She met producer Mark Ronson in March 2006. They bonded quickly, and Ronson wrote the piano riff for the title track the very next night.
marked a pivotal moment in Amy Winehouse's career, catapulting her to global stardom and cementing her status as a soulful, genre-bending singer-songwriter. This sophomore album, produced by Mark Ronson and Salaam Remi, showcased Winehouse's remarkable vocal range, lyrical depth, and nostalgic blend of jazz, soul, and R&B. Amy Winehouse Back To Black
The album's distinct sound was born from Winehouse’s fascination with 1960s girl groups like The Shangri-Las The Ronson Connection She met producer Mark Ronson in March 2006
Built on a sample of Marvin Gaye’s “Ain’t That Peculiar”. Upbeat tempo but lyrics about forced recovery. This sophomore album, produced by Mark Ronson and
This wasn't nostalgia; it was a revisionist history of soul music. Winehouse’s voice—a gravelly, deep, impossibly expressive contralto—wasn't just singing over these tracks; she was living inside them.