Archive for Tuesday, January 11, 2005
Alicia Keys gets ready to downsize
Alicia Keys certainly loves challenges.
After staying behind the piano and playing relatively intimate settings early in her singer-songwriter career, the young New Yorker surprised her fans last year by blossoming as a performer on an arena tour with Beyonce and Missy Elliott. The move seemed a major gamble, because who knew if Keys could compete with those flashy artists on such a high-energy, spectacle level? Yet she not only held her own but stole the show, according to some critics.
Now Keys, whose “The Diary of Alicia Keys” is nominated for album of the year in next month’s Grammy Awards competition, is going back to an intimate setting with a show she described Monday as “heavily stylized
Keys said the two-month tour will begin Feb. 25 in Miami and include stops March 16 and 17 at a venue yet to be announced in Los Angeles. Tickets are expected to go on sale Jan. 22. “The idea,” she said, “is to take what I learned from the arena show and combine that energy and excitement with the intimacy of a theater setting.”
- Longtime Republican voters are airing new views
- A high-tech response to cactus thefts in Palm Desert
- China abuzz over lip-syncing singer in Olympics opening ceremony
- Taking shots at ShotPaks
- Investigation of spending by care workers' union is sought
- How are swimmers smashing so many Olympic records?
- Two Republicans endorse Obama
- In Hanford, Wash., the country's most polluted nuclear reactor site draws tourists
- Visits by McCain, Obama to Orange County church underscore Pastor Rick Warren's prominence
- Chinese fast-food chain Panda Express thrives on orange chicken
- Two Republicans endorse Obama
- Georgia conflict may spark new U.S. policy battle over Russia
- U.S. women can't stand up to China
- NBC, like Phelps, in record pursuit at Olympics
- Mukasey won't pursue charges in Justice Department hiring scandal
- Los Angeles thwarts family in fight over graffiti
- Clinton was urged to paint Obama as foreign
- 'Sluggish' USC offense is a source of concern
- Chinese fast-food chain Panda Express thrives on orange chicken
- Cat burglar rats out his techniques for Los Angeles police
