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The following biography
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Wikipedia.org
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Free Encyclopedia.
Nelly Kim Furtado (born December 2, 1978) is a
Canadian singer-songwriter, instrumentalist, and record producer.
Furtado came to fame in 2000 with the release of
her debut album Whoa, Nelly!, which featured the Grammy Award-winning single
"I'm like a Bird" and "Turn off the Light". After giving birth to daughter Nevis
and releasing the less commercially successful Folklore (2003), she returned to
prominence in 2006 with the release of Loose and its hit singles, "Promiscuous",
"Maneater", "Say It Right" and "All Good Things (Come to an End)". So far she
has sold more than ten million albums worldwide.[citation needed]
Furtado is known for experimenting with different
instruments, sounds, genres, languages, and vocal styles. This diversity has
been influenced by her wide-ranging musical taste and her interest in different
cultures. [1] [2]
****
Background information
Birth name Nelly Kim Furtado
Born December 2, 1978 (age 28)
Victoria, British Columbia
Canada
Origin Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
Genre(s) Pop, Trip hop, folk, R&B, hip hop, world
Occupation(s) Singer-songwriter, record producer,
instrumentalist
Instrument(s) Vocals, guitar, keyboard, ukulele,
trombone
Years active 2000present
Label(s) DreamWorks (19992005)
Mosley Music Group/Geffen (2005present)
Website NellyFurtado.com
****
Biography
Early
years and influences
Furtado, a first-generation Portuguese Canadian,
was born as one of three children to Maria Manuela and Ant๓nio Jos้ Furtado,
Portuguese and Catholic parents from Sใo Miguel Island in the Azores. She was
named after Soviet gymnast Nellie Kim.
In Rolling Stone Magazine she talked about her
Catholic background, saying, "It was a big part of my life," Furtado says about
church. "Very exciting and colorful. It was just so customary that I didn't
really take the time to think about what everything meant, besides the basics. I
still believe in the Ten Commandments and the Seven Sins. It keeps me on the
straight and narrow, though I get jealous of people sometimes who can just let
go and give in to sin." Fly Girl. Rolling Stone. Retrieved on 16 Aug 2001.
Furtado's parents emigrated from Portugal to Canada
in the late 1970s. [3] She has stated that visiting her parents' birthplace, the
Azores islands, as a child experiencing its culture and learning the Portuguese
language has made her an open-minded person. [1] This has strongly influenced
her artistry as she has incorporated many cross-cultural sounds into her music.
It is also evident in her multilingualism as she can speak English, Portuguese,
Spanish and, to a lesser extent, Hindi. [1] Furtado has acknowledged her parents
as the source of her strong work ethic; she spent eight summers working as a
chambermaid with her mother, who was a housekeeper in Victoria. [4] She has
stated that coming from a working class background has shaped her identity in a
positive way. [1]
Furtado first sang at the age of four when she
performed a duet with her mother at church on Portugal Day. [1] She began
playing instruments at the age of nine, learning the trombone, ukulele and, in
later years, the guitar and keyboard. She began writing songs at the age of
twelve [1] and, as a teenager, she played in a Portuguese marching band. [3]
During these early years, Furtado embraced many
musical genres, listening heavily to mainstream R&B, hip hop, alternative rock,
alternative hip hop, trip hop, world music (including Portuguese fado, Brazilian
bossa nova, and Indian music), and a variety of others. [1] [4] Her influences
have included Jeff Buckley, Caetano Veloso, Amalia Rodrigues, Nusrat Fateh Ali
Khan, Cornershop, TLC, Mary J. Blige, Mariah Carey, Digable Planets, De La Soul,
Radiohead, Oasis, The Smashing Pumpkins, The Verve, U2, and Beck. [1] [2] [4]
Furtado's music has also been influenced by her
current residence, Toronto, which she calls "the most multicultural city in the
entire world" and a place where she "can be any culture". [5] Growing up in
Canada and experiencing Toronto's cultural diversity, she has said that she did
not have to wait for the Internet revolution to learn about world music; she
began listening to it at the age of fifteen and continues to discover new
genres. On a 2006 Rolling Stone issue, she commented about her diverse taste:
I always know there's a new genre left to
discover. For me, it's like a metaphor for life. I feel like if you can get down
with any style of music, you can get down with any style of person. So it's fun
for meI get to expose my fans to different vibes and they, in turn, open their
minds too. I'm always undergoing mind-opening. [5]
The first musicians Furtado interacted with were
underground rappers and DJs.[6] During a visit to Toronto, after the summer of
eleventh grade, she met Tallis Newkirk, member of hip hop group Plains of
Fascination and contributed vocals to their 1996 album Join the Ranks on the
track "Waitin' 4 the Streets". [7] She spent the rest of that summer in
Portugal, opening her mind to native rock acts. She then returned to British
Columbia in the fall. After graduating from Mount Douglas Secondary School in
1996, she moved to Toronto where she eventually formed the trip hop duo Nelstar
in 1997 with Newkirk. The experience led her back to her hip-hop influences and
allowed her to become more comfortable with writing her own melodies and rhymes.
