
Whitney Houston biography
Whitney Houston is inarguably one of the of the biggest female
pop stars of all time. Her accomplishments as a hitmaker are
extraordinary;
just to scratch the surface, she became the first artist ever to have seven
consecutive singles hit number one, and her 1993 Dolly Parton cover "I Will Always Love
You" became nothing less than the biggest hit single in rock history.
Houston was able to handle big adult contemporary ballads, effervescent,
stylish dance-pop, and slick urban contemporary soul with equal dexterity; the
result was an across-the-board appeal that was matched by scant few artists of
her era, and helped her become one of the first black artists to find success
on MTV in Michael Jackson's wake. Like many of the original soul
singers, Houston was trained in gospel before moving into secular music; over time, she
developed a virtuosic singing style given over to swooping, flashy melodic
embellishments. The shadow of Houston's prodigious technique still looms large over nearly every pop diva and
smooth urban soul singer -- male or female -- in her wake, and spawned a legion
of imitators (despite some critics' complaints about over-singing). Always more
of a singles artist, Houston largely shied away from albums during the '90s, releasing the bulk of
her most popular material on the soundtracks of films in which she appeared. By
the end of the decade, she'd gone several years without a true blockbuster, yet
her status as an icon was hardly diminished.
Whitney Elizabeth Houston was born in
Houston's debut album Whitney Houston was released in March 1985. Its first
single, "Someone for Me," was a flop, but the second try, "You
Give Good Love," became Houston's first hit, topping the R&B charts and hitting number three pop. Houston's next three singles -- the Grammy-winning romantic ballad "Saving
All My Love for You," the brightly danceable "How Will I Know,"
and the inspirational "The Greatest Love of All" -- all topped the
pop charts, and a year to the month after its release, Whitney Houston hit
number one on the album charts. It eventually sold over 13-million copies,
making it the best-selling debut ever by a female artist. Houston cemented her superstar status on her next album, Whitney; despite the
unimaginative title, it became the first album by a female artist to debut at
number one, and sold over nine-million copies. Its first four singles --
"I Wanna Dance With Somebody (Who Loves
Me)" (another Grammy winner), "Didn't We Almost Have It All,"
"So Emotional," and "Where Do Broken Hearts Go" -- all hit
number one, an amazing, record-setting run of seven straight (broken by
"Love Will Save the Day"). In late 1988, Houston scored a Top Five hit with the non-LP single "One Moment in
Time," recorded for an Olympics-themed compilation album.
Houston returned with her third album, I'm Your Baby Tonight, in 1990; a more
urban-sounding, R&B-oriented record, it immediately spun off two number-one
hits in the title track and "All the Man That I Need." But the
quality of the material was generally viewed as, overall, much weaker than her
previous efforts, and following those two hits, sales of the album tapered off
quickly, halting around four-million copies. Nevertheless, Houston remained so popular that she could even take a recording of "The
Star Spangled Banner" (performed at the Super Bowl) into the pop Top 20 --
though, of course, the Gulf War had something to do with that. In retrospect,
the erratic quality of I'm Your Baby Tonight seemed to signal Houston's declining interest in making fully fleshed-out albums. Instead, she
began to focus on an acting career, which she hadn't pursued since her teenage
years; she also married singer Bobby Brown in the summer of 1992. Her first feature film, a romance with Kevin Costner called The Bodyguard, was released in late
1992; it performed well at the box office, helped by an ad campaign which
seemingly centered around the climactic key change in
Houston's soundtrack recording of the Dolly Parton-penned "I Will Always Love
You." In fact, the ad campaign undoubtedly helped
"I Will Always Love You" become the biggest single in pop
music history. It set new records for sales (nearly five-million copies) and
weeks at number one (14), although those were later broken by Elton John's "Candle in the Wind 1997" and Mariah Carey and Boyz II Men's "One Sweet Day," respectively. Meanwhile, the soundtrack
eventually sold an astounding 16-million copies, and also won a Grammy for
Album of the Year.
Once Houston had stopped raking in awards and touring the world, she prepared her
next theatrical release, the female ensemble drama Waiting to Exhale. A few
months before its release at the end of 1995, it was announced that she and Brown had split up; however, they called off the split just a couple months
later, and rumors about their tempestuous
relationship filled the tabloids for years to come. Waiting to Exhale was
released toward the end of the year, and the first single from the soundtrack,
"Exhale (Shoop Shoop),"
topped the charts; the album sold over seven-million copies. For her next
project, Houston decided to return to her gospel roots; the soundtrack to the 1996 film
The Preacher's Wife, which naturally featured Houston in the title role, was loaded with traditional and contemporary gospel
songs, plus guest appearances by Houston's mother, Shirley Caesar, and the Georgia Mass Choir. Houston also began making headlines for what appeared to be increasing
unreliability, cancelling several TV and concert appearances due to illness.
In 1998, Houston
finally issued a new, full-length album, My Love Is Your Love, her first in eight years. Houston
worked with pop/smooth soul
mainstays like Babyface
and David Foster,
but also recruited hip-hop stars like
Missy Elliott, Wyclef Jean, Lauryn Hill, and Q-Tip.
The album sold even fewer
copies than I'm Your Baby Tonight, but it received Houston's most enthusiastic reviews in quite some time. Moreover, it produced
one of her biggest R&B chart hits (seven weeks at number one) in the trio
number "Heartbreak Hotel," done with Faith Evans and Kelly Price. She also duetted with Mariah Carey on "When You
Believe," a song from the animated film The Prince of Egypt. Unfortunately,
Houston was also back in the tabloids in early 2000; she was arrested in