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Lauryn Hill

 
Who2 Biography: Lauryn Hill, Singer
lauryn hill
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  • Born: 1975 (?)
  • Birthplace: South Orange, New Jersey
  • Best Known As: Singer from The Fugees

Lauryn Hill was the singer for the hip-hop group The Fugees, whose second album, The Score, was a top-seller in 1996. Her cover of the Roberta Flack song "Killing Me Softly", and her appearance in the movie Sister Act 2 thrust her into the limelight. In 1998 Hill's solo musical effort, The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill was a critical and popular success, earning 10 Grammy Award nominations. But Hill's next record, MTV Unplugged No. 2.0, didn't meet the expectations of fans and she withdrew from public life, dissatisfied with the pressures of celebrity. In 2005 she reunited with The Fugees and released the single "Take It Easy."

Hill is married to Rohan Marley, son of reggae legend Bob Marley... On her 1998 single "Everything is Everything", John Legend plays piano.

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Black Biography: Lauryn Hill
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singer; songwriter; music producer

Personal Information

Born on May 25, 1975, in South Orange, New Jersey; daughter of Mal (a computer analyst) and Valerie (a teacher) Hill; married Rohan Marley, date unknown; children: Zion David, Selah Louise, Joshua, John. Education: Attended Columbia University.
Memberships: none.

Career

Actress, singer, songwriter, and producer. The Fugees, member, 1988-1997; solo artist, 1997-; The Fugees, brief reunion performances, 2004, 2005; The Refugee Project, youth outreach program, founder, 1996-2000.

Life's Work

The adoration and respect accorded Lauryn Hill seems unparalleled. "The most versatile vocalist of her generation," wrote Kevin Powell in Horizon magazine. "Beautiful, multitalented, whipsmart," wrote Harper's Bazaar. "Catalyst...shining star...a divine singing voice and an up-front rhyme flow that ranks her among hip hop's dopest MCs," assessed Vibe. Public Enemy's Chuck D compared her to reggae legend Bob Marley. After creating, as Essence declared, "a new image of womanhood in the world of hip-hop" with her group the Fugees in the mid-1990s, Hill went on to score with her own phenomenally successful solo debut, 1998's The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill. Just when Hill's stardom seemed to reach its zenith, she stepped out of the limelight, taking a several-year hiatus from the public eye. When she resurfaced in the early 2000s, Hill revealed new depths of her musical talents.

Explored Music from an Early Age

Hill was born on May 22, 1975, and grew up in South Orange, New Jersey, not far from its public-housing projects. Her father Mal, who once sang professionally, was a computer analyst, while mother Valerie taught school in nearby Newark. Hill recalled many hours as an adolescent spent listening to her parents' old R&B records, which gave her an appreciation for the likes of Gladys Knight, Curtis Mayfield, and others. The Hills, however, stressed academic achievement for their children--she has an older brother, Malaney-- and she won entry to Columbia High School, an academically challenging school, where she became acquainted with a friend of her brother's named Prakazrel "Pras" Michel. A Haitian immigrant, Michel formed a rap group and asked Hill to join.

Hill, who also ran track, was a popular and magnetic personality even in high school. She once asked her father if she could have a birthday party in their backyard, and he agreed as long as it was kept small. "By the end of the night, 250 people must have showed up," Mal Hill told Rolling Stone reporter Alec Foege. By this time, she had ventured out on a few auditions, and won a recurring role on the CBS soap opera As the World Turns. "You'll see that my house is right on the borderline of the suburbs and the ghetto," Hill pointed out to Foege, who was visiting Hill at her family's home in South Orange. "I always had this duality. I went to school with a lot of white kids--it was really like a suburban environment--but I lived with black kids."

Formulated New Sound with the Fugees

Hill, Michel, and another girl had formed a group called the Fugees-Tranzlator Crew. The "fugee" part was taken from the word "refugee," based on their conviction that all blacks outside of Africa are, in a sense, refugees. They cut demos in which they rapped in other languages. One day Michel's cousin, Wyclef Jean, came by the studio to hear them. Jean was also from Haiti, but grew up in a rough section of Brooklyn in a strict household headed by his minister father. "When I heard Lauryn sing, I was like 'Wow!'" Jean told Edwige Danticat in Essence. "It clicked. I knew it was meant to be."

By this time, Hill had already won a billed film role opposite Whoopi Goldberg in the 1993 film Sister Act II: Back in the Habit, as insubordinate student Rita Watson. Accepted to several colleges, including Yale and Spelman, Hill chose to stick close to home and concentrate on her recording career by enrolling at Columbia University. After the other member departed for college, the three of them--Hill, Jean, and Michel--began performing in local talent shows and in New Jersey clubs; they also dropped the "Tranzlator" part of their name. "We sang, we rapped, we danced," Hill recalled for Foege in the Rolling Stone interview. "As a matter of fact, we were a circus troupe," she added. They won a recording contract with the Philadelphia rap label Ruffhouse, who released Blunted on Reality in 1993.

Hill and the others were unhappy with the finished product, however. Like many other young, inexperienced artists, they were shut out of the production and creative process, and the album was an edgy, quick-paced work of rap. "Hailed in Europe as a glimpse of the future, Blunted was summarily trashed in the American hip-hop press for missing the mark altogether," noted Rolling Stone's Foege. It languished on the charts, but when a producer remixed two of the tracks, the songs became underground club favorites. Then word of mouth began spreading about the female rapper who could also sing, and Hill soon became the focus of attention for the group. She, Michel and Jean fought for and won producer rights for their next effort, The Score, and their perseverance paid off. Bolstered by singles that showcased Hill's talents, such as a cover of the 1973 Roberta Flack hit "Killing Me Softy with His Song," and "Ready or Not," and the 1996 release sold millions and was the number-three pop album in the country at one point while in first place on the Billboard R&B charts. With sales of 17 million, the Fugees became the biggest selling rap act in history.

Solo Star Rose

Hill's appearance on magazine covers without her bandmates may have fueled speculation early on that she would ditch them for a solo career. The issue became one of the most overreported non-events during the peak of Fugee success. She emphatically dismissed such talk--"It's not a compliment when people tell me to break off from them," Hill told Vibe magazine in early 1996. "That's like telling me to drop my brothers," she continued. The group toured heavily in 1996, but by the time they performed at the Grammy Awards ceremony in early 1997, Hill was three months pregnant. She had met Rohan Marley, son of the late reggae giant Bob Marley, when he showed up for a Fugee show and tried to talk to her. At first, she was uninterested in the beginning because of a past relationship that soured. "But back then I wasn't really checking for anybody," Hill told Essence writer Monifa Young. "I was very much into my music. You know, I'd spent so many years working at a relationship that didn't work that I was just like, 'I'm going to write these songs and pour my heart into them.'"

Yet Marley persisted, a romance developed, and soon the fact that Hill was carrying the grandchild of late Bob Marley only added to the aura of divinity that seemed to surround her. She had initially refused to disclose who the father was, and took heat for taking the "single mother" route at such a young age. "A lot of people told me, 'Don't do it. It's not the right time, you're a superstar,'" Hill recalled in an interview with Daisann McLane in Harper's Bazaar. "But I looked at my life, and I said, 'Well, God has blessed me with a whole lot in a little bit of time.' At the end of the day, the only reason for me not to have a child would have been that it was an inconvenience to my career, and that wasn't a good enough excuse for me not to have my son."

Carrying a child, Hill has said, gave her even more energy--she recorded a track with gospel star CeCe Winans the day before she gave birth--and she wrote over two dozen songs for her own project. Hill's solo debut, The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, was released in August of 1998. Writing in Essence, Young called it "one of the most anticipated albums of the year by fans and industry insiders." It debuted to platinum sales. On it was a tribute to her son, named Zion David, titled "Joy of my World Is in Zion." Time magazine put Hill on the cover, and inside wrote about her and other African American artists such as Maxwell and Erykah Badu who were producing a fresh wave of "emotionally relevant" music that seemed to embody what writer Christopher John Farley called the "neo-soul" movement. Farley termed Hill's solo debut "the kind of galvanizing work neo-soul needs: unabashedly personal, unrelentingly confrontational, uncommonly inventive."

Hill has also become one of the most lauded of behind-the-scenes talents as well. She executive-produced Miseducation, and went to Detroit to work with Aretha Franklin and wrote the song "A Rose Is Still a Rose" for the Queen of Soul, which became the title track for Franklin's album. Hill also directed its video. "She's positive, detailed, conscientious," Franklin said of Hill to McLane in Harper's Bazaar. "Frankly, I was surprised to see that in such a young woman," she continued. Still, Hill found that fighting for control over her talents was not easy in the music industry, and she ultimately realized that success of her vision brought with it its own demons. "This is a very sexist industry," Hill told Young in the Essence interview. "They'll never throw the 'genius' title to a sister. They'll just call her diva and think it's a compliment."

In addition to her musical career, Hill sought opportunities to give back to her community. In 1996 she founded the Refugee Camp Youth Project, an outreach organization aimed at improving the lives of children in places like Haiti, Zaire, Kenya, Uganda, and New Jersey. The organization's projects included a day camp for inner-city kids in New Jersey and well-building projects in Africa. Hill's charity put on the first ever concert by an American act in Haiti. Over 75,000 showed up, including the country's president, for the benefit concert for the country's orphanages and rehabilitation camps. The money was mismanaged, some say by the Haitian government, but a second concert in Miami also garnered money for the foundation. Hill also organized "Hoodshock" in Harlem, which featured the late Notorious B.I.G. and the Fugees among others. In July of 2001, she teamed with Marc Anthony and Luther Vandross in a benefit concert, called "Aftershock," to provide relief to earthquake victims in India and El Salvador. The Refugee Camp Youth Project closed its doors in late 2000.

Turned from the Limelight

At the height of her popularity, Hill did something unusual: she retreated from the public eye. Hill bought her parents' house in South Orange, New Jersey, and eventually had three more children with Marley, whom she eventually married. And though she did not grant interviews and limited her appearances, Hill continued to compose her music. Her 2002 release of a performance on MTV Unplugged highlighted a new side of Hill, a side full of pain and emotion. Her emotional acoustic performance shocked fans who had pigeonholed her music talents into the hip-hop renditions of her earlier work, but her commanding lyrics and vocal performance marked a new high in her artistic career.

Slowly, Hill sought out performance opportunities, appearing with the Fugees for the first time since the late 1990s at various concerts in 2004 and 2005. Hill reemerged with a keen focus on her artistic vision, not a desire to please critics. In Trace magazine, her first interview in five years, Hill declared that the music she creates from now on "will only be to provide information to my own children," adding "If other people benefit from it, then so be it." She spoke of work on a new solo album and the possibility of a new album with the Fugees.

Awards

Two Grammy Awards for Best R&B song by a duo or group, for "Killing Me Softly with His Song," and for best rap album, The Score; 1997; triple platinum certification, November 1998, for The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, Recording Industry Association of America; five Grammy Awards, including two for The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, best R&B song for "Doo Wop (That Thing)," best new artist, and best female R&B vocalist; Essence Award, for humanitarian work, 1998; three NAACP Image Awards, 1999; two American Music Awards, for The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, 2000.

Works

Selected works

    Albums
    • (With the Fugees) Blunted on Reality, Ruffhouse/Columbia, 1993.
    • (With the Fugees) The Score, Ruffhouse/Columbia, 1996.
    • The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, Ruffhouse/Columbia, 1998.
    • The Lauryn Hill Story, Chrome Dreams, 2000.
    • MTV Unplugged No. 2.0, Columbia, 2002.
    • Greatest Hits, 2003.
    Films
    • Sister Act II: Back in the Habit, 1993.
    • Restaurant, 2000.

    Further Reading

    Periodicals

    • Essence, August 1996, p. 85; June 1998, p. 74.
    • Harper's Bazaar, April 1998, pp. 204-208.
    • Rolling Stone, September 5, 1996.
    • Time, July 6, 1998, pp. 85-86.
    • Trace, July 14, 2005.
    • Vibe, March 1996; June/July 1996; August 1998.
    On-line
    • Lauryn Hill, www.laurynhill.com (August 4, 2005).
    • "Lauryn Hill Returns to the Limelight," CNN, www.cnn.com/2005/SHOWBIZ/Music/07/13/people.laurynhill.ap/?section=cnn_showbiz (August 4, 2005).
    • "Lauryn Hill: She Knows Why the Cage Bird Sings," Horizon Magazine, http://horizonmag.com/1/hill.htm (August 4, 2005).

    — Carol Brennan and Sara Pendergast

    Artist: Lauryn Hill
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    See Lauryn Hill Lyrics
    • Born: May 25, 1975, South Orange, NJ
    • Active: '90s, 2000s
    • Genres: Rap
    • Instrument: Vocals, Producer, Arranger
    • Representative Albums: "The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill," "MTV Unplugged No. 2.0," "Ms. Hill"
    • Representative Songs: "Doo Wop (That Thing)," "Ex-Factor," "Everything Is Everything"

    Biography

    Call Lauryn Hill the mother of hip-hop invention; with her 1998 solo debut The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, the Fugees' most vocal member not only established herself as creative force on her own, but also broke new ground by successfully integrating rap, soul, reggae, and R&B into her own sound.

    Raised in South Orange, NJ, Hill spent her youth listening her parents' multi-genre, multi-generational record collection. She began singing at an early age, and was soon snagging minor roles on television (As the World Turns) and in film (Sister Act II: Back in the Habit). Her on-again, off-again stint in the Fugees began at the age of 13, but was often interrupted by both the acting gigs and her enrollment at Columbia University. After developing a following in the tri-state area, the group's first release -- the much-hyped but uneven Blunted on Reality -- bombed, almost causing a breakup. But with the multi-platinum The Score, the Fugees (and especially the camera-friendly Hill) achieved international success, though some pundits took shots at their penchant for cover songs.

    That criticism made Miseducation even more of a surprise. Hill wrote, arranged, or produced just about every track on the album, which is steeped in her old-school background, both musically (the Motown-esque singalong of "Doo Wop (That Thing)") and lyrically (the nostalgic "Every Ghetto, Every City"). As Miseducation began a long reign on the charts through most of the fall and winter of 1998 -- initially thanks to heavy buzz and overwhelming radio support for "Doo Wop (That Thing)" -- Hill became a national media icon, as magazines ranging from Time to Esquire to Teen People vied to put her on the cover. By the end of the year, as the album topped virtually every major music critic's best-of list, she was being credited for helping fully assimilate hip-hop into mainstream music. (Such an analysis, however, is lightweight at best: Hip-hop had been a huge force on the sales and radio fronts for most of the decade, and rappers Jay-Z, DMX, and Outkast had dropped similarly lauded LPs prior to or just after Miseducation's release, adding to the genre's dominant sales for the year). The momentum finally culminated at the February 1999 Grammy awards, during which Hill took home five trophies from her 11 nominations, including Album of the Year, Best New Artist, Best Female R&B Vocal Performance, Best R&B Song, and Best R&B Album; the most ever for a woman. Shortly after, she launched a highly praised national tour with Atlanta rappers Outkast.

    Hill also faced a lawsuit from two musicians who claim they were denied full credit for their work on the album. In an interesting twist, Hill's album proved to be such a commercial and critical success that it shed doubt on the Fugees' future. Their in-fighting became common knowledge, and matters were complicated when many fans interpreted Miseducation's various anti-stardom rants as a public dissing of co-Fugee Wyclef Jean.