[4] Although, "Like", one of the songs Nelstar recorded, received a VideoFACT
grant to cover for the production of a music video, Furtado felt the trip-hop
style of the duo was "too segregated" and believed it did not represent her
personality or allow her to showcase her vocal ability. [7] She left the group
and decided to move back home.
Before moving, she performed at the 1997 Honey Jam,
a female, mostly-black talent show at Toronto nightclub Lee's Palace. She
performed to a Digital Audio Tape in jeans and a t-shirt. [7] At the club, The
Philosopher Kings singer Gerald Eaton (aka Jarvis Church) was impressed with her
performance and approached her to write with him. Eaton and fellow Kings member
Brian West, collectively known as Track and Field, helped Furtado produce a
demo, but she already had plans to backpack through Europe and return home to
take creative writing courses at Camosun College. She stayed in touch with Eaton
and West who insisted that she return to Toronto to record more material. She
eventually returned for two weeks; the material recorded during those sessions
led to her record deal with DreamWorks Records in 1999. [2]
20002002: Whoa, Nelly!
Furtado continued to collaborate with Eaton and
West, who co-produced her debut album, Whoa, Nelly!, which was released in
October 2000. The album saw major success all over the globe supported by its
four singles, "I'm like a Bird", "Turn off the Light", "...On the Radio
(Remember the Days)", and "Hey, Man!". It received four Grammy nominations in
2002, and her debut single won for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance.
Furthermore, Furtado was critically acclaimed for her innovative mixture of
various genres and sounds. Slant magazine called the album "a delightful and
refreshing antidote to the army of 'pop princesses' and rap-metal bands that had
taken over popular music at the turn of the millennium". [8] The sound of the
album was strongly influenced by musicians who had traversed cultures and "the
challenge of making heartfelt, emotional music that's upbeat and hopeful". [2]
Following the release of the album, Furtado headlined the Burn in the Spotlight
tour and also appeared on Moby's Area:One tour.
20032005: Folklore
Before the release of her sophomore album,
Folklore, Furtado gave birth to her first child, daughter Nevis (purportedly
named for the Caribbean island, Nevis, on which she was conceived - in actuality
named for the Latin word "Nevi", confirmed by Nelly on Australia's Kyle and
Jackie O radio show on the 7th of August, 2006). On September 20, 2003 in
Toronto, she had a home birth with midwives. She has said about motherhood,
"It's actually pretty incredible. It's a lot more instinctual than I thought".
[9]
Nevis's father is Furtado's then boyfriend,
DJ/producer Jasper Gahunia aka Lil' Jaz. Furtado and Gahunia, who broke up in
2005, were together for four years and friends for several years before that.
She has stated, "We're fully active co-parents and really close friends, so
things are irie". [10]
Nevis is ethnically a quarter Filipino, a quarter
Indian, and half Portuguese. Furtado has chosen to raise her in Toronto due to
the city's cultural diversity, open-mindedness, and grassroots political
activism. [5]
Furtado's second album, Folklore, was released in
November 2003. The title was influenced by her parents immigration to Canada,
"when I look at my old photo albums, I see pictures of their brand-new house,
their shiny new car, their first experiences going to very North American-type
places like Kmart. When you have that in your blood, you never really part with
itit becomes your own personal folklore." [11] The album also displayed a
diverse sound but with a more rock-oriented, acoustic approach. [12] As she
focused more on the songwriting rather "than on frenetically switching genres
five times in one song",[11] BBC felt that it had "twice the originality" of her
debut. [13] Furtado attributed the mellowness of the album to the fact that she
was pregnant during most of its recording. [11] The final track on the album,
"Childhood Dreams", is dedicated to her daughter.
The album includes the single "For็a" (meaning
"strength" or "carry on" in Portuguese), which was written as the official
anthem of the 2004 European Football Championship. Furtado performed the song at
the championship's final in Lisbon, Portugal in July 2004. [14] Other singles
included the ballad "Try" and "Powerless (Say What You Want)", in which she
embraces her Portuguese heritage; the song deals with "the idea that you can
still feel like a minority inside, even if you don't look like one on the
outside". [11]
The album was not as successful as her debut,
partly due to troubles at DreamWorks Records and the less poppy sound. [13] It
lacked promotion because DreamWorks was sold to Universal Music Group at the
time of Folkore's release. In 2005, DreamWorks Records was shut down, and many
of its artists, including Furtado, were absorbed into Geffen Records. [15]
2006present: Loose
Furtado's third album, Loose, was released in June
2006. It was named partly after the spontaneous, creative decisions she faced
while creating the album [16] and also for the band TLC, who she said she
admires for "taking back their sexuality, showing they were complete women."
