Annie Lennox
Annie Lennox's parents include Dorothy Farquharson and Thomas Allison Lennox. Dorothy Farquharson & Thomas Allison Lennox is the full name given to her parents. Lennox was a flute, piano as well as harpsichord at Royal Academy of Music London for three years during the 1970s. She lived off of a student allowance and took off on a part-time job to supplement her budget. Lennox was not satisfied with the level of her abilities compared to other students at Royal Academy and began looking at other options. Lennox started her professional career in the year 1976 in a band called Dragons Playground. The group did not appear on the talent competition New Faces on I.T.V. Between 1977 and the year 1980 she was the vocalist in The Tourists. A British pop group. In this band, she got to know Dave Stewart and together they created their duo Eurythmics. Lennox went on to record her solo debut album Diva. The album was released in 1992. The album was hugely successful both commercially and critically. Nostalgia Lennoxs Six solo album, released in October 2014 is Nostalgia Lennox. The C.D. contains a collection of Lennoxs favourite soul jazz and blues tunes from her upbringing. Lepidoptera includes four keyboard improvised tracks. The E.P. She released her first solo album in conjunction with her art work in the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, titled "Now I'll Let You Go." Annie Lennox is a Scottish singer and songwriter 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, would go on to gain international recognition in the 1980s as the Eurythmics. Lennox began her solo musical career in 1992, by releasing the album Diva. It featured many popular songs including walking on Broken Glass and What's the Matter with You. Medusa the 1995 studio album, features covers of songs such as No More I Love Yous and A Whiter Shade of Pale. The singer has recorded six solo studio albums, as well as one compilation album to her credit. |
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