    She did continue shaping her solo career. The double-disc MTV Unplugged No. 2.0 appeared in spring 2002, showcasing a deeply personal performance from Hill. ~ Brian Raftery, All Music Guide
    Wikipedia: Lauryn Hill
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    Lauryn Hill Adams

    Hill performing in Prague, Summer 2007
    Background information
    Birth name Lauryn Noel Hill
    Born May 25, 1975 (1975-05-25) (age 34)
    Origin South Orange, New Jersey, United States
    Genres R&B, Hip Hop, Soul, Reggae
    Occupations Singer, rapper, songwriter, record producer, actress
    Instruments Vocals, guitar, piano
    Years active 1988–2002
    Labels Columbia, Ruffhouse
    Associated acts Fugees
    Website www.lauryn-hill.com

    Lauryn Noel Hill (born May 25, 1975)[1] is an American recording artist, musician, producer and actress. Early in her career, she established her reputation in the hip-hop world as the lone female member of the Fugees. In 1998, she launched her solo career with the release of the commercially successful and critically acclaimed album, The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill. The recording earned Hill five Grammy Awards.[2]

    Following the success of her debut album, Hill largely dropped out of public view, in part due to her displeasure with fame and the music industry. After a four-year hiatus, she released MTV Unplugged No. 2.0, a live recording of "deeply personal songs." The live recording was performed with an acoustic guitar played by Hill.[3] Hill also participated in a short-lived Fugees reunion during the mid-2000s. Hill is the mother of five children with Rohan Marley, the fourth son of reggae musician Bob Marley.[4]

    Contents

    Biography

    Early life

    Lauryn Hill was born in South Orange, New Jersey, the second of two children born to high school English teacher Valerie Hill and computer programmer Mal Hill. As a child, Hill listened to her parents' Motown 1960s soul records. Music was a central part of the Hill home. Mal Hill sang at weddings, Valerie played the piano, and Lauryn's older brother Melaney played the saxophone, guitar, drums, harmonica, violin, and piano. In 1988, Hill appeared as an Amateur Night contestant on It's Showtime at the Apollo. She sang her own version of Smokey Robinson's song "Who's Lovin' You?", where she was booed tremendously.[5]

    Hill was childhood friends with actor Zach Braff and both graduated from Columbia High School in 1993, where Hill was an active student, cheerleader, and performer. Braff has spoken of Hill attending his Bar Mitzvah in 1988.[6] Hill enrolled at Columbia University in 1993 and attended for about a year before dropping out to pursue her entertainment career.[7]

    Personal life

    Hill and Wyclef Jean dated through the majority of the Fugees time together, a relationship that friends have called "complicated".[5] In the summer of 1996, she met Rohan Marley, son of the late reggae icon Bob Marley, and openly had a relationship with him. Jean knew about this relationship. Hill soon became pregnant by Marley, who himself was already married. She kept the information about the identity of the baby's father a secret to almost everyone; Jean assumed the baby was his when he first visited her in the hospital.[5]

    Though she refers to Marley as her husband, the two appear to have never been legally married.[5] Marley never divorced his first wife, Geraldine Khawly, whom he married in 1993 while a sophomore at University of Miami, Florida. With Khawly he has two children, Eden and Nicolas.[8][9] Marley's personal MySpace account lists his relationship status as "single",[10] but says he and Hill are "spiritually together". Hill got into trouble in a recent vacation in Vietnam when she allegedly lost a high number of card games but failed to pay up on her debts. According to her Facebook page, Hill rates herself as an experienced card player, but her recent losing streak has cast doubt over this claim.

    Hill and Rohan have had five children together: Zion David Hill-Marley, Selah Louise Marley, Joshua Marley, and John Marley. The couple's fifth child is a girl who was born in early 2008;[11][12][13] and Marley told People magazine that although the baby is seven months old, she is still without a name.[14] Since 1998, Hill has lived in both the Caribbean and an upscale hotel in Miami,[5][15] but in August 2008, it was reported that Hill was living with her mother and children in her hometown of South Orange, New Jersey.[14]

    Acting career

    Hill began her acting career at a young age, appearing on the soap opera As The World Turns as Kira Johnson. In 1993, she co-starred in Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit as Rita Louise Watson, in which she performed the songs "His Eye Is on the Sparrow" (a duet with Tanya Blount) and "Joyful, Joyful". It was in this role that she first came to national prominence, with Roger Ebert calling her "the girl with the big joyful voice". Her other acting work includes the play Club XII with MC Lyte, and the motion pictures King of the Hill, Hav Plenty, and Restaurant. After her rise to musical stardom, she reportedly turned down roles in Charlie's Angels, The Bourne Identity, The Mexican, The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions.[5]

    She appeared on the soundtrack to Conspiracy Theory in 1996 with "Can't Take My Eyes Off You", and on Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood in 2002 with the track "Selah".

    Musical career

    The Fugees

    The Refugee Camp ("Fugees") formed after Prakazrel "Pras" Michel approached Hill in high school about joining a music group he was creating. Soon after, she met Michel's cousin and fellow Haïtian immigrant, Wyclef Jean. At some point, Hill was nicknamed "L Boogie", as she began to convert her poetic writing into rap verses. Hill's singing gained worldwide acclaim with the Fugees' remake of "Killing Me Softly with His Song", accompanied by a sample from Rotary Connection's "Memory Band".

    The Fugees' first album, Blunted on Reality, peaked at #49 on the U.S. Hot 100. The album sold over two million copies worldwide. Blunted on Reality was followed by The Score, a multi-platinum, Grammy-winning album that established two of the three Fugees as international rap stars. Singles from The Score include "Ready or Not", "Fu-Gee-La", "No Woman, No Cry", and "Killing Me Softly" (written by Lori Lieberman and made famous by Roberta Flack).

    The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill (1998)

    In 1996, Hill began production on an album that would eventually become The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill. The title was partially inspired by The Education of Sonny Carson, a film and autobiographical novel about a troubled African American youth.[16] The album featured contributions from D'Angelo, Carlos Santana, Mary J. Blige and a then-unknown John Legend. Songs for the album were largely written in an attic studio in South Orange, New Jersey and recorded at Chung King Studios in Jamaica.[17][18] Wyclef Jean initially didn't support Hill recording a solo album, but eventually offered his production help; Hill turned him down.[5]

    Lauryn Hill was once an artist on Ruffhouse Records.

