Aaliyah: Serious Manner

Photographer David LaChapelle
August 25, 2012

Before Aaliyah passed away on August 25, 2001, Jon Caramanica profiled her in FADER #8. His feature is below. Aaliyah was also the subject of FADER's 2008 Icon Issue; read an oral history of her life told by Missy Elliott and Timbaland as well as Aaliyah's family and friends, then download two Aaliyah mixes made for that issue here.

It’s OK not to know that much about Aaliyah. She likes it better that way. “I’m a bit of a loner,” she fesses, “There are plenty of moments when I just want to be by myself.” And indeed, Aaliyah has consciously remained mysterious, no matter how much success tugs at her lithe frame. Unlike most artists who sacrifice their personal space, and sanity, for a turn in the spotlight, Aaliyah keeps it on the low. Her youthful indiscretions hardly get a mention anymore, and the rumor mill almost never stops on her block.

But even more curiously, Aaliyah’s enigmatic charm extends into the furthest reaches of her artistic life. For an R&B singer of her youth, stature and beauty, she’s serious, almost dark. Her songs about heartbreak and pain, though they may seem relevant to her past, are untraceable—“I’ve never written a song. I don’t know if I’ll ever really write a song. I’ve always been the interpreter. I act it out, so to speak on it personally I can’t do.”

But the scars are there. In an era of unchecked frivolity, Aaliyah is the last of the torch singers, a woman for whom entertaining is as cathartic for her as the audience. There’s complex emotion throughout her corpus (“There’s obviously reasons I’m attracted to certain songs”) from “If Your Girl Only Knew” to “4 Page Letter” to her latest, “We Need A Resolution”, the lead single from her third album, titled Aaliyah. In the video, she appears almost sullen, her eyes thick with dark makeup; again, Aaliyah makes her trademark her serious manner, not her more ephemeral charms.

It’s that intense intelligence that’s led Aaliyah to grow her career slowly, never spreading herself too thin, and never saturating the market with her image. In the five years that have passed since recording her last album, she’s quietly made a foray into film, beginning with Romeo Must Die and soon to include the sequel to The Matrix. In fact, in an indication of her multitasking skills, her new album was recorded in Australia, while Aaliyah was shooting the film adaptation of Anne Rice’s Queen Of The Damned. It was only her second film project, but she’s being taken seriously in that field as well, having already had a successful pitch meeting with 20th Century Fox. Aaliyah says of her ambition, “It’s in how you carry yourself. I’ve always been a very mature person and I’ve always known what I wanted. And I go after it no matter what.”

Posted: August 25, 2012
Aaliyah: Serious Manner