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Norah Jones Biography
Perhaps piano-playing prodigy Norah Jones was always destined for greatness: From an early age, it was clear that she had inherited the musical talent of her famous father, Indian sitar legend and esteemed Beatles associate Ravi Shankar. But no one, especially Jones herself, could have predicted that her destiny would arrive so quickly, or spectacularly. Within the course of one short year, the exotic jazz chanteuse with the smoky voice and eyes skyrocketed from complete unknown to critics' darling to unlikely mainstream megastar--with this upward trajectory culminating in an astounding eight-trophy sweep at the 45th annual Grammy Awards. Winning every category in which she was nominated--including Best New Artist and Album, Record, and Song Of The Year--this gifted, torch-singing newcomer even trounced odds-on favorite Bruce Springsteen, in the process doing for jazz in 2003 what the O Brother, Where Are Thou? soundtrack's Grammy win did for bluegrass and country in 2002. Born, May 30, 1979 in New York
City, Jones was raised in Texas by her single mother, and never knew her
father as child; to this day, she is reluctant to discuss him in
interviews, although she does concede that they now have a close
relationship. However, while Shankar wasn't around to influence her
musically during her formative years, Jones drifted toward music on her
own, and discovered jazz while attending the Booker T. Washington High
School For The Performing And Visual Arts in Dallas, where she won two
Down Beat Student Music Awards in 1996 (for Best Jazz Vocalist and Best
Original Composition) and one in '97 (for Best Jazz Vocalist). She then
attended the University Of North Texas for two years, where she worked on
a degree in jazz piano, before deciding to take a break from her education
to move back to New York. There, she formed her own band with guitarist
Jesse Harris, bassist Lee Alexander, and drummer Dan Rieser, and began
gigging around the Greenwich Village jazz/folk club scene. Come Away With Me was not an
overnight sensation, but it garnered immense critical acclaim when it was
released in February 2002, and many months later, "Don't Know
Why" began receiving radio and VH1 airplay, which increased Jones's
buzz. This buzz then grew into a deafening roar when it was announced in
January 2003 that Jones had been nominated for an astonishing eight
Grammys; a week later, almost a full year after Come Away With Me's
initial street date, the album hit number one on the Billboard Top 200. Norah Jones Links |
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