Angie Stone, Grammy-nominated R&B singer, dies in vehicle collision

Angie Stone, a singer and songwriter who nominated for Grammy and who achieved success as part of the new Soul movement in the 1990s, died nearly two decades in the field of music, early on Saturday in a traffic accident in Alabama, according to CNN. It was 63.
Her death was confirmed by an actor, iPhone Forbes, who told CNN Stone to travel in a car after a Mobile performance, Ala, when the truck participated in a collision.
As a teenager who grew up in Colombia, SC, Stone has formed the three hip -hop hip -hop, who obtained a registration contract with Sugar Hill Records; She later formed a group called Vertical Hold and wrote her songs and performed with the likes of D’Angelo, Lenny Kravitz and Mary J. Blige. However, Stone did not explode widely until 1999 with the release of her first individual album, “Black Diampond”, which received Rave reviews on its way to get a gold certificate and cut the song “No MOVE RAIN (in this cloud)” that topped the Billboard for adults R&b AirPlay for 10 weeks. In 2002, she recorded another great success with “Wish I Mot Insk You”, which contains more than 136 million streams on Spotify.
Both songs embodied the ideals and the spirit of terrorism-“I hope you have not missed” a prominent sample in the early seventies of the last century “in the 1970s”-which made stars from his colleagues from the new artists such as Erika Badou, Maxwell and Devo after years, moved at a time when he moved greatly from the situation.
in 2000 interviews With the Times, Stone said that Lauren Hill “break the template” with her 1998 Grammy Prize winner, “Bad Lauryn Hill”. Stone said: “Our society is very conscious of pictures, and she said it is okay to be natural and beautiful and to sing something with a substance,” Stone said.
This story will be updated.