Alicia Augello Cook was born on January 25, 1981, in the Hell's Kitchen neighborhood of Manhattan. Her father Craig Cook left the family when she was two, and she was raised by her mother Teresa Augello, a paralegal and occasional actress. Hell's Kitchen in the early 1980s was one of New York's roughest neighborhoods, and Keys has spoken about using the piano — which she began studying at age seven — as both refuge and vehicle of transcendence. She attended the Professional Performing Arts School on scholarship, graduated as valedictorian at sixteen, and was admitted to Columbia University, which she left after six weeks to commit entirely to music.
Keys signed with Columbia Records at fifteen and had a troubled early development there, with label executives attempting to shape her into a more conventional pop product. She eventually moved to Clive Davis's J Records, where she released Songs in A Minor (2001) with a degree of artistic control unusual for a debut. The album sold 235,000 copies in its first day, went on to sell over 12 million copies worldwide, and established Keys immediately as one of the most significant artists of her generation. 'Fallin'' spent six weeks at number one, and the album won five Grammy Awards — a record for a debut artist at the time.
Keys's artistic identity is rooted in a classical piano technique that she deploys in service of a soul and R&B vocabulary, creating music that is simultaneously intellectually rigorous and emotionally accessible. Her INFJ character is visible in the depth of social engagement that has accompanied her musical career: she co-founded Keep a Child Alive in 2003, working extensively on HIV/AIDS awareness in Africa; she launched the We Are Here movement in 2014; and she has been a consistent and principled voice on racial justice, women's empowerment, and social inequality. Her decision to stop wearing makeup publicly in 2016 — and the subsequent cultural conversation that decision generated — was characteristic of the INFJ's willingness to capture their values rather than simply articulate them.
Keys's body of work, from Songs in A Minor through her more recent projects, demonstrates the INFJ's characteristic progression: from the intense personal focus of early work, through the expanding social vision of midcareer, to the philosophical integration of later output. She has produced, written for, and collaborated with an enormous range of artists, demonstrating the INFJ's genuine interest in others' creative development alongside their own. Her marriage to producer Swizz Beatz and their family life have been a public testimony to the possibility of combining high-level professional achievement with genuine personal grounding.