Rihanna has sold more than 15 million albums and 45 million singles
worldwide. She has achieved nine number-one singles on the Billboard Hot
100 since first appearing on the chart on June 11, 2005, which is the
most by any artist during that time span. As of July 23, 2010, Rihanna
has sold approximately 5,563,000 album units in the US. She has sold
over 10 million records in the UK. Billboard named Rihanna the Digital
Songs Artist of the 2000s decade. Rihanna has also amassed over a
billion views on the popular video sharing site, YouTube, becoming only
the fourth artist to do so. She has received several accolades,
including the 2007 World Music Awards for World's Best-Selling Pop
Female Artist and Female Entertainer of the Year, as well as the 2008
American Music Awards for Favorite Soul/R&B Female Artist and
Favorite Pop/Rock Female Artist. She serves as one of Barbados's
honorary cultural ambassadors. In January 2010, Rihanna received two
Grammy Awards for Jay-Z's 2009 single "Run This Town". In February 2011,
Rihanna received a Grammy Award for Best Dance Recording, as well as
receiving a Brit Award for Best International Female Solo Artist.
Rihanna was born in Saint Michael, Barbados on February 20, 1988, to
Monica, an accountant, and Ronald Fenty, a warehouse supervisor. Her
mother, a native of Guyana, is Afro-Guyanese, and her father is of
Barbadian and Irish descent. She is the eldest of three siblings; two
younger brothers, Rorrey and Rajad Fenty. She began singing at around
the age of seven. Her childhood was deeply affected by her father's
addiction to crack cocaine and her parents' rocky marriage, which ended
when she was fourteen years old. Rihanna attended Charles F. Broome
Memorial School, a primary school in Barbados, and then the Combermere
School, where she formed a musical trio with two of her classmates at
the age of fifteen. In 2004 she won the Miss Combermere Beauty Pageant.
She was an army cadet in a sub-military programme that trained with the
military of Barbados and Shontelle was her drill sergeant. In 2003,
friends introduced Rihanna and her two bandmates to record producer Evan
Rogers, who was vacationing in Barbados with his wife. The group
auditioned for Rogers, who said that "the minute Rihanna walked into the
room, it was like the other two girls didn't exist." While auditioning
for Rogers, Rihanna sang Destiny's Child's cover of "Emotion". Over the
next year, Rihanna and her mom shuttled back and forth to Rogers' home
in Stamford, Connecticut. Then, shortly after turning 16, she relocated
in the United States and moved in with Rogers and his wife. Carl Sturken
helped her record a four-song demo, which included the ballad "Last
Time", a cover of Whitney Houston's hit "For the Love of You", and what
would become her first hit, "Pon de Replay", to send to various
recording companies. It took a year to record the demos, because Rihanna
was going to school and would only record during summer and Christmas
school breaks. Her demo made its way to Def Jam, which invited her to
audition for the label's then-president, Jay-Z, who quickly signed her.Rihanna "What's My Name" Song
On February 8, 2009, Rihanna's scheduled performance at the 2009 Grammy
Awards was cancelled. Reports later surfaced regarding an alleged
altercation with then-boyfriend, singer Chris Brown, who was arrested on
suspicion of making criminal threats. On March 5, 2009, Brown was
charged with assault and making criminal threats. Due to a leaked
photograph from the Los Angeles Police Department obtained by
TMZ.com—which revealed Rihanna had sustained visible injuries—an
organization known as STOParazzi has proposed a law called "Rihanna's
Law," which, if enacted, would "deter employees of law enforcement
agencies from releasing photos or information that exploits crime
victims." Gil Kaufman of VH1 reported "the nonstop coverage of the
Rihanna/Brown case has brought up a number of issues regarding the
privacy of alleged victims of domestic violence, including the decision
by almost all major news outlets to divulge the identity of the
victim—which is not typically done in domestic-violence cases" and the
controversial distribution of the leaked photograph. Rihanna was
subpoenaed to testify during a preliminary hearing in L.A. on June 22,
2009. "The DA told me Rihanna will be subpoenaed. I will accept on her
behalf," Rihanna's attorney, Donald Etra told Us Weekly. On June 22,
2009, Brown pled guilty to the felony assault. In exchange for his plea
Brown received five years probation and was ordered to stay fifty yards
away from Rihanna, unless at public events, which then will be reduced
to ten yards.
