Khalid
ABOUT
Khalid is a nontraditional R&B singer and songwriter with a large following attracted to his undemonstrative but heartfelt vocal style and down-to-earth perspective. Although he attained a major-label contract within months of uploading his first songs, “Location,” released when the El Paso native was just out of high school, moved into the mainstream at a slow tempo similar to that of the song itself and became a Top 20 pop hit just after the release of American Teen (2017), one of the biggest album debuts of the late 2010s. Within a period of just over a year, Khalid went from an unknown, everyday teenager to a chart-topping, platinum-certified pop star with Grammy nominations for “Location” and American Teen, plus Logic’s “1-800-237-8255,” on which he appeared. The Billboard 200-topping Free Spirit (2019) wasn’t released until two years after American Teen, but Khalid was busy throughout the interim with an assortment of featured appearances and collaborations, highlighted by the Top Ten pop hits “Love Lies” (with Normani) and “Eastside” (headlined by Benny Blanco.
Khalid returned to his solo work with the 2021 mixtape Scenic Drive (The Tape) and three years later delivered his third album, Sincere, previewed with a pair of singles that hit the R&B Top Ten.
Khalid Robinson was raised by his mother, whose military career necessitated an itinerant upbringing. Originally from Fort Stewart, Georgia, he also lived on military reservations in Kentucky and New York, as well as in Heidelberg, Germany, before his mother was transferred to Fort Bliss in El Paso, Texas. Throughout, music had been a constant — Khalid started singing as early as he could speak, and his mother performed with the U.S. Army Chorus — but a supportive environment at El Paso’s Americas High School sparked his creativity and boosted his confidence. While at Americas, Khalid uploaded his first recordings. They quickly reached A&R executive Tunji Balogun, who signed the artist to major-label RCA.
Khalid’s commercial debut was made in August 2016, three months after he received his high school diploma, with “Location.” A sparse love ballad produced by a team of six including Smash David and Syk Sense, it reflected the singer’s affinity for the likes of James Blake and Frank Ocean. The anti-anthemic second single “Young Dumb & Broke” didn’t arrive until the following February, as “Location” was remarkably still gaining ground, and set up the March release of the album American Teen. Containing both singles, the LP entered the Billboard 200 at number nine. “Location” finally peaked on the R&B/hip-hop and Hot 100 charts, respectively at numbers two and 16, two months later, and “Young Dumb & Broke” likewise took off gradually, ultimately topping the R&B/hip-hop chart and landing within the pop Top 20. Khalid became a sought-after featured artist in the process. He and Alessia Cara contributed to Logic’s April 2017 single “1-800-237-8255,” a Top Ten pop hit titled after the phone number for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. The song was subsequently nominated for Grammy Awards in the categories of Song of the Year and Best Music Video. At the same time, “Location” was up for Best R&B Song, American Teen was nominated for Best Urban Contemporary Album, and Khalid himself was among the nominees for Best New Artist.
