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Queen Pen
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Lynise Walters (born September 24, 1972), known professionally as Queen Pen, is an American rapper. Born in Brooklyn, New York City, she was discovered by producer Teddy Riley at an IHOP restaurant in Virginia Beach, Virginia. Riley later invited her to "spit lyrics" for Blackstreet's 1996 single "No Diggity", which became her and Riley's most successful recording (although she was uncredited on many publications of the song).[1] Walters signed with Riley's Lil Man Records, an imprint of Interscope Records to release her debut album, My Melody (1997), which spawned the single, "All My Love" (featuring Eric Williams) peaking at number 28 on the Billboard Hot 100. The album contained production largely handled by Riley and writing contributions from fellow Brooklyn native Jay-Z.
Her second studio album, Conversations with Queen (2001) contained less involvement from both, and saw minimal critical or commercial response. She has not released any music afterward and has since become an author.[2]
Career
[edit]Her music career launched after she became a protégé of Teddy Riley, a producer and member of the R&B group Blackstreet in the mid-1990s. Although she was not listed on the song, she was a featured artist alongside Dr. Dre in Blackstreet's 1996 hit, "No Diggity". She signed to Riley's Lil' Man label and released My Melody (1997), her solo debut album, produced by Riley.[3]
Her first album produced the charted singles "Man Behind the Music", "All My Love", and "Party Ain't a Party". She also gained notoriety for her song "Girlfriend" (featuring Meshell Ndegeocello), where the lyrics explored same sex relationships.[4] In 1999, she took a three-year hiatus from performing and returned with her second album, Conversations with Queen (2001).
Personal life
[edit]After the release of the single "Girlfriend", which contained themes that were taboo in the hip hop community at the time, some media sources presumed Queen Pen to be bisexual or a lesbian.[5][6] During the song's release, Queen Pen remained coy about her sexuality and would not disclose it unless it was going to be a "front page" story.[6] She added that if she told the press she was straight, she would be viewed as a liar; in turn, if she were to say she was gay, she would be viewed as someone trying to get publicity.[6] In 2001, Queen Pen disclosed in an interview that she was neither bisexual nor lesbian.[7] She is now an entrepreneur and novelist. Her sons Donlynn and Quintion are also rappers, who go by the handles Nefu Da Don and Q Nhannaz, respectively.
Feud with Foxy Brown
[edit]In 1998, a dispute between Foxy Brown and Queen Pen developed over her controversial lesbian-themed single "Girlfriend".[5] Brown, who took offense to the song's subject, spewed homophobic remarks at both Pen and former rival Queen Latifah via her diss track "10% Dis".[5][8] In response, Pen reportedly confronted Brown while barefoot in the lobby of Nevada's Reno Hilton during the Impact Music Convention and tried to slap her and chase her down an elevator.[5][9] The fight was broken up by producer Derek "DC" Clark and Brown's associates Noreaga and Cam'ron.[9] Later, Queen Pen happened upon Foxy Brown again when Brown was accompanied by ex-lover Kurupt. Again, the conflict was subdued before any further physical contact occurred.[9]
In late 1998, Brown released another diss track titled "Talk to Me", which contained more homophobic remarks directed at Pen and Queen Latifah.[10] In 2001, Pen responded to the diss track with her record "I Got Cha", in which Queen Pen called Brown a "bum bitch", and later made remarks about her being funny and fake "like a drag queen".[11] Although Queen Pen insisted the song was not about Brown, she responded in an MTV interview: "You make a record about me, I make a record about you. Sooner or later I'm going to have to punch you in your face."[12] Shortly after the track's release, the feud began to die down, and by July 2006, Pen and Brown reconciled at Russell Simmons' Hip-Hop Summit.[13]
Novels
[edit]- Situations: A Book of Short Stories (2002)
- Blossom: A Novel (2007)
Discography
[edit]Albums
[edit]- My Melody (1997)
- Conversations with Queen (2001)
Singles
[edit]- "Man Behind the Music" (1997)
- "All My Love" (1998)
- "Party Ain't a Party" (1998)
- "It's True" (1998)
- "I Got Cha" (2001)[14]
References
[edit]- ^ "The Number Ones: Blackstreet's "No Diggity" (Feat. Dr. Dre & Queen Pen)". Stereogum. 2022-04-25. Retrieved 2022-07-13.
