Possessing an arena-filling voice she honed in the church,
Kelly Price has alternated with ease between contemporary gospel and soul-rooted R&B across her lengthy career.
Price established herself in the early '90s as a vital background vocalist -- most notably for
Mariah Carey -- and toward the end of the decade stepped to the front with
Soul of a Woman (1998), her platinum solo debut. While she could have easily left supporting work to the past,
Price scored one of her biggest hits as a featured artist post-breakthrough with
Whitney Houston's "Heartbreak Hotel," her first Grammy-nominated recording. The singer, who is also a songwriter and producer, has since released five additional Top Ten R&B/hip-hop albums, from the platinum Mirror Mirror (2000) through
Sing Pray Love, Vol. 1: Sing (2014). She has entered the 2020s with
Grace (2021), an EP for Motown Gospel.
Raised in a strict Pentecostal household,
Kelly Cherelle Price started singing as a youngster in church, where her mother was a musical director. First heard on
Candi Staton's gospel album
Standing on the Promises, the Queens native made greater inroads through secular music, beginning as a background vocalist for
George Michael at Madison Square Garden. That 1991 performance led to several years of supporting
Mariah Carey on-stage and in the studio, from
Carey's 1992 MTV Unplugged performance up through the 1997 release
Butterfly. At the same time,
Price recorded background vocals for the likes of
Frankie Knuckles,
112,
the Isley Brothers,
Puff Daddy, and
the Notorious B.I.G. -- including "Mo Money Mo Problems" -- and stayed connected to gospel with supporting work for
Sounds of Blackness and
Keziah Jones.
Signed to
the Isley Brothers' T-Neck label, which at the time was under the Universal-distributed Island label,
Price emerged as a solo artist in 1998 with "Friend of Mine," more specifically with its soapy remix featuring
R. Kelly and
Ronald Isley. It topped Billboard's R&B/hip-hop chart and was a crossover hit, peaking at number 12 on the Hot 100. The single pushed the parent album
Soul of a Woman, executive produced by
Isley, to number 15 on the Billboard 200.
Price was then featured (with
Faith Evans) on
Whitney Houston's "Heartbreak Hotel," a number two pop hit that was subsequently nominated for a Grammy in the category of Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal.
As a consequence of the Universal-Polygram merger,
Price moved to the roster of
Def Jam's Def Soul subsidiary, and in 2000 returned with Mirror Mirror. That album yielded three Top 20 R&B/hip-hop singles, including an update of
Shirley Murdock's "As We Lay,"
Price's second Grammy-nominated recording -- her first for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance. Like the debut album, Mirror Mirror went platinum within months of landing.
Price's Def Soul phase concluded after the 2001 holiday release
One Family: A Christmas Album and the 2003 Top Ten album Priceless. The latter set's "He Proposed" was up for Best Traditional R&B Vocal Performance. Also in 2003,
Price was cast in the original stage version of Why Did I Get Married?, her first collaboration with Tyler Perry.
Price has gone on to record a mix of contemporary gospel and R&B with longer gaps between LPs. She set up her own label under GospoCentric to release the primarily self-produced 2006 album
This Is Who I Am. Another revered gospel label,
Malaco, supported her 2011 LP
Kelly, which garnered four Grammy nominations: Best R&B Vocal Performance ("Tired"), Best R&B Performance and Best R&B Song (both for the
Stokley Williams collaboration "Not My Daddy"), and Best R&B Album. Next was
Sing Pray Love, Vol. 1: Sing, which arrived through eOne in 2014 and became
Price's sixth Top Ten entry on the R&B/hip-hop chart. A couple years later,
Price was among the many voices of
Kanye West's "Ultralight Beam," resulting in her eighth and ninth Grammy nominations. Instead of continuing the Sing Pray Love series,
Price cut
Grace, an EP, released in 2021 on Motown Gospel. ~ Andy Kellman