
Blige with a Star on The Hollywood Walk of Fame on Januin Hollywood, California. Blige attend the ceremony honoring Mary J. Producer Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs and recording artist Mary J. Blige fights back tears talking about the Roy Ayers sample that drives the song. The cornerstone of the documentary is the album’s title track, first heard in a cappella form as we see footage of Schlobohm and its residents. In a clip of a teenage Blige singing Vesta Williams‘ “Congratulations,” we see the foreshadowing of her iconic vocal delivery, as well as an illustration of how Blige was singing for escapism rather than stardom. It’s something to be said about how an environment can condition you to choke down any imagination of perseverance within you, just for the sake of survival one of the greatest paradoxes in the life of a Black American. (Photo by Theo Wargo/Getty Images)īlige spoke candidly about growing feelings of dejection and defeat, learning to push down her dreams and choosing not to ever smile because the people in Schlobohm were jealous of those with ambition and aspirations. Blige attends the “Mary J Blige’s My Life” New York Premiere at Rose Theater, Jazz at Lincoln Center on Jin New York City. It is directed by Academy Award winner Vanessa Roth ( Freeheld). Blige’s My Life, streaming on Amazon Prime Video Friday. Now, fans get to have a detailed look inside the making of that album with a brand new documentary, Mary J. Perhaps no other of Blige’s 13 studio albums exemplifies this connection better than 1994’s My Life. However, it’s her ability to connect with her fans that’s been her most enduring virtue. With 20 Top 10 R&B hits, eight consecutive platinum albums, and nine Grammy Awards, the Queen of Hip-Hop Soul has taken her place among the most important artists in American music history. Over the past three decades, very few artists have been as consistently successful as Mary J. King lamenting about the thrill being gone all the way down to Janet Jackson calling for everyone to break color lines and join a rhythm nation, there has been no shortage of songs and albums that have captured the multiple obstacles that Black men and women go through every day. The ability to take pain, heartbreak, depression, frustration and turn it into something beautiful, uplifting, and empathetic is a power that Black artists and creators have possessed since the dawn of this nation.įrom field hands singing in the hot sun of Southern plantations to B.B. The Grammy-winner recounts her turbulent upbringing and heartbreak that inspired the creation of her 1994 sophomore album