- ^ "My Melody | What's Queen Pen up to Now? | Nevernaire". Nevernaire. 3 February 2023.
- ^ Ankeny, Jason. "[Queen Pen at AllMusic Queen Pen]". AllMusic.
- ^ Jamison, Laura (1998-01-18). "A Feisty Female Rapper Breaks a Hip-Hop Taboo". New York Times.
- ^ a b c d D, Davey (May 15, 1998). "May '98 Hip Hop News". Davey D's Hip Hop Corner. daveyd.com. Retrieved May 16, 2013.
- ^ a b c Jamison, Laura (January 18, 1998). "A Feisty Female Rapper Breaks a Hip-Hop Taboo". New York Times. Archived from the original on August 8, 2011. Retrieved May 16, 2013 – via prismnet.com.
- ^ Flowers, Nina (July 2001). "Revolutions > Queen Pen: Conversations with Queen". Vibe. No. 131.
- ^ "Funkmaster Flex – 10% Dis Lyrics". Rap Genius. Retrieved May 8, 2013.
- ^ a b c "Vibe Confidential: Everything You Want to Know Before You're Supposed to Know It." Vibe. August 1998: 44. Print.
- ^ "Foxy Brown – Talk To Me Lyrics". Rap Genius. Retrieved May 8, 2013.
- ^ "Queen Pen – I Got Cha Lyrics". Rap Genius. rapgenius.com. Retrieved May 16, 2013.
- ^ Reid, Shaheem (April 6, 2001). "No Diggity: Queen Pen Returns With New LP". MTV News.com. Archived from the original on February 10, 2012. Retrieved May 16, 2013.
- ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Foxy Brown & Queen Pen reconcile". YouTube. 21 August 2006. Retrieved May 16, 2013.
- ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 445. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.
External links
[edit]Queen Pen
View on GrokipediaEarly Life
Childhood in Brooklyn
Lynise Walters, professionally known as Queen Pen, spent her formative years in the Brooklyn neighborhoods of Crown Heights and Flatbush.[10][11] By age 16, she had become a single mother, eventually raising two sons who were reported as 8 and 9 years old in early 1998.[10]Education and Early Interests
Lynise Walters, professionally known as Queen Pen, grew up in the Flatbush and Crown Heights neighborhoods of Brooklyn, New York City, where she faced early challenges including becoming a single mother at age 15 to her first son, Donlynn, and at age 17 to her second son, Quintin.[11][12] These circumstances did not deter her ambitions, as she persistently pursued opportunities in the entertainment industry despite limited resources.[12] From a young age, Walters demonstrated a strong interest in performance and music, dreaming of a career as an entertainer and using any extra income to rent a neighborhood recording studio for creating demos.[12] This self-driven engagement with music production foreshadowed her later entry into hip-hop, though specific details on formal education remain undocumented in available records.[12] Her early focus on emceeing and artistic expression aligned with broader aspirations in hip-hop culture, honed through personal initiative amid personal hardships.[13]Music Career Beginnings
Discovery and Mentorship
Lynise Walters, known professionally as Queen Pen, entered the music industry in the mid-1990s after approaching record producer Teddy Riley, a key figure in new jack swing and member of the R&B group Blackstreet.[14] Having known Riley socially through mutual friends at his annual Fourth of July parties in New York and Virginia Beach, Walters decided to demonstrate her rapping ability during one such encounter, stating, "Look, I'm not tryin' to come on to you or nothin' but I know I can rap."[14] Impressed by her freestyle performance, Riley invited her to his studio for a formal audition, where he recognized her potential despite lacking an immediate label deal; he promised to support her career once opportunities arose.[14] Riley fulfilled his commitment after securing production resources, tracking Walters down and integrating her into his projects as a protégé. This mentorship began around 1995, with Riley providing guidance on songwriting, studio techniques, and industry navigation, drawing from his experience producing hits for artists like Michael Jackson and Guy.[10] Walters had prior local performance experience in New York, but Riley's endorsement elevated her profile, leading to her debut feature on Blackstreet's "No Diggity" in 1996, which showcased her rapid-fire delivery alongside Dr. Dre and propelled the track to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100.[10][13] Under Riley's tutelage, Queen Pen honed a style blending hardcore lyricism with R&B influences, crediting him for fostering her confidence amid the male-dominated rap scene. Riley not only produced her early recordings but also advocated for her signing to Interscope Records via his imprint, enabling her transition from guest verses to solo artistry. This phase marked a pivotal mentorship dynamic, where Riley's production expertise—evident in the track's multi-platinum success—directly catalyzed her breakthrough, though she later pursued independent ventures.[14][11]Breakthrough with Blackstreet
