Singer-songwriter and guitarist India.Arie
learned the transforming power of music early in life, encouraged
by both parents. Her mother, Simpson, is herself a former singer,
and now India's stylist who sometimes comes onstage to duet with
her daughter. Her father is former Denver Nuggets basketball star
Ralph Simpson.
She had taken up several musical instruments throughout
her schooling in Denver, Colorado, but her discovery of the guitar
at college in Savannah, Georgia, led to a personal revelation about
songwriting and performing. "When I started tapping into my
own sensitivity, I started to understand people better. It was a
direct result of writing songs," she said when she released
her first album.
India co-founded an Atlanta-based independent music
collective, and her single song on a locally released compilation
led her to a gig at Lilith
Fair, where a Universal / Motown music scout spotted her. Her
first release, Acoustic Soul drew from hip-hop, neo-soul, blues
and folk music, all at once. The album debuted at Number 10 on the
Billboard national album chart upon its release in March of 2001.
Within six weeks, it was certified as a gold record for sales of
over a half-million.
By the end of 2001, the album had passed the million
unit mark, and she was named Best New Artist by Vibe Magazine, MTV2
and Billboard's Video Awards. India also drew nominations from the
NAACP Image Awards and Soul Train's Lady of Soul Awards. Entertainment
Weekly magazine listed India among the Top 100 "It" Entertainers
of 2001. In 2002, she an Essence Award for "writing the anthem
for Black womanhood, for celebrating our strength, courage and wisdom,
and illuminating our beauty -- naturally."
At the 2002 Grammy Awards in 2002, India astonished
the record industry by drawing nominations in seven categories,
including Best New Artist; and Record, Song and Album of the year.
This was the most of any solo artist in history. Although she took
home no awards Grammy night, she turned in a buoyant performance
of "Video" to close the performances of the nominees.
India's creative fire remains bright with the release
of her sophomore album, Voyage to India, which was nominated for
four Grammys. "Writing songs teaches me," she
says. "It's like I hear words I could not make up in my own
head -- they're way more wise than I am! When I hear it in the completed
song, I say, 'Wow, that's a message for me.' That's the thing that
excites me, listening to this album and seeing how my life is going
to manifest itself into even more of what these songs are."
The music of India.Arie expresses an unshakable and much-needed
faith in the ways that love and life can lead us to our best selves.
She told a New York Times reporter, "I want my album to be
something that fills up a space with good love energy. Or fills
up a person that way -- where they say, 'Every time I listen to
that album, I feel good.' I want that. That's my wish."