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Deborah Cox

Deborah Cox (born January 7, 1974 in Toronto, Ontario) is a Canadian R&B/pop singer, whose 1999 smash hit "Nobody's Supposed to be Here" was the longest-running number one single in the history of Billboard magazine's R&B charts.

She got into the music industry as a backup vocalist for Céline Dion, and after signing to Arista Records, released her self-titled debut album in 1994. The album made her a rising star, and set the stage for 1998's One Wish. The first single from that album, "Nobody's Supposed to be Here", spent a record 14 weeks atop the Billboard R&B charts.

On February 17, 2004, Cox made her Broadway debut in the Elton John-Tim Rice musical Aida. Her third album, The Morning After, is due to be released in November, 2004.


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Her third album, The Morning After, is due to be released in November, 2004. Dio's line-up consisted of Ronnie James Dio on vocals, Craig Goldy on guitar, Rudy Sarzo on bass, Simon Wright on drums, and Scott Warren on keyboards. On February 17, 2004, Cox made her Broadway debut in the Elton John-Tim Rice musical Aida. The bands Fireball Ministry and Anthrax opened for Dio on this tour. The first single from that album, "Nobody's Supposed to be Here", spent a record 14 weeks atop the Billboard R&B charts. tour ran from September to October. The album made her a rising star, and set the stage for 1998's One Wish. The U.S.

She got into the music industry as a backup vocalist for Céline Dion, and after signing to Arista Records, released her self-titled debut album in 1994. In 2004, Dio toured Europe from July to August, and South America in August. Deborah Cox (born January 7, 1974 in Toronto, Ontario) is a Canadian R&B/pop singer, whose 1999 smash hit "Nobody's Supposed to be Here" was the longest-running number one single in the history of Billboard magazine's R&B charts. Goldy returned to Dio in the summer of 2003, to join Dio on a tour with Motörhead and Iron Maiden. Goldy returned in 2000 for Dio's eighth studio album, Magica, but subsequently left before completion of Dio's ninth effort, Killing the Dragon, which was released in 2002 through Spitfire Records. The album also features the return of Craig Goldy on guitar, who previously left the band after the Dream Evil tour.

Pilson had earlier played with Dio in the 90s. The album features multi-instrumentalist Jeff Pilson (ex-Dokken) on bass duties. In 2004 Dio released their tenth studio album, Master of the Moon on September 7, 2004 in America through Sanctuary Records, and on August 30, 2004 in Europe through SPV Records. On July 21, 1987 their fourth album Dream Evil was released.

In 1986 Vivian Campbell left the band to join Def Leppard and was replaced by Craig Goldy. Several songs were recorded during the tour for that album; they were to be released along with the studio-recorded "Time To Burn" on the "Intermission" EP. Now a five member band, they released The Last in Line on July 2, 1984, followed by Sacred Heart on August 15, 1985. To avoid having the vocalist stuck behind a keyboard in concert, the band recruited keyboardist Claude Schnell.

In May 1983 they released their debut album Holy Diver, on which Ronnie James Dio played keyboards. In addition to Ronnie, Vivian Campbell played guitar; Jimmy Bain, bass; and Vinny Appice, drums. Dio is a hard rock band led by vocalist Ronnie James Dio, who formed it in October 1982 after leaving Black Sabbath.