
Keri Hilson Returns To Music With New Album ‘We Need To Talk'
Keri Hilson
Getty Images
R&B singer Keri Hilson has largely been absent from the music world since the turn of the last decade, instead focusing on film and TV roles rather than a follow-up to her 2010 sophomore album No Boys Allowed. Now, 15 years after the release of her second full-length project, Hilson is back with her long-awaited third studio album, We Need to Talk: Love.
Hilson confirmed the album's impending release last month with the single 'Bae' sampling Hurricane Chris's 2007 hit 'A Bay Bay." Taking a step back from the music world was necessary for Hilson following the success of 'Pretty Girl Rock,' her last single to make a splash on the Billboard Hot 100 more than a decade ago. She confessed to People she was 'depressed' as her career reached new heights with 'Pretty Girl Rock''s success.
"I was just not okay. I was not well; I needed a break,' she said. 'Fame was a beast for me, and I fell into a really dark place. I needed to step away for a moment. I thought it'd be just a one-year moment, not a 14-year moment, but it turns out it was necessary. I really can't regret it. I, as a human, needed that time.'
It got to a point where Hilson considered leaving music altogether. 'I just wasn't sure of it anymore. The industry was changing. I love making the art, I love doing music, I love making music, I love performing music, but I didn't love everything that came with it. I didn't love the heavy criticism. It's just not like the old industry now, and that, to me, felt like a threat.,' she admitted. 'You have to let rock bottom occur to rebuild. So that's what I did.'
Now, Hilson has regained her confidence as an artist and isn't afraid about putting herself out there after all this time. She alludes to this inner struggle in her new video series WNTT to accompany the album. 'I just don't want to put me, my life or my art into the hands of people who don't give a f**k about about me,' Hilson said honestly. 'And the thing is, I don't fear being human. I love being human in my own hands. I fear being human in their hands. And it's like, I want to be in the game. I want to be at the top. But I still want to feel like I belong to myself.'
The new LP is just the opener for a trilogy of albums Hilson has planned. We Need to Talk deals with love while the forthcoming projects center around drama and redemption. Giving her fans lots of new music was her way of making up for lost time. 'I've been gone for so long. I wanted to give enough to satiate my fans,' she told People. 'Once I became clear on how I wanted to present this album, the story I wanted to tell became love, drama, redemption. It's also a parallel to my career — loving music, encountering drama and feeling redeemed, finally.'
Hilson is set to perform alongside share the stage with other R&B and hip-hop stars at Girls Night Out in Bridgeport, Connecticut on April 26 and in Providence, Rhode Island on May 9.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Addison Rae Confirms She's Changed Her Name to 'Addison': 'I've Grown Past Just Being Called Addison Rae'
Addison Rae appeared Quen Blackwell's YouTube series Feeding Starving Celebrities on Sunday, June 8 There, she chatted about her new album, Addison, and how she decided to self-title her debut album She also revealed that since releasing her album, she decided her stage name would be just "Addison"Addison Rae would like to reintroduce herself to fans. On Sunday, June 8, the pop singer appeared on friend and internet personality Quen Blackwell's YouTube series Feeding Starving Celebrities. During their conversation, Addison (whose real name is Addison Rae Easterling) chatted about releasing her debut album, Addison. The "Fame Is a Gun" singer, 24, first explained that she thought about self-titling the album 'for a really long time,' noting, 'when you do hear all of the music like straight through, there's not really a title that like encompasses all of it." 'Everybody that I played it to as well they were just like, 'Oh it just sounds like just like you. Like it just sounds like music you would make,'' she recalled for Blackwell, also 24. 'I don't really know what else to call it and so I was like, 'Maybe then the album is just my name.'" 'I like the fact that you are changing your stage name and taking off the 'Rae,'' Blackwell replied. 'Is that something you've talked about?' Addison responded by saying she hasn't spoken publicly in depth about that, 'But I said it in an interview, I was just like 'Oh I think I've you know I've grown past just being called Addison Rae.' And then the album being named Addison kind of was like a tie-in for that.' Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. 'Whoever knows me as Addison Rae and knew me as Addison Rae will always know me as that anyways,' she acknowledged, before confessing, 'I just am tired of also signing Addison Rae. It's really long.' 'I just would rather sign 'Addison,'' she admitted, while giggling. 'And then I was like, 'Yeah, it just makes more sense because like it's going back to the roots really.'' 'The truth,' Blackwell proposed. 'What you were called as a kid. You've always been Addison.' The singer then acknowledged, 'But I know you're going to put Addison Rae on the title [of the YouTube video].' Blackwell then gave a cheeky side-eye directly to the camera, preemptively admitting that the title would in fact have her former stage name. 'It's okay, approved because I'm still Addison Rae until after this album,' Addison said. 'And then you're Addison,' Blackwell said. 'And then I'll delete it out the title.' Read the original article on People


Los Angeles Times
an hour ago
- Los Angeles Times
Billy Joel tried to kill himself twice before realizing he could channel his sadness into music
