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Leona Lewis has talent to match hype
Nekesa Moody
NEW YORK—The buildup to Leona Lewis’ stateside debut has been so great
that you half expect her to be surrounded by heavenly angels when she
appears. Backed by music mogul Clive Davis, the budding British diva has
already drawn endless comparisons to Mariah Carey and Whitney Houston
for her booming voice. No less than Oprah Winfrey fawned over her
talents on a recent show. She even managed to win over Simon Cowell, who
fell in love with her talent when she won “The X Factor,” the British
version of “American Idol.” Cowell and Davis both produced her debut
album, “Spirit,” which was released in the U.S. this week.
“It was blindingly obvious when this girl came on the show that this
wasn’t just someone who had the potential to be a good singer, this was
someone who had a potential to be a star,” Cowell told The Associated
Press. For a new artist, the attention can be daunting. “It’s quite
scary,” Lewis said in a phone interview and she was told — probably for
the millionth time — about comparisons to Carey and Houston. “It’s a
massive compliment. Personally I’ve got a lot of hard work to do.”
But early signs show that Lewis, 22, may be able to deliver on the lofty
expectations. The album is already a top seller in Europe. Last month,
she scored a No. 1 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 chart with her first
single, “Bleeding Love” — the first time a British woman has topped that
chart in 21 years.
“Leona is the first vocalist that I have heard in well over a decade
that between her voice and her appearance and just presence, she had the
different elements that I thought were necessarily to be a world-class
singer,” said One Republic’s Ryan Tedder, who co-wrote “Bleeding Love.”
While there are certainly plenty of huge voices, Lewis’ pipes have an
elegant tone and impressive range that recall Carey and Houston, two of
the most successful pop divas ever. However, Carey and Houston debuted
when soaring vocals and dramatic power ballads ruled radio — which is no
longer the case.
That’s why “Spirit” includes a mix of midtempo songs sprinkled with
ballads like her remake of Roberta Flack’s classic “The First Time Ever
I Saw Your Face.” Davis said it was important not to typecast Lewis as a
balladeer: “I really see her as a contemporary singer who is versatile
and who can do all types of material.” Her singing background seems to
bear out Davis’ assessment: The daughter of a Guyanese part-time DJ and
a Welsh ballet teacher, Lewis grew up exposed to a variety of genres.
She got the performing bug early, appearing in local talent shows as a
child and attending a performing arts school. But in her early teens, it
was opera, and not pop, that enthralled her.
“My training is kind of classical, so I’ve done a lot of opera, and I
was very interested in Leontyne Price,” Lewis says her in sweet,
shy-sounding voice. “As I got older and more into, like, contemporary
music and all that kind of jazz, soul and blues ... I kind of found
myself shifting toward that.” |