    Several songs on the album concerned her frustrations with The Fugees;[17] "I Used to Love Him" dealt with the break-down of the relationship between Hill and Wyclef Jean.[17] "To Zion" spoke about her decision to have her first baby, even though many at the time encouraged her to abort the pregnancy as to not interfere with her blossoming career.[19]

    The Miseducation contained several interludes of a teacher speaking to what is implied to be a classroom of children; in fact, the "teacher" was played by Ras Baraka (a poet, educator and politician) speaking to a group of kids in the living room of Hill's New Jersey home.[16] The singer requested that Baraka speak to the children about the concept of love, and he improvised the lecture.[16]

    Though The Miseducation was largely a collaborative work between Hill and a group of musicians known as New Ark (Vada Nobles, Rasheem Pugh, Tejumold and Johari Newton), there was "label pressure to do the Prince thing," wherein all tracks would be credited as "written and produced by" the artist with little outside help.[5][20] While recording the album, when Hill was asked about providing contracts or documentation to the musicians, she replied, "We all love each other. This ain't about documents. This is blessed."[5] Hill, her management, and her record label were sued in 1998 by New Ark, claiming that they either co-wrote or co-produced 13 of 14 tracks on the album.[21] The suit was settled out of court in February 2001 for a reported $5 million.[2]

    In 1998, Hill released The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, which was both critically and commercially successful. It sold over 423,000 copies in its first week and topped the Billboard 200 albums chart for four weeks and the Billboard R&B Album chart for six weeks; it would go on to sell more than 18 million copies over the next decade.[2] The first single off the album was "Lost Ones" (US #27), released in Spring 1998. The second was "Doo Wop (That Thing)", which reached #1 in the Billboard charts. Other singles released in support of the album were "Ex-Factor" (US #21), "Everything Is Everything" (US #35), and "To Zion".

    At the 1999 Grammy Awards, Hill was nominated 10 times, becoming the first woman ever to be nominated 10 times in one year: Hill won five Grammys including Album of the Year (beating Madonna's critically acclaimed Ray of Light), Best R&B Album, Best R&B Song, Best Female R&B Vocal Performance, and Best New Artist. Hill set a new record in the industry, becoming the first woman to win five Grammys in one night. Between 1998 and 1999, Hill earned $25 million from record sales and touring.[5]

    Hill became a national media icon, as magazines ranging from Time to Esquire to Teen People vied to put her on the cover.

    In the late 1990s, Hill was noted by some as a humanitarian. In 1996 she received an Essence Award for work which has included the 1996 founding of the Refugee Project, an outreach organization that supports a two-week overnight camp for at-risk youth, and for supporting well-building projects in Kenya and Uganda, as well as for staging a rap concert in Harlem to promote voter registration. In 1999 Hill received three awards at the 30th Annual NAACP Image Awards. In 1999 Ebony named her one of "100+ Most Influential Black Americans". She was named with Congressman Jesse Jackson, Jr. and others among the "10 For Tomorrow," in the EBONY 2000: Special Millennium Issue.

    Self-imposed exile and MTV Unplugged No. 2.0 (2000–2003)

    After the release of her debut album, she explored other methods of expressing herself, including creating an extensive amount of music, poetry, and clothing designs.[citation needed] She started writing a screenplay about the life of Bob Marley, in which she planned to act as his wife Rita.[5] She also began producing a romantic comedy about soul food with a working title of Sauce, and accepted a starring role in the film adaptation of Toni Morrison's novel Beloved;[5] she later dropped out of both projects due to pregnancy.[5]

    Hill became dissatisfied with the music industry; she felt she was being unfairly controlled by her record label, and disliked being unable "to go to the grocery store without makeup."[16] She fired her management team and began attending Bible study classes five days a week; she also stopped doing interviews, watching television and listening to music.[20] She started associating with a "spiritual adviser" named Brother Anthony.[22] Some familiar with Hill believe Anthony more resembled a cult leader than a spiritual advisor,[5][23] and thought his guidance probably inspired much of Hill's more controversial public behavior.[22][23][24]

    In 2000, she dropped out of the public eye. She described this period of her life to Essence: "People need to understand that the Lauryn Hill they were exposed to in the beginning was all that was allowed in that arena at that time… I had to step away when I realized that for the sake of the machine, I was being way too compromised. I felt uncomfortable about having to smile in someone’s face when I really didn’t like them or even know them well enough to like them."[4]

    She also spoke about her emotional crisis, saying, "For two or three years I was away from all social interaction. It was a very introspective time because I had to confront my fears and master every demonic thought about inferiority, about insecurity or the fear of being black, young and gifted in this western culture."[4] She went on to say that she had to fight to retain her identity, and was forced "to deal with folks who weren't happy about that."[4]

    On July 21, 2001, Hill unveiled her new material to a small crowd, for a taping of an MTV Unplugged special. An album of concert, titled MTV Unplugged No. 2.0, focused on the lyrics and the message rather than the musical arrangements. "Fantasy is what people want, but reality is what they need", she said during the concert. "I’ve just retired from the fantasy part." Most of the songs featured only an acoustic guitar and her voice, somewhat raspy from rehearsal on the day before the recording. Hill used the set as an opportunity to give information on why she had been absent from the public for a period of time and what she had found while away.