Billy Joel's life is awash in revelations these days — some bad, some worse. Last month, the 'Only the Good Die Young' singer-songwriter canceled all his upcoming concerts, revealing he was struggling with a brain disorder that causes a potentially reversible kind of dementia. Then last week, he divulged that he attempted suicide twice in his 20s after falling in love with his bandmate's wife and causing the downfall of the band itself. 'I felt very, very guilty about it. They had a child. I felt like a homewrecker,' Joel says (via People) in the first half of the two-part documentary 'Billy Joel: And So It Goes,' which premiered last Wednesday and hits HBO Max in July. 'I was just in love with a woman and I got punched in the nose, which I deserved.' Joel said both he and his friend and Attila bandmate, Jon Small, were upset by what happened while Joel was living with Small and Small's then-wife, Elizabeth Weber. So upset that Attila — a Led Zeppelin-inspired metal band, according to the New York Times — broke up and Joel started boozing, which sent him into a tailspin. 'I had no place to live,' Joel says in the documentary. 'I was sleeping in laundromats, and I was depressed, I think to the point of almost being psychotic. So I figured, 'That's it. I don't want to live anymore.'' He tried twice to end his life in the early 1970s, according to the documentary. First, he took the entire lot of sleeping pills that his sister, then a medical assistant, had given him to help him sleep. That put him in the hospital. 'He was in a coma for days and days and days,' Judy Molinari says in the program. She thought she had killed her brother. Joel says in the doc that he woke up in the hospital still suicidal, hoping to do it 'right' the next time. His sister said he wound up drinking 'lemon Pledge' furniture polish. That time, an unlikely person took him to the hospital: Small, his then-estranged best friend. 'Eventually,' Small says in the documentary, 'I forgave him.' As for those impulses to harm himself, they wound up paying off for Joel after he checked out of a facility he had checked himself into after the second suicide attempt. 'I got out of the observation ward and I thought to myself, you can utilize all those emotions to channel that stuff into music.' Joel reconnected with Weber about a year after that, wrote about her in the 1973 song 'Piano Man,' and married her from then until 1982. Marriages to Christie Brinkley, Katie Lee and current wife Alexis Roderick would follow. The first part of the documentary covers Joel's childhood and runs through his 1982 motorcycle accident, according to the New York Times. He doesn't meet his 'Uptown Girl,' Brinkley, until Part 2.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Aaron Rodgers Confirms He Got Married a 'Couple Months' Ago in Surprise Wedding
Aaron Rodgers has tied the knot! The NFL quarterback, 41, told media during a press conference on Tuesday, June 10, that he is married. He said the wedding took place "a couple months" ago, but did not share any other details. Brittani. Then news comes just days after the athlete signed a new contract to play for the Pittsburgh Steelers. Rodgers first revealed that he was dating a woman named Brittani — who is quite private, and has no social media — in late 2024, and later sparked rumors that he had gotten married. While the star athlete was attending the 2025 Barnstable Brown Gala in Louisville, Ky., on May 2 ahead of the Kentucky Derby, he was spotted sporting a dark-colored band on his ring finger, leading fans on social media to speculate that he and Brittani had said "I do." At the time, a representative for Rodgers did not respond to PEOPLE's request for comment. Rodgers first publicly mentioned Brittani on The Pat McAfee Show in December 2024, casually dropping the life update while discussing his Christmas shopping. At the time, he recalled a stressful situation where a package he ordered for Brittani was delayed. After co-host AJ Hawk reacted to the revelation by jokingly asking, 'Spears?' Rodgers clarified, "Not Brittany Spears, no, this is Brittani with an 'i.' ' And later, when McAfee and others on the show poked fun at Rodgers for being "in love," the grinning star appeared to confirm his feelings, replying, 'It's a good feeling boys. It is.' The star appeared on the show again in April 2025, and shared that the relationship is 'serious." "I'm in a different phase of my life," he explained. "I'm 41 years old. I'm in a serious relationship. I have off-the-field stuff going on that requires my attention.' Before tying the knot with Brittani, Rodgers — who has been vocal about his desire to remain out of the public eye — had several high-profile relationships. Most recently, he was linked to Mallory Edens, a model and the daughter of one of the Milwaukee Bucks' primary owners, Wes Edens. He was also previously engaged to Shailene Woodley until the exes called off their engagement in February 2022 and fully ended their relationship that April. Rodgers also dated both Olivia Munn and retired NASCAR driver Danica Patrick. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up to date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. The NFL star previously opened up about his past high-profile relationships in his 2024 Netflix docuseries, Aaron Rodgers: Enigma, stating that given his distaste for the public eye, he "didn't do myself any favors with some of the girls I dated." 'I definitely hated it at first — like, really despised it,' Rodgers said about fame. 'I enjoyed my private life. I enjoyed being able to go places. But from Super Bowl MVP, MVP, State Farm commercials, that got a little bit more difficult.' Read the original article on People