Sunday 10 August 2008

Axelle Red

Axelle Red   
Artist: Axelle Red

   Genre(s): 
Pop
   Other
   Chanson
   



Discography:


Jardin Secret   
 Jardin Secret

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 15


French Soul (Best Of)   
 French Soul (Best Of)

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 28


Alive   
 Alive

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 15


A Tatons   
 A Tatons

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 14




European pop diva Axelle Red was born Fabienne Demal on February 15, 1968. Demal grew up bilingualist, language production both French and Dutch from her earlier years. A fan of American pop and R&B, she highly-developed a firm interest in singing as a tiddler, beginning to do in her early adolescent years. Demal was discovered by a natural endowment guide at old age 15, and was invited to record a single, entitled "Slight Girls." The song became a national hit, turn Axelle Red into an inst star. Though she studied law of nature and drama for a time, by 1988 she had turned her full attention to her musical career, having sign-language with the powerful transnational BMG. The song "President John F. Kennedy Boulevard," written by Axelle and her musically gifted brothers, became the singer's kickoff gold record, followed short thereafter by "Aretha et Moi." In 1992 Axelle Red switched over to Virgin, with whom she produced her first-class honours degree uncut record, Sans Plus Attendre. Thanks to a twine of radio hits, the R&B-inflected phonograph recording would sell five century,000 copies, becoming Belgium's best-selling record of all time. Thanks to several important alive appearances and a successful followup record, A Tatons, Axelle Red quickly rose wine to international stardom. Face A/Face B (2002) and French people Soul (2004) paid homage to her longtime love involvement with American soul and disco euphony music, volunteer up opportunities to act with some of those genres' about rife refer calling. Projects like her twenty pct studio apartment record, Jardin Secret, institute Axelle as meshed with political causes as musical pursuits. As a congresswoman for UNICEF and an exponent of tolerance, in recent old age the singer has wielded her considerable star force in documentation of do-gooder causes world.