Monday, 30 June 2008

Heather Nova

Heather Nova   
Artist: Heather Nova

   Genre(s): 
Rock: Pop-Rock
   Rock
   



Discography:


Redbird   
 Redbird

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 12


Siren   
 Siren

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 14


South   
 South

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 13


Beautiful Angel   
 Beautiful Angel

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 17


Sleepin'   
 Sleepin'

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 16


Blow   
 Blow

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 9




The sweet of Heather Nova consumed the indie rock food market throughout the nineties, and into the unexampled millennium she was a rising whiz across the orb. Born to a Canadian mother and a forefather from Bermuda, Heather Frith used tattle and music as a means of entertainment during her puerility. She was born in her father's native din Land on July 6, 1967, and exhausted the side by side 16 age of her life aboard a 40-foot boat with her parents, brother, and sister. Her imagination was tried and true and music was her calling. She endlessly listened to tape-recorded records from her mother, after crafting her own songs by years eight. By 14, she was learning to play guitar and was a fan of Neil Young and Jimmy Cliff. Two years later, she and her kinsperson returned to the States, where Nova enrolled at the Rhode Island School of Performing Arts and began perusal visual liberal arts. One to be interpreted by a moving figure and artistic creation itself, Nova shifted creativity into piece of writing music, just music for films. A cupboard ballad maker of sorts, Nova was quick to see that she could commix her sexual love for film and medicine for something solid. To seduce her dreaming occur lawful, she stirred to New York City and adopted her mother's maiden name.


Fourth dimension exhausted in the metropolis that never sleeps was fugacious; Nova establish herself at house in London by the late '80s and focussed on songwriting. A self-titled EP was recorded under her given key out, just later released by Rough Trade as These Walls in 1990. Nova was a budding creative person and ontogeny confident by the clock time she issued her low album, Glowstars, in 1993. Coffeehouse gigs across the land attributed to Nova's emergence as a performing artist and Blow, a alive effort, followed the same year. The president of Big Cat Records, Abbo, was interpreted by Nova's innocent lyrical lulu and made her an offer. Nova aquiline up with Killing Joke's Youth for her proper orbicular debut, 1994's Oyster. Oyster, which appeared on Sony/Work in the U.S., was dark and sulphurous, just naked as a jaybird and sexy. The individual "Walk This World" was a score in Europe and she went on to play nearly 300 gigs crosswise the continent for the next two years.


After a domain go, Nova returned to Bermuda for some down time. It was there that she reflected upon her life and composed songs for a third gear album. Siren would surface in 1998, showcasing a more calm down and serene Nova. It was a surprise strike among critics and earthy, passionate songs such as "Heart & Shoulder" and "London Rain (Zero Heals Me Like You Do)" that were mainstays among college wireless. Prior to the decade's end, Nova went back to Bermuda on December 31, 1999, for her first show up ever. She performed Bob Marley's "One Love" and embarked on another journey, another x.


The long time to come would prove prominent for Heather Nova. She was creatively in control of her have material and comfortable in her London home. Still England's sweetheart, Nova surfaced for a fourth album in the come down of 2001. South (V2 Records) was recorded patch on vacation in Bermuda and the title itself was an homage to Nova's upbringing. The album was a chart-topper in the U.K. as was the individual "The Virus of the Mind." In May 2002, American fans ultimately got a sense of taste of Nova's young substantial when South was officially released the U.S. Several months later, Nova self-published a book of drawings and poems coroneted "the sorrowjoy." Her fifth album, Storm was released in 2003.





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