This page will contain discussion groups about Deborah Cox, as they become available.Deborah CoxDeborah 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. This page about Deborah Cox includes information from a Wikipedia article. Additional articles about Deborah Cox News stories about Deborah Cox External links for Deborah Cox Videos for Deborah Cox Wikis about Deborah Cox Discussion Groups about Deborah Cox Blogs about Deborah Cox Images of Deborah Cox |
|
Her third album, The Morning After, is due to be released in November, 2004. In the 1980s and 1990s, he returned to secular pop music. On February 17, 2004, Cox made her Broadway debut in the Elton John-Tim Rice musical Aida. In the late 1970s, Dion recorded albums in the Contemporary Christian Music vein. The first single from that album, "Nobody's Supposed to be Here", spent a record 14 weeks atop the Billboard R&B charts. His Born To Be With You album, produced by Phil Spector and released in 1973, was a commercial disaster, but has been cited by Jason Pierce of Spiritualized as a major influence on Spiritualized's work. The album made her a rising star, and set the stage for 1998's One Wish. He continued to record protest songs into the 1970s. 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. Kennedy. 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. After getting clean from drug use (he has remained clean ever since except for a brief period in the mid-1970s) he switched to protest songs in the late 1960s; his best-known song as a soloist, "Abraham, Martin, and John", was a response to the 1968 assassinations of Martin Luther King and Robert F. During the mid-1960s, he struggled with his addictions and recorded songs in a folk-rock vein. He was a singer and songwriter whose career began in popular music in the 50s with his group known as Dion & the Belmonts.He went solo in the early 1960s and continued to have hits with songs like "Runaround Sue", "The Wanderer" and "Ruby Baby" until 1964, when changing public tastes and heroin addiction caused him to enter a commercial decline. Dion DiMucci was born July 18, 1939 in the Bronx, New York, United States. |