Monday, March 5, 2012

Estelle

  • For her latest album, All of Me, singer-songwriter Estelle is singing from the heart. Four years in the making, her much-anticipated collection marks the first release since the British songstress U.S. debut album, Shine.
  • (Huffington Post)
  • With the release of her second U.S. album last week, some of Estelle's more recent fans may have been caught by surprise.
  • (Burlington County Times)
  • NEW YORK — Estelle said she left the United Kingdom to pursue her career in America because performing RB music back home was too tough. Its so (expletive) hard for British artists to be taken seriously as RB artists, she said.
  • (msnbc.com)
  • Estelle, the Britain-born, New York-based hip-hop/soul/pop songstress is more than a Grammy-winning singer with stunning pipes and ethereal style.
  • (MSN Music)
  • Estelle said she left the United Kingdom to pursue her career in America because performing rhythm blues music back home was too tough.
  • (Miami Herald)
  • Estelle Swaray is a Londoner. But for the past few years, the British singer best known for the song American Boy (her 2008 Grammy-winning hit with Kanye West) has called the U.S. home.
  • (NPR News)
  • Estelle dazzles when she commands the stage, both in her spirit and her vocal capabilities, and Tuesday night (Feb. 28) at Irving Plaza in New York City, she stayed true to form for a set that lasted close to two hours.
  • (The BoomBox)
  • British singer Estelle prefers to take her time. It took her four years to produce her 2008 album, "Shine," which included her breakthrough Grammy-winning single, "American Boy," featuring Kanye West.
  • (Arlington Heights Daily Herald)
  • When Estelle rose to fame in 2008 with "American Boy," featuring Kanye West, listeners met a sophisticated artist whose interests included traveling around the world and the aforementioned American boys.
  • (Daily Texan Online)
  • About a month ago, the ballad "Thank You" infiltrated RB radio and left fans scrambling to identify the pained, powerful voice. Was it a more subdued Adele? Or had Mary J.
  • (Washington Post)

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