Annie Lennox
Annie Lennox is a Scottish born and bred singer. Her birth date was 25 December 1954 in Aberdeen. Dorothy Farquharson was her mother, while Thomas Allison Lennox was her father. Lennox was a student for three year at the Royal Academy of Music London in the 1970s, was admitted. Her budget was supplemented with a student stipend and part-time work. Lennox felt that her skills aren't the same as the Royal Academy classmates. So she thought about alternative paths she could take. Lennox began her career as an instrument player with the group Dragons Playground. But she quit prior to New Faces, the I.T.V. talent competition. Between 1977 and 1980 she was the vocalist in The Tourists. A British pop group. As part of this group, she was first introduced to Dave Stewart. Together they created the Eurythmics the pop group. Lennox started working on her first solo album Diva, which was released around 1992. It received lots of praise both from the press and critics. Nostalgia Lennoxs six-album solo, released in October 2014 is Nostalgia Lennox. The C.D. The C.D. comprises Lennox's most loved blues, jazz, and soul songs from her youth. Lepidoptera came out by Lennox on May 19, 2019. The album is consisting of four tracks composed by Lennox. The E.P. The E.P. is her first solo album, and is a sequel to the art installation she created at Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art entitled Now I Let you Go... Annie Lennox is a Scottish musician and singer who was born on the 25th of December 1954. The Tourists had a minor success in the late 1970s. Lennox and Dave Stewart, a fellow musician, went on to become famous internationally in the 1980s as the Eurythmics. Lennox began her own solo career when she released her first album Diva in 1992. The album was the inspiration of several hit songs, including Walking on Broken Glass. Medusa, a 1995 studio album, features covers of songs such as No More I Love Yous and A Whiter Shade of Pale. The six solo studio albums and her compilation album contain a variety of songs. |






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