Queen Pen's association with Blackstreet marked her entry into mainstream recognition through her featured rap verse on the group's 1996 single "No Diggity," which also included Dr. Dre.[15] Released on July 29, 1996, as the lead single from Blackstreet's album Another Level, the track sampled the guitar riff from Bill Withers' "Grandma's Hands" and blended R&B harmonies with hip-hop elements, achieving widespread commercial success.[16] [15] Queen Pen delivered the song's assertive female perspective in her verse, rapping lines that positioned her as a confident "playette" countering the male-dominated narrative, which contributed to the track's appeal.[17] "No Diggity" topped the Billboard Hot 100 chart for four weeks starting in November 1996 and sold 1.6 million copies that year, propelling Blackstreet to their greatest commercial peak while introducing Queen Pen to a broad audience.[15] The song's success earned it a Grammy Award for Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals in 1998, highlighting the collaborative impact despite Queen Pen's relatively uncredited status in some early listings.[15] This exposure, stemming from her work under Blackstreet's producer Teddy Riley, established her as a rapper capable of bridging R&B and hip-hop, paving the way for her subsequent solo endeavors.[2]Solo Recording Career
Debut Album: My Melody
My Melody is the debut studio album by American rapper Queen Pen, released on December 16, 1997, through Lil' Man Records with distribution by Interscope Records.[11] The project emerged from Pen's prior collaboration with producer Teddy Riley on Blackstreet's hit "No Diggity," positioning her as a protégé in the new jack swing-influenced hip-hop scene.[11] Recording took place at Future Recording Studios in Virginia Beach, Virginia, reflecting Riley's production base.[18] Production was led primarily by Teddy Riley, with additional contributions from Kaseem Coleman and William Stewart, emphasizing polished, pop-leaning R&B-rap fusion tracks.[19] Featured artists included Riley himself, Markell Riley, Mr. Cheeks of Lost Boyz, Nutta Butta, and Eric Williams of Blackstreet, alongside guest spots from Meshell Ndegeocello and a sample flip of Phil Collins on "Get Away."[11] The 13-track album blended club anthems, introspective cuts on relationships and abuse, and assertive boasts, with standout production on "Party Ain't a Party" and "Man Behind the Music."[19] Key singles included "Man Behind the Music" (released 1997), a tribute to Riley; "All My Love" featuring Eric Williams, which peaked at number 28 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 17 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart in early 1998; and "Party Ain't a Party" featuring Lost Boyz members, reaching number 74 on the Hot 100.[9][20] The album debuted and peaked at number 78 on the Billboard 200, number 13 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, and number 1 on the Heatseekers Albums chart, indicating niche breakthrough appeal without mainstream dominance.[9] Sales totaled approximately 302,000 units, reflecting modest commercial uptake amid competition from established female rappers like Foxy Brown and Lil' Kim.[21] Critically, My Melody received mixed-to-positive notices for its craftsmanship and Pen's versatile delivery, though some noted her flow as occasionally rigid compared to peers.[19] RapReviews awarded it a 6.5 out of 10, praising Riley's beats and hits like "Party Ain't a Party" for club viability while critiquing reliance on pop accessibility.[19] uDiscover Music highlighted its audacious themes, including same-sex attraction in "Girlfriend" and domestic violence in "Get Away," deeming it a well-crafted debut with enduring sonic quality.[11] The album's blend of bravado and vulnerability established Pen's voice but was somewhat eclipsed by rising contemporaries, contributing to her short-lived solo prominence.[11]Follow-up Efforts and Commercial Challenges
Following the modest success of her 1997 debut album My Melody, which peaked at number 78 on the Billboard 200 and was certified gold, Queen Pen released her second studio album, Conversations with Queen, on May 22, 2001, via Motown Records.[9][22] The project featured a shift in production, with diminished contributions from mentor Teddy Riley compared to the debut's heavy reliance on his new jack swing style, incorporating instead a mix of hip-hop and R&B tracks produced by various collaborators.[23] Despite efforts to build on her earlier momentum, including lead single "Beautiful" featuring Chris Duke, the album received limited promotion and garnered minimal critical attention, with reviewers noting its failure to replicate the debut's crossover appeal.