Destiny’s Child, whose final line-up comprised of Beyoncé Knowles, Kelly Rowland, and Michelle Williams, was one of the bestselling girl groups in the late ’90s and early ’00s. Each group member had their strengths and while Destiny’s Child didn’t always lead songs with a formulaic approach, Williams’ hooks were always something to look out for that differentiated her from the other vocalists.
Williams was the last member of the trio to join Destiny’s Child, as Knowles and Rowland had been in the group since the beginning. She made her Destiny’s Child debut in 2000 in the “Say My Name” video with former Destiny’s Child member Farah Franklin. Franklin left the group after five months. The first song the trio recorded together was “Independent Women Part I,” which appeared on the soundtrack to the 2000 film Charlie’s Angels.
Williams, like Rowland and Knowles, went on to pursue a solo career. Williams was the first group member to release a solo project. Her first solo album was Heart to Yours which was released in 2002 during the hiatus of Destiny’s Child. Two years later she released a gospel album titled, Do You Know.
After the group officially disbanded in 2006, Williams released her first pop album, Unexpected in 2008. She followed up with her fourth studio album Journey to Freedom in 2014.
After music, Williams has been very open about her personal journey with mental health. She released a book Checking In: How Getting Real about Depression Saved My Life—and Can Save Yours in 2021. She spoke about the book with her Destiny’s Child groupmates in a clip uploaded to her Instagram at the time.
“It’s okay to not be okay. and it’s okay to tell somebody you’re not okay. I honestly should have done that with y’all. I’ve been open about a lot of things but I was never really truthful about how I really was,” she said. “Even though y’all have proven to be safe friends, safe sisters, sometimes people have to know you’re not going to be looked at differently if you say, ‘Y’all, I’ve been really sad too long. Something’s going on.”
Destiny’s Child would go on to release five studio albums, earn 14 Grammy nominations and snag three wins, twice for Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals and once for Best R&B Song. The group has sold an estimated 17.5 million albums in the US and over 60 million records worldwide.
Take a look at five of Michelle Williams’ most memorable hooks on Destiny’s Child: