12 February 2012

Another one gone early

Jon Pareles and Adam Nagourney have an article in The New York Times about Whitney Houston (photo, at right, with Nelson Mandela, photo, at left, a great one gone):
Whitney Houston, the multimillion-selling singer who emerged in the 1980s as one of her generation’s greatest R&B voices, only to deteriorate through years of cocaine use and an abusive marriage, has died in Beverly Hills, California. She was 48.
Her death came as the music industry descended on Los Angeles for the annual celebration of the Grammy Awards, and Houston was, for all her difficulties over the years, one of its queens. She was staying at the Beverly Hilton hotel on Saturday to attend a pre-Grammy party being hosted by Clive Davis, the founder of Arista Records, who had been her pop mentor.
Houston was found in her room at 3:55 p.m., and paramedics spent close to twenty minutes trying to revive her, the authorities said. There was no immediate word on the cause of her death, but authorities said there were no signs of foul play.
From the start of her career more than two decades ago, Houston had the talent, looks, and pedigree of a pop superstar. She was the daughter of Cissy Houston, a gospel and pop singer who had backed up Aretha Franklin, and the cousin of Dionne Warwick. (Franklin is Houston’s godmother.)
Houston’s range spanned three octaves, and her voice was plush, vibrant, and often spectacular. She could pour on the exuberant flourishes of gospel or peal a simple pop chorus; she could sing sweetly or unleash a sultry rasp.Dressed in everything from formal gowns to t-shirts, she cultivated the image of a fun-loving but ardent good girl, the voice behind songs as perky as I Wanna Dance With Somebody (Who Loves Me) and as torchy as what became her signature song, a version of Dolly Parton’s I Will Always Love You.
But, by the mid-1990s, even as she was moving into acting with films like The Bodyguard and The Preacher’s Wife, she became what she described, in a 2009 interview with Oprah Winfrey, as a “heavy” user of marijuana and cocaine. By the 2000s she was struggling; her voice grew smaller, scratchier and less secure, and her performances grew erratic.
All of Houston’s studio albums were million-sellers, and two have sold more than ten million copies in the United States alone: her 1985 debut album and the 1992 soundtrack to The Bodyguard, which includes I Will Always Love You.
But her marriage to the singer Bobby Brown— which was, at one point, documented in a Bravo reality television series, Being Bobby Brown— grew miserable, and in the 2000s, her singles slipped from the top ten. Houston became a tabloid subject: the National Enquirer ran a photo of her bathroom showing drug paraphernalia. And each new album— Just Whitney in 2002 and I Look to You in 2009— became a comeback.
In Central Park in 2009, singing for Good Morning America, her voice was frayed, and on the world tour that followed the release of the album I Look to You that year, she was often shaky. Whitney Houston was born on 9 August 1963, in Newark, New Jersey. She sang in church, and, as a teenager in the 1970s and early 1980s, she worked as a backup studio singer and featured vocalist with acts including Chaka Khan, the Neville Brothers, and Bill Laswell’s Material.
Davis signed her after hearing her perform in a New York City nightclub, and spent two years supervising production of the album Whitney Houston, which was released in 1985. It placed her remarkable voice in polished, catchy songs that straddled pop and R&B, and it included three Number One singles: Saving All My Love for You, How Will I Know and The Greatest Love of All.
Because Houston had been credited on previous recordings, including a 1984 duet with Teddy Pendergrass, she was ruled ineligible for the best new artist category of the Grammy Awards; the eligibility criteria have since been changed. But with Saving All My Love for You, she won her first Grammy award, for best female pop vocal performance, an award she would win twice more.
Her popularity soared for the next decade. Her second album, Whitney, in 1987, became the first album by a woman to enter the Billboard charts at Number One, and it included four Number One singles. She shifted her pop slightly toward R&B on her third album, I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight, in 1990, which had three more Number One singles.
For much of the 1990s, she turned to acting, bolstered by her music. She played a pop diva in The Bodyguard, and its soundtrack album— including the hits I Will Always Love You, I’m Every Woman, I Have Nothing, and Run to You— went on to sell seventeen million copies in the United States. It won the Grammy for album of the year, and I Will Always Love You won record of the year (for a single). After making the films Waiting To Exhale in 1995 and The Preacher’s Wife in 1996— which gave her the occasion to make a gospel album— Houston resumed her pop career with My Love Is Your Love in 1998.