[24] Commercially, Conversations with Queen underperformed, debuting and peaking at number 134 on the Billboard 200 and number 31 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, far below the debut's metrics and reflecting broader industry hurdles for female rappers in the early 2000s, where market dominance by established acts like Lil' Kim limited space for newcomers.[25] No singles from the album achieved significant chart traction, contributing to sales that did not approach gold status.[23] These outcomes were compounded by label transitions—moving from Interscope's Lil' Man imprint to Motown—and the rapper's evolving personal priorities, including single parenthood and community activism, which strained her ability to sustain a full-time music focus.[9] No subsequent studio albums followed, marking the effective end of Queen Pen's major-label recording efforts in hip-hop, as she pivoted toward independent projects and non-music ventures amid a competitive landscape that favored male artists and a narrow roster of female stars.[26] Guest appearances, such as on tracks by other artists in the early 2000s, provided sporadic visibility but failed to reignite solo commercial viability, underscoring persistent barriers like reduced mentorship support and shifting genre trends toward crunk and pop-rap.[27]Notable Singles and Collaborations
Queen Pen's most prominent collaboration came early in her career with her guest verse on Blackstreet's "No Diggity" (1996), featuring Dr. Dre, which reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and earned a Grammy nomination for Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals.[26] The track, produced by Teddy Riley, sold over 1.6 million copies as a single and contributed to the album's diamond certification.[26] From her debut solo album My Melody (1997), the lead single "Man Behind the Music" introduced her style, blending rap with R&B elements, though it did not chart highly on the Billboard Hot 100. Follow-up singles included "All My Love" (1998), featuring Eric "E" Williams of Blackstreet, which peaked at number 28 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and number 11 on the UK Singles Chart.[28][29] "Party Ain't a Party" (1998), featuring Lost Boyz, Markell Riley, and Nutta Butta, became a club staple with its upbeat production by Teddy Riley, amassing millions of streams despite modest chart performance.[3] "It's True" (1998) followed, showcasing her lyrical delivery over mid-tempo beats. Later efforts included "I Got Cha" (2001), a collaboration with Erick Sermon sampling Marvin Gaye, released amid her transition to Motown Records, though it received limited commercial traction.[27] These singles highlighted Pen's versatility in fusing hip-hop with R&B, often under Riley's production, but faced challenges in sustaining the momentum of her Blackstreet feature.[26]Literary Career
Transition from Music
Following the underperformance of her 2001 album Conversations with Queen, which peaked at number 142 on the Billboard 200 and sold fewer than 50,000 copies in its first week, Queen Pen ceased releasing new music and pivoted to authorship. In 2002, she independently published her debut literary work, Situations: A Book of Short Stories, via her imprint Queenpen Music Inc., marking a deliberate shift toward prose to channel her storytelling abilities beyond hip-hop's commercial constraints.[30][31] This move allowed Queen Pen greater autonomy in creative expression, as she later described writing as a liberating outlet permitting unbound imagination compared to the music industry's demands.[32] Her early books focused on urban narratives reflecting real-life struggles, relationships, and resilience, themes resonant with her Brooklyn upbringing and career experiences. By self-publishing, she bypassed label dependencies that had limited her musical output post-debut success.[33] The transition proved viable, with Situations achieving independent sales success and establishing her in urban fiction, a genre she has since championed through subsequent novels and publishing services for emerging authors.[34] This phase aligned with personal priorities, including family and community work, while leveraging her public profile from music to build a literary audience.[35]Key Publications and Themes
