Annie Lennox
Annie Lennox was born in Aberdeen Scotland on December 25 1954. Dorothy Farquharson and Thomas Allison Lennox are her parents. Lennox took classes in piano, flute as well as harpsichord at Royal Academy of Music London for three years in the 1970s. Lennox was able to survive on a student's stipend, and worked part-time to help supplement her income. When she was at the Royal Academy Lennox was dissatisfied by her performance compared to her student classmates and contemplated a possible alternative direction she would take. Lennox played flute in a band named Dragons Playground in 1976. The group did not make it to the talent contest New Faces on I.T.V. She sang lead for The Tourists (a British popband) between 1977 and 1980. Here she met Dave Stewart who would later create Eurythmics. Lennox then began to work on her first solo album Diva and it was released around 1992. In both commercial terms and critically, it was an enormous success. Nostalgia Lennoxs sixth solo album debuted on October 31, 2014. The C.D. Lennox has chosen her favorite jazz, blues and soul tunes. Lepidoptera is a compilation of four songs that were improvised by piano, which Lennox made available in May 2019. The E.P. First album of hers"Now I Letting You Go... was released as the perfect accompaniment to her work of art in the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art. Annie Lennox, born on December 25, 1954, in Scotland is a philanthropist and an activist in the political arena. She sings. The Tourists were a new-wave group that had some success in the late 1970s. Then, she was joined by the band with fellow musician Dave Stewart to form the pop duo Eurythmics. Lennox launched her solo career with her first album Diva in the year 1992. It was the basis of many hits songs such as"Why" and "Walking in Broken Glass. Medusa is her album in 1995. studio features cover versions of the songs No MoreI Love Yous as well as The Whiter Shade of Pale. Her solo studio albums and the compilation album have a lot of songs. |






Comments
Post a Comment