Houston married Brown in 1992, and in 1993 they had a daughter, Bobbi Kristina, who survives her. Houston’s 2009 interview with Winfrey portrayed it as a passionate and then turbulent marriage, marred by drug use and by his professional jealousy, psychological abuse, and physical confrontations. They divorced in 2007.
Her albums in the 2000s advanced a new persona for Houston. In 2002, Just Whitney was defensive and scrappy, lashing out at the media and insisting on her loyalty to her man. Her most recent studio album, I Look to You, appeared in 2009, and it, too, reached Number One. The album included a hard-headed breakup song, Salute, and a hymn-like anthem, I Didn’t Know My Own StrengthHouston sang: “I crashed down and I tumbled, but I did not crumble/I got through all the pain,” in a voice that showed scars.
Neil R. Portnow, president of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, which bestows the Grammys, called her “one of the world’s greatest pop singers of all time, who leaves behind a robust musical soundtrack. A light has been dimmed in our music community today,” he said.
Lieutenant Mark Rosen, a spokesman for the Beverly Hills Police Department, said that emergency workers responded to a 911 call from security at the Beverly Hilton hotel on Wilshire Boulevard at 3:43 p.m., saying that Houston was unconscious in her fourth-floor suite. He said that LAFD personnel were already on the scene to help prepare for a pre-Grammy party. Lieutenant Rosen said that detectives had arrived to conduct what he said was a full-scale investigation into the death. He said that Houston’s body was still in the hotel room as of 8 p.m. and would not be removed until the investigation was completed. “There were no obvious signs of foul play,” he said. “It’s still fresh an investigation to know whether... the reality is she was too far too young to die and any time you have the death of someone this age it is the subject of an investigation.” Houston arrived at the hotel with what Lieutenant Rosen described as an entourage of friends and family, some of whom were in the hotel suite at the time. He said that police had notified Houston’s mother and daughter of the death; it was unclear whether or not they were there.At Davis’ party, where Houston was a regular guest and performer, tourists shot cellphone pictures of a police crime laboratory van parked outside. But, inside, the glamour of the event seemed undiminished, even if Houston’s name was on everyone’s lips The streets in front of the Beverly Hilton, already crowded because of the Grammy Awards party taking place there, swarmed with reporters and fans, drawn by the news of this latest high-profile pop star dying in Los Angeles. Even after the news of Houston’s death had been released, celebrities and other partygoers continued to arrive for the Davis event, which went on as planned, while fans stood behind a rope trying to take pictures. Dressed in evening gowns and tuxedos, people stepped out of limousines at curbside and streamed into the hotel.
A number of fans came to mourn Houston and to show their support. “I was in utter, total disbelief,” Lavetris Singleton said. “Who was not a fan of Whitney Houston at some point? I want to show support because she inspired a lot of people and nobody’s perfect,” she said. “But if we’re not out here then she’ll be forgotten. We are her legacy.”
Performers at the Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, where the Grammys are to be held, heard about Houston’s death just as Rihanna and Coldplay were about to rehearse their number for the awards. The show’s producer, Ken Ehrlich, debated about how to acknowledge Houston’s death. (The show is already scheduled to include a tribute by Alicia Keys and Bonnie Raitt to Etta James, the blues singer who died last month, as well as a video segment about music figures who died in 2011.) After the initial shock, Ehrlich said he called Jennifer Hudson and asked her to come and sing one of Houston’s songs during the televised show on Sunday as a simple memorial. “We are going to do something very simple, not elaborate,” he said. “We just want to keep it respectful. My feeling was it’s to early to do an extended tribute," Ehrlich added, "but we really wanted to remember her because she was so closely tied to the Grammys.”
Besides her daughter, now eighteen, Houston is survived by her mother. A woman who answered the telephone at the Edgewater, New Jersey home of Houston’s mother on Saturday night said she would not speak to reporters.
Rico says that he couldn't care less about the loss of poor Ms. Houston, but he knows of people who will...

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