Situations (2002), Queen Pen's initial foray into literature, comprises a collection of short stories published under her own imprint, Queenpen Music Inc., delving into interpersonal and societal challenges faced in urban environments.[36] The narratives examine dynamics of love, mortality, criminal underworld involvement, sexual identity, and allegiance, reflecting raw encounters drawn from hip-hop cultural peripheries.[31] Her first full-length novel, Blossom (2006), issued by Atria Books—a division of Simon & Schuster—portrays the descent of a Brooklyn high school student into a volatile liaison with an established street operator, marked by opulent inducements, a failed assassination, and familial tragedy.[37] This work underscores the precariousness of affection amid criminal pursuits, where affluence coexists with perpetual threat, encapsulating broader motifs of aspiration clashing with peril in African American urban milieus.[38] The Urban Fairytale series, culminating in a complete anthology released in 2020, adapts canonical fables into gritty metropolitan reinterpretations, including Dust 2 Diamonds as an urban Cinderella variant featuring a protagonist navigating abusive guardianship and self-reliance amid exploitation.[39] Installments transpose elements like Snow White, Little Red Riding Hood, and Beauty and the Beast to contexts of familial strife, illicit economies, and redemption arcs, questioning conventional resolutions in favor of unpredictable outcomes shaped by resilience or downfall.[40][41] Recurring themes in Queen Pen's oeuvre encompass the enticements and hazards of clandestine livelihoods, the fortitude required of women confronting patriarchal and socioeconomic barriers, explorations of loyalty versus self-preservation, and candid depictions of sexuality within high-stakes relational frameworks, often informed by autobiographical echoes from her music industry tenure without romanticizing outcomes.[42] These elements prioritize causal consequences of choices in unforgiving settings over idealized narratives, aligning with urban fiction's emphasis on empirical survival mechanics.Personal Life
Relationships and Domestic Violence
Queen Pen, whose real name is Lynise Walters, was in a long-term relationship with the father of two of her children, characterized by sustained domestic abuse over approximately 8.5 years. She reported enduring repeated physical assaults, including bruises, cuts from kicks and punches, knocked-out teeth, and injuries requiring stitches.[7][8] In January 2008, her ex-boyfriend conducted a home invasion during which he severely beat her, rendering her unconscious.[43] On May 19, 2008, the same individual assaulted her in the presence of her children inside her home, leading her to file a police report; the report itself did not document physical contact, and the perpetrator could not be located afterward.[44][45] Queen Pen later described the relationship's escalation, stating that it reached a point where her ex attempted to kill her, forcing her to act in self-defense.[46] These experiences prompted Queen Pen to advocate for stricter domestic violence legislation, including hosting a January 2009 press conference and rally in Brooklyn to urge New York lawmakers for enhanced protections and penalties.[43][47] She has emphasized that having children with the abuser did not deter the violence, and she channeled her ordeals into music addressing abuse's emotional toll.[7][10]Family and Community Involvement
Lynise Walters, professionally known as Queen Pen, became a mother at age 15 with the birth of her son Donlynn, who later pursued a rap career under the stage name Nefu Da Don.[9] She gave birth to another son, Quintion (also spelled Quintin), at age 17, who raps as Q Nhannaz.[9] Her daughter Lyric, born in 1999, engages in music by remixing tracks and writing lyrics under the moniker Lyriic Staar.[9] Walters has two additional children, resulting in a total of five.[9] In community efforts, Queen Pen has operated High Risk Teen Programs targeting youth in Harlem and Brooklyn, earning recognition from local officials including the mayor of Jersey City and assembly members for her motivational speaking at group homes, juvenile detention centers, and schools.[9] She serves on the board of directors for Children of Promise, an initiative aiding children of incarcerated parents, and provides mentorship to foster youth through relationship-building and virtual connections with their parents.[35] Additionally, she has conducted workshops at Rikers Island for juveniles and female inmates, as well as in Harlem and Brooklyn high schools and junior highs, motivated by a sense of obligation following her success with Blackstreet's "No Diggity" in 1996.[35]Controversies
"Girlfriend" Single and Sexual Identity Themes