During the summer, Rihanna collaborated with rapper Eminem on "Love the
Way You Lie", which reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100, as
well as other countries including Australia, Canada, Ireland, New
Zealand, Norway and Sweden. The song became Rihanna's seventh number one
hit single on the Hot 100 of her career, making her the female artist
with the fifth-most number ones in the chart's history. In August, 2010,
a wax figure of Rihanna was unveiled in Madame Tussauds in Washington
D.C. Rihanna was asked by Kanye West in or around August 2010 to
contribute to "All of the Lights", the fifth track from West's fifth
studio album, My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy. In an interview with
MTV News, Rihanna stated that she "loved" the song, which also features
several other artists, including but not limited to Alicia Keys, John
Legend, Fergie and Elton John. On October 19, 2010, Rihanna released a
self-titled book, and is currently working on Peter Berg's film,
Battleship, scheduled for release in 2012. On October 20, 2010, Rihanna
announced that she was parting ways with manager Marc Jordan and will
henceforth be managed by Jay-Z's Roc Nation Management. She is also
starting her own company, Rihanna Entertainment, in which she will
"merge all of her businesses including music, film, fragrance, fashion
and book ventures".
Rihanna released her fifth studio album, Loud, on November 16, 2010.
The album debuted at number three on the Billboard 200, selling 207,000
copies in its first week, becoming the fifth top-ten album of Rihanna's
career in the US, with her best week of sales. Its lead single, "Only
Girl (In the World)", was digitally released in the United States in
September 2010. After many weeks, the song reached number one on the
Billboard Hot 100. "Only Girl" also reached number one in many other
countries including Australia, Canada, and the UK. Later the song won a
Grammy Award for Best Dance Recording at the 53rd Grammy Awards. The
album's second single, "What's My Name?", featuring rapper Drake, also
reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100. Although it was the second
single from Loud, it reached the top spot before the first single, "Only
Girl (In the World)" making it the first time in Hot 100 history that
an album's debut single reached number one after the second single. On
December 5, 2010, Rihanna had three songs in the top ten on the UK
singles chart with "Only Girl (In The World)" at number seven, "What's
My Name?" at number eight, and the David Guetta single "Who's That
Chick?" at number nine. On January 9, 2011, the same three songs were in
the top ten on the UK singles chart with "What's My Name?" at number
one, "Only Girl (In The World)" at number nine, and the David Guetta
single "Who's That Chick?" at number ten. On January 9, 2011, "What's My
Name?" hit the top spot on the official UK singles chart, giving
Rihanna the record of being the first female solo artist to have 5
number one singles in the UK in consecutive years. In 2007, "Umbrella"
gave Rihanna her first UK number one single; in 2008, "Take A Bow" gave
her her second; in 2009, "Run This Town" was the third; in 2010, "Only
Girl (In the World)" gave her her fourth UK number one single.
Volume 65 of the Contemporary Black Biography book series notes that
"Rihanna is the rare rhythm and blues (R&B) diva to emerge from the
Caribbean world." Becoming an international sensation, Rihanna is known
for blending R&B with Caribbean music, such as reggae and dancehall.
Peter Coulter of the Antrim Times commented that "[Rihanna] has an
amazing voice which showed during her acoustic set, she just needs to
work on her audience engagement during live shows." At the time of her
debut, reviewers referred to her as a "bubblegum queen" and her music to
"teen pop." Larry Meyler of The Sun stated that "Rihanna going bad is
very good" and that she had "[shaken] off any 'teen pop' image as she
rocked the stage." While performing at the Ottawa Bluesfest, Denis
Armstrong of Canadian Online Explorer commented on her performance
saying "her show was a Disney-esque choreographed fantasy of non-stop
hip-swivelling, sassy attitude and personal endearments and a string of
funky, sugar-free hits." After revealing a new image while headlining
her first tour, she was likely to be criticized for her tight leather
outfit during each show. A review in The Times compared Rihanna's stage
wardrobe styling to that of Janet Jackson. He described her outfit as "a
vision of Ann Summers couture in thigh-high boots and a few scraps of
black PVC." Stuart Derdeyn of The Province commented that "even with the
whole haute couture B&D clearly firing on all points, she's still
got a ways to go to become the new Janet Jackson." Rihanna's musical
style has changed during the release of her last three albums. She was
originally marketed as a reggae singer since she burst into the music
scene in 2005, with a styles of pop, R&B and dancehall. Her music
include various styles of musical genres, including contemporary
R&B, dance-pop and the Caribbean music styles of reggae and
dancehall. With the release of Music of the Sun and its lead single "Pon
de Replay", Jason Birchmeier of Allmusic described Rihanna's musical
style as "synthesize Caribbean rhythms and beats with standard-issue
urban dance-pop: Caribbean-inflected urban, if you will." Rihanna is
described as utilizing "dancehall-lite beats and a reggae vocal
cadence." NME describes the singer as a "heady mix of dancehall, reggae
and contemporary R&B." Barry Walters of Rolling Stone considers
Rihanna's A Girl Like Me to be "lightweight dancehall and R&B jams."
After the release of Good Girl Gone Bad, Allmusic's Andy Kellman
credits Rihanna to be "as pop as pop gets." Kelefa Sanneh of The New
York Times described her hit "Umbrella" as a lightweight pop confection
with a heavy hip-hop backbeat, a breezy love song enriched by those
unexpectedly goth-sounding keyboards and by the incongruous hint of
anguish in Rihanna’s girlish voice.
