MY RHYTHM, my blues
WHO|September 21, 2020
BACK WITH NEW MUSIC AFTER NEARLY EIGHT YEARS, THE SINGER OPENS UP ABOUT SUCCESS, STRUGGLES AND HOW DEPRESSION NEARLY TOOK HER LIFE
MY RHYTHM, my blues

Brandy Norwood, better known professionally as Brandy, doesn’t seem to age. Seated in the plush living room of her LA home with her signature braids cascading down the sides of her face, the singer appears as youthful as when she was a ’90s teen superstar. “Cocoa butter!” she says with a laugh, offering up the simple secret to her fountain of youth. Her wide-set eyes still sparkle, but they’ve seen plenty in her 41 years of life, most of which were spent under the intense glare of the spotlight.

“I’ve been through so, so much,” she says of her past. Despite her one-time public image of bubbly positivity, Brandy found herself in a deep, dark depression that pushed her to the brink. “I’ve struggled with losing myself in ways where I didn’t feel like I could figure it out,” she says about her mental health. Back with her first album in nearly eight years, B7, “I’m in a place now where I can be proud of moving in the right direction,” says the singer and mum to 18-year-old daughter Sy’rai.

For years it seemed the only direction Brandy could go was up. At 15, she burst onto the music scene with her soulfully sweet and raspy tone on her debut single ‘I Wanna Be Down’. Nearly four years later came her sophomore album, Never Say Never, and the chart-topping duet with Monica, ‘The Boy Is Mine’, that earned her a Grammy.

Meanwhile, she cemented her fame on TV, starring on the coming-of-age sitcom Moesha and being the first Black actress to play Cinderella on-screen in ABC’s 1997 musical, with her real-life mentor Whitney Houston as her fairy godmother.

This story is from the September 21, 2020 edition of WHO.

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This story is from the September 21, 2020 edition of WHO.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.