Episode notes
At 15, a classically trained piano prodigy walked into a record label boardroom carrying a homemade knife, a survival habit from the streets of Hell's Kitchen. This deep dive tells the story of Alicia Augello Cook, known as Alicia Keys, and how a biracial kid from an unforgiving neighborhood fought off the machinery of the modern music industry to keep her authentic artistic soul and redefine 21st-century R&B.
We trace her Suzuki-method training, her early signing to Columbia Records, and the label's attempts to force her onto a manufactured pop assembly line. When they rejected her self-produced tracks as sounding like one long demo, she demanded release from her contract, kept her master rights, and signed with Clive Davis at J Records, where Fallin and Songs in A Minor made history.
- How the Suzuki method let her reverse-en ...Â