LeToya Nicole Luckett-Walker (née Luckett; born March 11, 1981) is a two-time
Grammy Award-winning American R&B singer-songwriter and entrepreneur.
She is an original member of the R&B group,
Destiny's Child, and has since pursued a
successful solo career, topped the U.S. Billboard 200 albums chart and
has been certified platinum by the RIAA.
Luckett was born in Houston, Texas and grew up singing in her local
church, Brentwood Baptist Church. Her father, a singer, spread the word
of his daughter's talent. Luckett had the opportunity to sing her first
church solo at the age of five. "The lady just gave me the mic one
Sunday and I sang", she recalls. Shortly thereafter, she joined the
children's choir and began performing in plays at her elementary
school, where she met
Beyoncé.
In 1993, Luckett joined the group,
Destiny's Child alongside Knowles,
Kelly Rowland and
LaTavia Roberson. Graduating from the
Houston club scene, the group began opening for such acts as
Dru Hill,
SWV
and
Immature. Columbia Records signed
Destiny's Child in 1997.
In 1998,
Destiny's Child released their
self-titled debut album, "Destiny's Child", which included the singles
"No, No, No" featuring
Wyclef Jean and "With
Me". They were also featured on the "Why Do Fools Fall in Love"
soundtrack with the song, "Get on the Bus", featuring
Timbaland (aka Timbaland), which was
released as a single in Europe. "Destiny's Child" toured as an opening
act on
TLC's "Fanmail Tour" and
Christina Aguilera's debut tour.
In 1999, "Destiny's Child" released their sophomore album, "The
Writing's on the Wall". It became one of the biggest selling albums
released by a female group and was certified eight-times platinum in
the U.S. The album included four hit singles, "Bills, Bills, Bills",
"Bug a Boo", "Say My Name" and "Jumpin' Jumpin'".
During 2000, in the midst of the success of "The Writing's on the
Wall", Luckett and fellow member
LaTavia Roberson tried to make a break
with their manager by writing a letter stating "they wanted an
additional business manager since they felt they were losing
communication with
Mathew Knowles
(
Beyoncé' father)". The pair
said at the time they were only looking to secure outside management,
but they soon found themselves on the outs with the Knowles family.
When the "Say My Name" music video debuted in February 2000, they were
shocked to find themselves replaced by two new members,
Michelle Williams and
Farrah Franklin.
After several months of media speculation, LeToya and
LaTavia Roberson began auditioning
young women for a new female R&B quartet. Naty Quinones and Tiffany
Beaudoin made the cut. The group, "Anjel", recorded a 22-song demo in
Atlanta. The production company which handled the group fell through
and all the members of "Anjel" went their separate ways.
In 2003, Luckett decided to pursue a solo career and signed with
Capitol Records. She immediately began working on her debut solo album
and, in 2004, she released her first track, "You Got What I Need", a
promo single available exclusively on vinyl.
Her self-titled debut album, "LeToya", was released on July 25, 2006.
On the issue dated August 12, 2006, Luckett's debut album, "LeToya",
debuted at number one on the U.S. Billboard 200. As of December 2006,
the album had been certified platinum, having shipped over 1,000,000
copies.
Her official first single, "Torn", was a ballad produced by Teddy
Bishop. The song has reached number two on Billboard magazine's Hot
R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart, number thirty-one on the Billboard Hot 100
chart, number one on BET's 106 & Park countdown, and also number one on
Urban Mediabase. Her second single, "She Don't", premiered on BET's
"Access Granted" in July 2006 and was a moderate success reaching
number seventeen on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs.