NEW YORK, Nov. 22, 2008

Second Cup Cafe: Nikka Costa

Funky, Soulful Singer Performs Songs From Her New Album, "Pebble To A Pearl"

  • Singer-songwriter Nikka Costa.

    Singer-songwriter Nikka Costa.  (Matthew Welch)

  • The Early Show Second Cup Café

    Check out performances by artists who take to our stage each Saturday morning.

(CBS)  Like the title of her latest album, "Pebble to a Pearl," singer Nikka Costa has smoothed out her rough edges, and what has emerged is a polished and soulful talent.

With her funky sound, Costa gives off a Motown vibe infused with a contemporary appeal.

Costa stopped by The Early Show's "Second Cup Café" to perform songs from the new album.

"I have never been so proud of an album," she said on her MySpace page.

The American singer first had luck overseas in Italy in 1981 when, at just eight-years-old, she released her first album, featuring the single "(Out Here) On My Own" for the musical, "Fame," which rose to the top of the European charts.

In 1996, she released her album "Butterfly Rocket" in Australia, where it made the Top 20. That album took flight and landed her the ARIA Music Awards' Best Breakthrough Artist title, as well as Best Female Artist the following year.

Her song "Like A Feather" grabbed the attention of fashion designer Tommy Hilfiger, who featured it in one of his TV ad campaigns.

With a boost from Hilfiger, her next album, "Everybody's Got Their Something," in 2001, got a lot more attention.

Her notoriety further soared in 2005 when she released her album "Can'tneverdidnothin" and toured with the rocker Lenny Kravitz, who was also featured on the album.

Music runs in the family. Her father, Don Costa, was an arranger for the legendary crooner Frank Sinatra.


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by sinibaldi1 November 23, 2008 1:12 PM EST
Perpetual hymn of an open book.

Like an iced
dream my mind
disappears in
the heart of
an innocent
nurse, when a
clamour appears
and a delicate
blackbird discovers
a glimmer.

Francesco Sinibaldi
Reply to this comment
by gatofeo November 23, 2008 7:30 AM EST
"Her notoriety further soared ..."
It''s not notoriety, you idiot, it''s fame!
Notoriety is ill-fame! Al Capone had notoriety. Eliot Ness had fame. John F. Kennedy had fame for his political skills, but he had notoriety for his womanizing!
I see this mistake all the time. Notoriety is NOT a synonym for regular fame, in essence it means, "bad fame."
Get it?
Reply to this comment
by memphisgirl5 November 22, 2008 7:47 PM EST
WHY was Nikka Costa''s peformance cut in half?? She is one of the most talented and soulful artists around today, and your treatment of her will insure I never make the mistake of watching The Early Show again!
Reply to this comment
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