BIOGRAPHY
"If you're going to make it in
this business, you need the kind of personality that, you have
to do or die, there's no alternative." So said Jennifer Lopez
once, about the rollercoaster ride that is the entertainment
business.
The multi talented superstar, who hails from
New York City's Castle Hill section of the Bronx, has had a
bead on that little secret of survival long before she ever
stepped in front of a movie camera. It is only now, with the
release of her much anticipated debut album for The WORK Group,
On The 6, can she take a breath, and dare to look back.
"I call the album On The 6 because I think
about traveling on the 6 train." she says. "That's howI used
to go into the city to audition, dance in clubs, dance classes.
It was how I used to come home."
A lot has happened since. It's the perfect
metaphor for a girl whose gutsy blend of fearlessness and raw
beauty conquered worlds far beyond a rickety subway line. "It's
how I started my journey." she says proudly.
One that began around age four, when she first
dared to dream she was going to be "somebody". By the time she
was a teenager, she had years of dancing classes under her belt,
as well as rock solid values instilled by her hard working Puerto
Rican parents. But Jennifer also recognized there were other
mountains to climb. If you follow her trail back to the days
before she was one of Hollywood's hottest stars, you'll find
traces of her trademark bravado and sensuality in every move.
An eye opening stint with Fox's groundbreaking
comedy Living Color as one of the acclaimed Flygirls; a streetwise
role on the ill fated TV series Sout Central; and eventually
her first film appearence, landing a crucial part in Director
Gregory Nava's Latino epic Mi Familia. She landed another plum
role along side Woody Harrelson and Wesley Snipes in Money Train.
Cut to career-defining roles in 1996's Selena, and 1998's Out
Of Sight, where Lopez's mesmeriz-ing performance as a street
savvy cop opposite George Clooney created the ultimate screen
chemistry, and you could sense the buzz surrounding Lopez was
beginning to bubble over.
The sum of such electrifying moments, however,
still didn't add up to the total Jennifer. Even though the national
media began painting her in Madonna and Monroe-esque strokes
("Watching her is like seeing molten rock churn an epic, yet
personal work, like On The 6, to fully flesh out what lies behind
those smoldering brown eyes: A captivating voice - and more
importantly - an untamed soul - yearning to musically express
to the joyful, somestimes painful, unpredictable ride of life.
"This is a dream come true for me," she says.
"Music has always been an important part of my life. It's funny,
but when I look back, there is always a song that will take
me there. Christmas was always salsa and merengue. Thanksgiving
- the songs from West Side Story, which for some reason always
come to then. Barbara Streisand - she always reminds me of my
mother because she's a huge fan. I remember being in the school
playground at lunchtime and hearing 'Rappers Delight'. I was
so open when I heard it my face lit up. And I remember Lisa
and the Cult Jam's 'All I Cried Out', when I was 13 or 14, because
I was going through my first little heartbreak."
No doubt a new generation of fans will be reacting
to Jennifer's powerful debut effort, pumped and primed for the
Latino tinged anthem "Let's Get Loud," produced by Emilio Estefan,
or swooning to the album's poignant opener, "If You Had My Love."
That track was helmed by Grammy award winning producer Rodney
Jerkins (Michael Jackson, Brandy), with Jennifer's magnetic
voice pulling the listener all the way into the story. Like
many of the album tracks, it was co-written by the album's executive
producer Corey Rooney.
"I looked to Corey for most of the leadership
on this album," Jennifer says. "We did a lot of listenling to
different kinds of music. For me lyrics are very important.
Every song on the album was something that touched me very deeply.
They ring very true. Words move me, but more than that it's
the image you create. You close your eyes and you can feel what
that person is going through and you connect with it. To me,
that's what music ia all about."