    Unlike the near-unanimous praise of The Miseducation, 2.0 sharply divided critics. AllMusic gave the album 4 out of 5 stars, saying that the recording "is the unfinished, unflinching presentation of ideas and of a person. It may not be a proper follow-up to her first album, but it is fascinating."[25] Rolling Stone called the album "a public breakdown".[5] Slant Magazine's Sal Cinquemani wrote, "Hill's guitarwork is multi-textured and fine-tuned but her vocals lack confidence and seem to toe the edge of her range throughout the album. And though the stripped-down nature of the show is fitting, many of the songs sound as if they are still in their infancy."[26] Despite the mixed reviews, 2.0 debuted at #3 on the Billboard 200 and went platinum four weeks after its release.

    Despite Hill's departure from the media and celebrity, she continued to have some success in the music world. Her song "Mystery of Iniquity" was nominated for a Grammy without promotion or radio airplay and used as an interpolation by hip-hop mega-producer Kanye West for his single "All Falls Down" (eventually recorded by Syleena Johnson).

    Vatican controversy

    On December 13, 2003, Hill made headlines by denouncing "corruption, exploitation, and abuses" in reference to the molestation of boys by Catholic priests in the United States and the cover-up of offenses by Catholic Church officials.[27] The statements were made during a performance at a Christmas benefit concert at the Vatican. Reading from a prepared statement,[27] Hill told the crowd of 7,500:

    I am sorry if I am about to offend some of you. I did not accept my invitation to celebrate with you the birth of Christ. Instead I ask you why you are not in mourning for him in this place? I want to ask you, what have you got to say about the lives you have broken? What about the families who were expecting God and instead were cheated by the Devil? Who feels sorry for them, the men, women and children damaged psychologically, emotionally and mentally by the sexual perversions and abuse carried out by the people they believed in? Holy God is a witness to the corruption of your leadership, of the exploitation and abuses which are the minimum that can be said for the clergy. There is no acceptable excuse to defend the church."[28]

    Hill called on the church leaders to "repent" and encouraged the crowd to "not seek blessings from man but from God."[29] She then performed the songs "Damnable Heresies" and "Social Drugs".[29]

    High-ranking church officials in attendance included Cardinal Camillo Ruini, Monsignor Rino Fisichella and Edmund Cardinal Szoka.[30] Pope John Paul II was not present.[30] The segment was cut from the television broadcast. Both the Vatican and Columbia Records refused to issue official statements regarding Hill's actions.[31][32] Monsignor Fisichella told reporters that Hill had acted "in poor taste and very bad mannered. It showed a complete lack of respect for her invitation and for the place where she had been invited to perform".[33] The Catholic League called Hill "pathologically miserable" and claimed her career is "in decline".[34]

    Hill responded to the controversy on December 16: "What I said was the truth. Is telling the truth bad manners? What I asked was the church to repent for what has happened."[35] The following day, several reporters suggested that Hill's comments at the Vatican may have been influenced by her "advisor" Brother Anthony.[36]

    Short-lived return of the Fugees (2004–2006)

    The Fugees performed on September 18, 2004 at Dave Chappelle's Block Party in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn. They headlined a bill that included a star-studded cast of hip-hop celebrities. The concert featured Hill's nearly a cappella rendition of "Killing Me Softly". The event was recorded by director Michel Gondry and was released on March 3, 2006 to mostly positive reviews.[37][38]

    In 2005, she told an interviewer that "The Fugees was a conspiracy to control, to manipulate and to encourage dependence. I took a lot of abuse that many people would not have taken in these circumstances."[39]

    The Fugees also appeared at BET's 2005 Music Awards on June 28, 2005, where they opened the show with a 12-minute set.

    One track, "Take It Easy", was leaked online and therefore was released as an internet single on September 27, 2005. It peaked at #40 on the Billboard R&B Chart. The song was mostly panned by critics, as The Village Voice wrote, "Turns out that a Fugees reunion wasn't really what anyone was waiting for; we just wanted Lauryn to start rapping again."[40]

    The Fugees embarked on a European tour from November 30, 2005 through December 20, 2005. The group played in Austria, Slovakia, Sweden, Finland, Norway, Germany, Belgium, Italy, France, England, Ireland and Switzerland.

    On February 6, 2006, the Fugees did a special "Reunion Concert" in Hollywood, that was offered as a live webcast on the Verizon Wireless website. The Fugees were featured in numerous Verizon Wireless VCast advertisements in magazines and on TV around that same time. A new song titled "Foxy" was made available on VCast and a third new song was leaked, unofficially titled "Wannabe", which uses the same hook as the Michael Jackson song "I Wanna Be Where You Are".

    Old tensions between Hill and the other members of the group soon resurfaced, and the reunion fizzled before an album could be recorded. Jean and Michel both blamed Hill for the split. Hill reportedly demanded to be addressed by everyone, including her bandmates, as "Ms. Hill"; she also considered changing her moniker to "Empress".[14] Her chronic tardiness — sometimes stalling up to 45 minutes after the two had taken the stage to join them — has been cited as another contributing factor to the break up.[14]

    Michel told the press in August 2007, "Before I work with Lauryn Hill again, you will have a better chance of seeing Osama Bin Laden and George W. Bush in Starbucks having a latte, discussing foreign policies… At this point I really think it will take an act of God to change her, because she is that far out there."[41]

    2004–present

    Hill has been slowly working on a new album[5] and in November 2004 shot a music video. The album had a slated street date of November 2005, and neither it nor the music video have been released.[42] It was also reported that as of 2003, Columbia Records had spent more than $2.5 million funding Hill's new album, mostly spent on installing a recording studio in the singer's Miami apartment and flying different musicians around the country.[5]

