelled her increasingly into the British public eye. She involved herself in charities, obtained promotional endorsements, and was invited by British model Naomi Campbell to become a client of her modeling agency. Thus, when she had her second child the following year, there was not the same respite from the spotlight leading up to her third album, Walk With Me, which came out in September 2006. Using samples from rock groups like The Stranglers and Depeche Mode, her music drifted away from her RB fan base and turned more towards poprock.
- Cyril Cordor, All Music Guide
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