Coming from the cradle of the hip hop and Latin
hip hop movements, (the Boogie down Bronx), it's no surprise
that great beats also motivate Jennifer. Webo, salsa, disco,
rap, R&B, are all part of her music vocabulary. She was determined
from the start to enlist the best producers, forging a signature
sound that resonates long after you identified the styles. "I
call it Latin soul" she says. And it is indeed a diverse mix
of Latin-tinged, and hip hop driven rhytms that steers On The
6. Superstar producers such as the aforementioned Estefan, and
Jerkins as well as Sean "Puffy" Combs (Faith Evans, The Notorious
BIG), Rich Wake (Celine Dion) and Track Masters (Will Smith,
Nas, LL Cool J) among others, all stepper up for some of their
best work.
"I was fortunate to work with all the great
people that I did." Jennifer Lopez says. "It was great to work
with Puffy, for example. He's the consummate professional. He
always knows what he's doing in the studio. You can hear it
in the track we did." The song, "Feelin' So Good," which includes
blistering rap cameos by fellow Bronx alumni Fat Joe and Big
Pun, captures that street corner feel that Jennifer remembers
from her clubbing days. "I had an idea for the video already
for that one." se laughts. "I wanted to get off the train and
have Pun and Joe meet me in front of my actual apartment in
the Bronx. I have my parka on and we head downtown to club.
We emerge at 6:00 AM and it's daylight. Bach in the day, if
you came out of the Tunnel and it was daytime, you knew you
were in trouble."
It's those authentic movements, foundly recalled
by Jennifer, that anchor On The 6. Having to collaborate with
a myriad of producers - and facing a whole new set of pressures
as she high drives head-first into the music industry - she
is able to keep it real by never forgetting the importance of
her journey. It's that compass, musically and spiritually, that
guides this ambitious debut.
"There's a reason I call it Latino soul." Lopez
says. "It's a mixture of the things that I was when I was growing
up. I was coming up when hip and R&B was something we all loved.
Latino freestyle was big then. I always wanted to bring that
all together, in a pop format. My mother always had a big appreciation
for music. Musical, operas, pop. We listened to everything.
I remember when I first sat down with the record company about
what I wanted to do, they weren't quite sure of all the styles
I wanted to incorporate. But they were great, very supportive.
After they had heard the first couple of tracks they realized
what I was trying to accomplish."
Ironically, The WORK Group's Co-President Jeff
Ayeroff came close to originally signing Jennifer when he was
with Virgin records, and Lopez was still a Flygirl. It was after
Selena came out that the executive approached her again.
Now, the same audience who flocked to her critically
acclaimed performance will love the stirring duet with Latin
superstar Marc Anthony, on the heartwrenching "No Me Ames".
"I'm Marc's biggest fan." says enifer. "He's incredibly talented,
and knows how to interpret a song." Another album highlight
is the haunting ballad "Shouldd Have Never," produced by Poke
and Tone of the Trackmasters. Jennifer shares the willing credits
with Corey Rooney on the latter, and recalls that it was this
particular track that taught the most about songwriting.
"The Trackmasters brought us this guitar loop
for that, and it sounded like the Gypsy Kings, and I was like
yeah, that's just what I#m looking for. Corey said go home and
listen to it and get some ideas for a song. And I came back
and described this whole scenario for it, like a movie. So we
went into the next room and I just started describing this story
about a girl who says "I should have never touched you, looked
at you, etc." And he was like: "Great, that will be the chorus.
And we just put it into words."
The result is a song, and an album, as seductive
as any one of her movie roles, but rooted in those raw, vital
truths she learned a long time ago. Encouraged by family and
friends, she nurtured those rootss, extending her grasp to achieve
goals that most girls her age only dreamed about. Dreams that
too often end with the closing of subway doors.
It's more than fitting that an album filled
with such aspirations should be crafted by a dancer who wanted
to be a singer, who evolved into actress, who finally got the
opportunity to sing. On The 6, in many ways, is about coming
full circle.
"This album completes the journey. Doing television,
the movies, and now this, I'm actually accomplishing what I
set out to do." she says. "There's something to be said about
patience. Because you could be running toward something, when
what you want is right behind you trying to catch up with you."
Just like a downtown train...
Biography taken from the official
site