    In 2004, Hill began selling a pay-per-view music video of the song "Social Drugs" through her website.[43] Those who purchase the $15 video would only be able to view it three times before it expired. In addition to the video, Hill began selling autographed posters and Polaroids through her website, with some items listed at upwards of $500.[43]

    Performing in New York's Central Park in 2005

    In 2005, she told USA Today, "If I make music now, it will only be to provide information to my own children. If other people benefit from it, then so be it."[39] When asked how she now felt about the songs on 2.0, she stated "a lot of the songs were transitional. The music was about how I was feeling at the time, even though I was documenting my distress as well as my bursts of joy."[39]

    She has toured several times in recent years, though most of her concerts have received mixed reviews.[44][45][46] Hill is often late to concerts (sometimes by over two hours) and reconfigures her well-known hits in to "unrecognizable scat chants" while "sporting frizzy orange hair and exaggerated makeup".[14][47][48] On some occasions, fans have booed her and left early;[49] some fans have also demanded their money back after concerts.[50]

    On October 6, 2005, Lauryn Hill emceed and performed two songs at the Take Back TV concert launching Al Gore's CurrentTV.[51][52][53]

    In June 2007, Sony records said though Hill has "consistently recorded over the past decade" and has what amounts to "a library of unreleased material in the vault", she had recently re-entered the studio "with the goal of making a new LP."[54] Later that same year, Think Differently music quietly released a 22 track compilation titled Ms. Hill which featured cuts from The Miseducation, various soundtracks contributions and other "unreleased" songs.[55] It features guest appearances from D'Angelo, Rah Digga and John Forté.[56] It is unclear if the album is sanctioned by the artist — many of the songs are obviously in unfinished format and clock in at under one minute — but it is currently listed on AllMusic and Amazon.

    Reports in mid-2008 claimed that Columbia Records currently believe Lauryn Hill to be "on hiatus."[14] Rohan Marley disputed these claims, telling an interviewer that Hill has enough material for several albums: "She writes music in the bathroom, on toilet paper, on the wall. She writes it in the mirror if the mirror smokes up. She writes constantly. This woman does not sleep". One of the few public appearances Hill made in 2008 was at a Martha Stewart book-signing in New Jersey, perplexing some in the press.[57]

    On November 4, 2008, Hill was scheduled to perform at the Avo Session Basel music festival in Basel, Switzerland. Her concert was cancelled "for personal reasons" [58].

    In April 2009, it was reported that Hill would engage in a 10 day tour of European summer festivals during mid-July of that year. On June 10, Hill's management informed the promoters of the Stockholm Jazz Festival, which she was scheduled to headline, that she would not be performing due to unspecified "health reasons."[59] Shortly afterwards, the rest of the tour was cancelled as well.[59]

    Alleged racist statements

    A unsubstantiated rumor circulated that Hill made the following statement: "I would rather have my children starve than have white people buy my albums". MTV publicly disclaimed the quotation, and after a discussion on The Howard Stern Show, Hill herself called in to the show from Norway to refute it.[60] Hill has repeatedly asserted in interviews that the rumor is false, that she never made such statements, would never make such statements, and that she is in no way racist.[61]

    Legacy and influences

    Lauryn Hill has been cited as an influence by many, especially those in the neo-soul movement of the 2000s. Musicians who have acknowledged Hill's importance include Prince,[14] John Legend,[62] Alicia Keys,[63] D'Angelo,[16] Mary J. Blige,[2] and Jazmine Sullivan.[2] In 2005, Talib Kweli released a song about the singer, titled "Ms. Hill", on Right About Now.[64][65]

    Michelle Obama, wife of U.S. President Barack Obama, told the BBC that she frequently listens to Hill's music on her iPod,[66] while 2008 Republican presidential candidate Senator John McCain's daughter Meghan has claimed that her father listens to Hill: "I borrowed his car once in D.C., and I was like, looking through [his] CDs, and I was like, 'Oh, Lauryn Hill.'"[67] Actors Russell Crowe and Denzel Washington are also reportedly fans of the singer.[14] D'Angelo, who appeared on "Nothing Even Matters," referred in an interview to at least one church reportedly having used the song in a service.[16]

