
Now, however, Kelly's dark side is fodder for talk shows and tabloids and has been documented by his accusers in police files and court documents. In the past, these jumbled passions suggested a dark side to Kelly's life just beneath the surface of his enormous public successes. Of course, Kelly has always trafficked in such outrageousness, mixing soft-porn come-ons with crying jags about his late mother, God and his own fallibility.
R kelly loveland album full#
But there are a few moments when the disconnect between Kelly's lyrics and his sordid legal troubles becomes disturbing, no more so than when he refers to himself as the "pied piper of R&B " in "Step in the Name of Love," a reference to the fairy-tale figure who enticed a village full of children away from their parents. But celebrity watchers scanning "Chocolate Factory" for howlers won't be disappointed. It ushers in an album that, by Kelly's standards, is PG-rated overall for lyrical content. Though "Ignition" resorts to a lame laundry list of automobile cliches, - Prince's "Little Red Corvette" with a few cylinders missing - the remix leaves tread marks on the imagination with its nursery-rhyme interjections and Jamaican inflections. "Right now, he's innocent until proven guilty, and there are stations in town playing this record, and listeners requesting that we play it, and to stay competitive I have to play it, too." "People like President Clinton paved the way," he said. 2 on the R&B chart, a major hit in urban markets nationwide.ī-96 program director Todd Cavanah pointed out that Kelly is not the first celebrity in recent years to weather a sex scandal. The song's opening line - "Let me stick my key in your ignition, babe" - is indicative of its subject matter, a salacious account of love-making in the back seat of a car. It's been issued in a couple of formats: a slow-grind ballad of the sort Kelly specializes in and an uptempo remix. Yet, a few weeks ago Kelly resurfaced with "Ignition," the first single from "Chocolate Factory," and radio embraced it.

Kelly" and "R.," with its inspirational anthem "I Believe I Can Fly," established him as the biggest R&B singer of the '90s, Kelly found his career in danger of bottoming out. "The Best of Both Worlds," a joint album with Jay-Z, flopped, and last autumn his Jive record label scrapped a finished Kelly solo album, "Loveland." After multimillion-sellers such as "12 Play," "R. His songs were pulled from radio playlists, and hip-hop peers such as Jay- Z and Nas publicly distanced themselves from him. Kelly was indicted last year in Chicago on 21 counts of child pornography, and faces 12 more counts on similar charges after a recent arrest in Florida.
