Annie Lennox
Annie Lennox, born 25th December 1954 in Aberdeen Scotland. Dorothy Farquharson was her mother, while Thomas Allison Lennox was her father. Lennox was a student at her studies at the Royal Academy of Music, London in the 1970s. She took a course in harpsichord and flautist piano over 3 years. Lennox was paid a allowance and worked part-time to supplement her budget. Lennox as she was studying at the Royal Academy of Music in London, was dissatisfied in her performance when in comparison to the other students. She started to think about alternatives. Lennox joined a group called Dragons Playground as the flute player in 1976. She quit the band shortly before New Faces, the I.T.V. talent contest. Between 1977 and the year 1980 she sang in The Tourists. A British pop group. The band she was in, was met by Dave Stewart. Together they created the Eurythmics pop duo. Lennox worked on her solo first album Diva. The album was released in 1993. It was an enormous hit, both in terms of the sales as well as critical acclaim. Nostalgia Lennoxs 6th solo album came out on October 31, 2014. The C.D. The C.D. is composed of Lennox's most loved soul, jazz and blues songs from her childhood. Lepidoptera is a collection of four impromptu piano pieces was released by Lennox in May of 2019. The E.P. Her first solo album in conjunction with her art work in the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art entitled "Now I Let You go." Annie Lennox is a Scottish artist and singer born on the 25th of December 1954. After minor success as a member of the group known as The Tourists in the late 1970s, Lennox and co-musician Dave Stewart went on to become internationally renowned as the duo known as Eurythmics in the 1980s. Lennox made her debut as a solo artist in 1992, with the release of Diva, which featured several hit songs like Why as well as Walking on Broken Glass. Medusa her 1995 studio album has cover versions of songs like No MoreI Love Yous as well as A Whiter Shade of Pale. Her credits include seven studio albums by herself as well as a compilation. |






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