Annie Lennox
Annie Lennox, born 25th December 1954, in Aberdeen Scotland. Dorothy Farquharson, and Thomas Allison Lennox were her parents. Lennox was accepted into the Royal Academy of Music in London in the 1970s where she studied the flute piano as well as the harpsichord for three consecutive years. She lived off of an allowance for students and went on part-time employment to augment her budget. Lennox felt that her skills weren't as good as those of the Royal Academy classmates. So she started thinking of other routes she could choose. Lennox joined a group called Dragons Playground as the flute player in 1976. But she quit before her band was invited to compete on I.T.V.'s talent contest New Faces. The singer was lead vocalist to The Tourists (a British popband) from 1977-1980. There she made friends with Dave Stewart who would later form Eurythmics. Lennox worked on her solo debut record Diva. It was released in 1993. The album had a tremendous success both commercially and critically. Nostalgia Lennoxs sixth solo album was released in October of 2014. The C.D. Lennox has picked her most favored blues, soul and jazz songs. Lepidoptera is a compilation of four impromptu piano pieces was released by Lennox in May of 2019. The E.P. This is the companion album of her "Now I let it go... artwork, which was displayed at Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art. The album is her first independently-released album. Annie Lennox is a Scottish singer and songwriter who was born on the 25th of December 1954. The Tourists gained some minor recognition for her and Dave Stewart's work during the 1970s. They would go on, in the 1980s, to become the popular duo Eurythmics. Lennox's debut album in 1992 Diva featured a number of hit songs, including Why the World is Broken Glass. Medusa is her album of studio work from 1995. It features cover versions of songs like"No MoreI I Love Yous and The Whiter Shade of Pale. The six solo studio albums as well as her compilation album include a number of hits. |






Comments
Post a Comment