"Girlfriend," released on December 16, 1997, served as the third single from Queen Pen's debut album My Melody, featuring vocals from Me'Shell Ndegeocello and produced by Teddy Riley.[48][49] The track interpolated elements from Ndegeocello's 1994 song "If That's Your Boyfriend (He Wasn't Meant for You)," reimagining it as a direct taunt to a male listener whose female partner has been seduced by the rapper.[50] Lyrics such as "If that's your girlfriend, she wasn't last night" position Queen Pen as the aggressor in a same-sex pursuit, emphasizing physical and emotional intimacy between women over heterosexual norms.[10] The song's central themes revolve around female same-sex desire and rivalry, portraying lesbian attraction as a disruptive force in traditional male-female dynamics within hip-hop's predominantly heterosexual framework.[51] By explicitly addressing a woman's appeal to another woman, "Girlfriend" challenged the genre's infrequent exploration of non-heterosexual identities, sparking public discourse on queerness in rap at a time when such topics were largely absent or stigmatized.[52] This led to immediate speculation about Queen Pen's personal sexual orientation, with some media and fans interpreting the lyrics as autobiographical revelation rather than artistic provocation.[53] Queen Pen rejected these interpretations, denying that she was lesbian or bisexual and clarifying that the track was not a reflection of her own experiences but a bold creative choice to address underrepresented perspectives.[19] In a 1998 Rap Pages interview, she highlighted heterosexual themes in other album songs to counter assumptions, asserting the song's intent was to generate controversy and broaden hip-hop's lyrical scope without defining her identity.[54] Despite academic analyses framing it as an early queer expression in rap, her consistent disavowals underscore a distinction between performative themes and private reality, amid a cultural context where hip-hop's homophobia amplified scrutiny.[55][52]Feud with Foxy Brown
In 1998, tensions between Queen Pen and Foxy Brown escalated following the release of Queen Pen's single "Girlfriend," which openly addressed lesbian attraction and relationships within hip-hop circles.[56] Brown publicly criticized the track, viewing its themes as provocative and potentially targeted at straight female rappers like herself, amid a broader cultural discomfort in the genre regarding explicit discussions of female sexuality and orientation.[57] Brown retaliated with the diss track "10% Dis," recorded in 1998 and released via Funkmaster Flex's mixtape series under Loud Records, where she targeted both Queen Pen and Queen Latifah—extending an existing feud with Latifah—by mocking their perceived sexual orientations and accusing them of jealousy over her success.[58][59] The song's title alluded to MC Lyte's 1988 track of the same name, framing Brown's response as a lyrical inheritance in female rap rivalries.[58] The verbal conflict turned physical in May 1998 at a hip-hop convention in Reno, Nevada, where Queen Pen confronted Brown in a hotel lobby after learning of the diss track; Pen, reportedly appearing barefoot and agitated, attempted to engage Brown directly, though bystanders intervened before escalation.[57] This incident, covered in contemporary hip-hop news outlets, highlighted the raw interpersonal stakes in 1990s rap feuds, often amplified by mixtape releases and limited mainstream mediation.[57] Queen Pen addressed the beef years later on her 2001 album This Is...Queen Pen, via the track "I Got Cha," which included subliminal shots at Brown, derogatorily labeling her a "bum bitch" and referencing her reliance on industry connections over lyrical merit.[56] The two rappers publicly reconciled in 2006 at the Hip Hop Summit, an event focused on industry unity, effectively ending the longstanding animosity without further recorded diss tracks.[6]Discography
Albums
Queen Pen's debut studio album, My Melody, was released on December 16, 1997, by Lil' Man Records with distribution handled by Interscope Records.[60] Executive produced by Teddy Riley, the project featured guest appearances from artists including Eric Williams on the single "All My Love" and Markell Riley on "Party Ain't a Party," blending hip-hop with new jack swing influences characteristic of Riley's production style.[18] The album comprised 13 tracks and received production credits from Riley and others, marking Pen's emergence as a solo artist following her feature on Blackstreet's "No Diggity."[11] Her second and final studio album, Conversations with Queen, followed on May 22, 2001, via Motown Records.[24] Also containing 13 tracks, it was executive produced by Kedar Massenburg and Queen Pen herself, shifting toward a more introspective tone with reduced involvement from prior collaborators like Riley.[25] The release garnered limited commercial attention compared to her debut and represented her last major-label effort in music.[61]| Title | Release date | Label(s) | Format(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| My Melody | December 16, 1997 | Lil' Man, Interscope | CD, cassette, vinyl [62] |
| Conversations with Queen | May 22, 2001 | Motown | CD [63] |
