Annie Lennox
Annie Lennox's parents are Dorothy Fharquharson and Thomas Allison Lennox. Dorothy Farquharson and Thomas Allison Lennox are her parents. Lennox was a student for three year in the Royal Academy of Music London in 1970s, was accepted. Lennox was paid a stipend and did part-time jobs to supplement her budget. Lennox, while studying in the Royal Academy of Music in London, was not happy with her performance compared to that of her classmates. She began considering different options. Lennox was initially a flute-player within the band Dragons Playground. But she quit shortly before New Faces, the I.T.V. talent competition. She was the main voice for The Tourists a British pop band from 1977 to 1980. It was during this time that she met Dave Stewart with whom she formed her pop group Eurythmics. Lennox worked on her solo debut album Diva. It was released in 1993. It was a huge success both critically and commercially. Nostalgia Lennoxs sixth album as a solo artist came out in the month of October, 2014. This C.D. contains a collection of Lennoxs favorite blues and soul tracks from her early years. Lepidoptera is a collection of four improvised tracks for piano that Lennox has released in May 2019. The E.P. The first single from her debut album, Now I'm Letting You go... is the perfect accompaniment to her work of art at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art. Annie Lennox (born December 25, 1954) is an artist from Scotland. Scottish political activist and singer. The Tourists were a new-wave group that had some popularity in the latter part of 1970s. Later, Lennox was joined by her fellow musician Dave Stewart to form the pop duo Eurythmics. Lennox's 1992 debut album Diva featured a number of hit tracks, such as Why and Walking on Broken Glass. Medusa an album from her studio, that was released in 1995 features songs that are re-imagined from her best-loved songs, including The No MoreI I Still Love Yous (and A Whiter Shade of Pale). The six solo studio albums and her compilation album have a lot of tracks. |






Comments
Post a Comment