    Discography

    See also

    References

    1. ^ Raftery, Brian. "Lauryn Hill - Biography". Allmusic. http://allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&searchlink=&sql=11:gpfuxqqhldte~T1. Retrieved 2008-12-11. 
    2. ^ a b c d e Rolling Stone article: "Inside "The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill: page 1."
    3. ^ AllMusic entry for Lauryn Hill.
    4. ^ a b c d They Call Me Ms. Hill : Essence.com
    5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Toure (2003-10-30). "The Mystery of Lauryn Hill". Rolling Stone. http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/5940100/the_mystery_of_lauryn_hill/. Retrieved 2009-05-17. 
    6. ^ "BRAFF: 'LAURYN HILL WAS MY COKE AND PEPSI PARTNER'". PR-inside.com. http://www.pr-inside.com/rss/braff-lauryn-hill-was-my-coke-and-pepsi-partner-r15839.htm. Retrieved September 6 2006. 
    7. ^ http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,990180,00.html
    8. ^ Géraldine Khawly family tree
    9. ^ Rolling Stone: The Mystery of Lauryn Hill
    10. ^ MySpace: Rohan Marley's official personal page.
    11. ^ http://allhiphop.com/stories/rumors/archive/2008/02/04/19232808.aspx Lauryn Hill had a baby girl in the very recent past
    12. ^ YBF Exclusive: Lauryn Hill Is Preggers!
    13. ^ http://www.bossip.com/11573/lauryn-gives-birth Lauryn Hill just had her 5th kid
    14. ^ a b c d e f g h People magazine article: "Whatever Happened to ... Lauryn Hill?" by Tiffany McGee and Alex Tresniowski.
    15. ^ FoxNews article: "White House Says 'No' to Denzel Washington's 'Great Debaters'".
    16. ^ a b c d e f Rolling Stone article: "Inside "The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill: page 7."
    17. ^ a b c Rolling Stone article: "Inside "The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill: page 3."
    18. ^ Rolling Stone article: "Inside "The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill: page 5."
    19. ^ Rolling Stone article: "Inside "The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill: page 4."
    20. ^ a b Rolling Stone article: "Inside "The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill: page 8."
    21. ^ The Legal Tangle of ‘Miseducation’
    22. ^ a b Urb Magazine article: "Lauryn Hill :: The Mystification of Ms. Hill".
    23. ^ a b MSNBC article: "Was Hill influenced to attack Catholic Church?".
    24. ^ Contact Music article: "DID CULT MAN INFLUENCE LAURYN HILL'S VATICAN RANT?".
    25. ^ http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:wnfyxqu0ldke
    26. ^ Slant Magazine Music Review: Lauryn Hill: Unplugged No. 2.0
    27. ^ a b MTV News article: "Lauryn Hill Attacks Catholic Church At Vatican Concert"
    28. ^ What Lauryn Hill told the Vatican
    29. ^ a b Entertainment Weekly article: "Forgive Them Father"
    30. ^ a b CTV News article: "Lauryn Hill speaks out against abuse at Vatican."
    31. ^ New York Times article: "ARTS BRIEFING 12/16/2003".
    32. ^ Rolling Stone article: "Hill Blasts Catholic Church".
    33. ^ The Age article: "Catholic leaders get an angry sermon".
    34. ^ Poynter Online - Abuse Tracker
    35. ^ IMDB news article: "Movie/TV News WENN 16 Dec 2003".
    36. ^ MSNBC article: Was Hill influenced to attack Catholic Church?".
    37. ^ Metacritic entry for Dave Chappelle's Block Party: film maintains an 84% positive rating ("Universal Acclaim").
    38. ^ RottenTomatoes.com entry for Dave Chappelle's Block Party: film maintains a 92% positive rating and is "Certified Fresh."
    39. ^ a b c USA Today article: "Lauryn Hill returns to the limelight."
    40. ^ The Fugees: Reunited and Not Very Good Tom Breihan, Villagevoice.com, September 26, 2005
    41. ^ AllHipHop.com Daily News - : Pras: "It Will Take An Act of God To Change Lauryn."
    42. ^ http://rellavent.blogspot.com/2005/07/lauryn-hill-trace-magazine-interview.html
    43. ^ a b http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1484249/20040109/hill_lauryn.jhtml?headlines=true
    44. ^ http://www.sacbee.com/static/weblogs/music/archives/003463.html
    45. ^ http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/06/29/DDGD8QN31O1.DTL
    46. ^ http://www.rte.ie/arts/2005/0714/hilll.html
    47. ^ http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1566531/20070807/hill_lauryn.jhtml?rsspartner=unknown
    48. ^ http://www.bossip.com/22351/coming-out-of-the-dark/
    49. ^ XXL article: "Label Source Says Lauryn Hill 'On Hiatus,' Rohan Marley Says 'She’s Always Working' have demanded their money back after her shows".
    50. ^ http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07185/799220-351.stm
    51. ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XPqJocrLjzM
    52. ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vTYgA1VBW2c
    53. ^ Lauryn Hill hosts Current TV launch
    54. ^ http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1563151/20070621/hill_lauryn.jhtml?rsspartner=rssFeedBurner
    55. ^ http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:0jfpxz9hld6e
    56. ^ http://www.amazon.com/Ms-Hill-Lauryn/dp/B0014FC29C
    57. ^ http://www.rollingstone.com/rockdaily/index.php/2008/10/24/random-notes-lauryn-hill-martha-stewart-bono-and-the-week-in-rock/
    58. ^ http://www.avo.ch/en/artists/arti08-akt.php?a=4
    59. ^ a b http://www.rollingstone.com/rockdaily/index.php/2009/06/10/lauryn-hill-cancels-european-tour-cites-health-reasons/
    60. ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gfuIMfHGJWs Lauryn Hill calls from Norway to clear up false racist rumors
    61. ^ Urban Legends Reference Pages: Lauryn Hill on Whites Buying Her Albums
    62. ^ http://www.musicomh.com/interviews/john-legend_0707.htm
    63. ^ http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/aliciakeys
    64. ^ http://www.avclub.com/content/node/22804
    65. ^ http://www.prefixmag.com/reviews/talib-kweli/right-about-now/14817/
    66. ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/nolpda/ifs_news/hi/newsid_7442000/7442317.stm
    67. ^ http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1579270/20080108/index.jhtml

    External links

    Awards and achievements
    Preceded by
    Paula Cole
    Grammy Award for Best New Artist
    1999
    Succeeded by
    Christina Aguilera



     
     
    Learn More
    Vince Vaughn: Saturday Night Live (TV Episode) (1998 Comedy TV Episode)
    MTV Unplugged: Lauryn Hill - No. 2.0 (2002 Music Film)
    Hip-Hop Uncensored, Vol. 2: The Real Hip Hop (2000 Music Film)

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