[17] Four lead singles were released in different regions of the world: the
Spanish reggaeton-influenced "No Hay Igual" (featuring Calle 13), the hip-hop
"Promiscuous" (featuring Timbaland), for which she won a 2006 Billboard Music
Award, the latin "Te Busqu้" (featuring Juanes) and the dark-pop "Maneater". For
the first time, Furtado worked with a variety of record producers and followed a
more collaborative approach in creating the album. The album, mostly produced by
Timbaland, showed her experimenting with a more R&Bhip hop sound and the
"surreal, theatrical elements of '80s music". [18] She has categorized the
album's sound as punk-hop, which she describes as "this modern, poppy, spooky
music" and stated that "there's a mysterious, after-midnight vibe to [it] that's
extremely visceral". [16] She attributed the youthful sound of the album to the
presence of her two-year old daughter. [18]
Furtado also wanted the album to sound more like
her demo tapes which she prefers over her finished albums. She recalls, "The
cool thing is we did the mixes as we went. The whole album is a board mix
theoretically. We didn't bring in the fancy mixer at the end". [5] During the
album's creation, she listened to several electro and hard rock musicians
including System of a Down and Death from Above 1979 who influenced the rock
sounds present on the album and the "coughing, laughing, distorted bass lines"
which were kept in the songs deliberately. [5]
Loose became the most successful album of Furtado's
career, reaching number-one in several countries including the United States and
Canada and producing the hit singles "Promiscuous", "Maneater", "Say It Right"
and "All Good Things (Come to an End)", the first two of which have become the
most successful songs of her career reaching number-one on several charts
worldwide. The album received generally positive reviews from critics,[19] with
some citing the "revitalising" effect of Timbaland on Furtado's music,[20][21]
and others calling it "slick, smart and surprising." [22]
In June 2006, in an interview with Genre magazine,
when asked if she had "ever felt an attraction to women", Furtado replied
"Absolutely. Women are beautiful and sexy." She also said the idea that everyone
was inherently bisexual made sense to her and agreed with Kurt Cobain's
statement that "everyone is gay" from Nirvana's "All Apologies". [23] Some
considered this an announcement of bisexuality [24], but in August 2006, she
confirmed that she was "straight, but very open-minded". She commented that she
was slightly embarrassed by the quotes and stated, "I guess I was humouring the
journalist a little and I was reading a book about Chinese medicine, and we went
off on a tangent." [25]
In November 2006, Furtado announced that her world
tour will begin in Canada on January 31, 2007. The first date is in London,
Ontario, and she will tour five continents. [26] Furtado and Justin Timberlake
are featured on Timbaland's upcoming single "Give It to Me". [27]
In late November, Furtado said that she turned down
US$500,000 to pose nude in Playboy.[28]
It has been reported that Nelly will make an
all-Spanish album that will be coming out in early 2007.[29]
Acting
career
Furtado began acting in school plays in middle
school. She formally began studying acting after she planned to appear in an
Indian Hindi language film which never came to fruition. [5] Acting courses
taught her to "let go of [her] ego and feel really grounded"; this influenced
the theme and creation of her third album Loose. She prepared for a role in a
second film, the independent drama Nobody's Hero (2006), [30] but plans fell
through as filming conflicted with the promotion of Loose. [5]
Discography
For a comprehensive listing of all Nelly Furtado
releases, see Nelly Furtado discography.
Albums
Year Title Chart positions [31] [32] [33] WW sales
US sales
U.S. Canada
2000 Whoa, Nelly! 24 2 5,500,000 2,600,000
2003 Folklore 38 18 2,000,000 500,000
2006 Loose 1 1 3,000,000+ 945,356
Singles
Year Title Album Chart positions [31] [32] [33]
[34] [35]
U.S. UK CA AUS MEX ARG GER IRL NL PHI FRA SPN NZ
EUR PL RSA CHN JPN ARC WW
2000 "I'm like a Bird" Whoa, Nelly! 9 5 3 2 4 41
4 4 10 33 2 1 1 4 8 4 7
2001 "Turn off the Light" 5 4 40 7 2 31 5 7 7 46
8 1 3 3 3
"...On the Radio (Remember the Days)" 18 14 53 3
67 22 7 16 5 7 14 27 19 25
2002 "Hey, Man!" 20 49
2003 "Powerless (Say What You Want)" Folklore 13
6 37 18 1 8 36 5 18 23 16 23 16 27 37 18 9
2004 "Try" 15 9 61 1 1 31 10 20 4 25 11
34 40 28
"For็a" 40 76 12 1 9 3 12 22 6 15
20
"Explode" 86 15 34 13 1 19
2005 "The Grass Is Green" 65
2006 "Promiscuous" (feat. Timbaland) Loose 1 3 1 2
13* 6 5 9 1 15 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 4*
"Maneater" 16 1 5 3 1 1 4 2 10 1 14 2 1 1 1 1 1
13 4
"Say It Right" 6* 14* 18* 1*
10* 24*
"All Good Things (Come to an End)" 4* 2*
8* 11* 8* 3* 18*
"No Hay Igual"~ (feat. Calle 13) 1
"Te Busqu้"~ (feat. Juanes) 20 17
1 1
2007 "Showtime"[36]
Notes
A dash [] indicates that the song has yet to chart
in the country.
An asterisk [*] indicates that the song is
currently on the charts in the country.
A tilde [~] indicates that the song was not/has yet
to be released in North America.
Awards and nominations
For a full list of awards and accolades, see List
of Nelly Furtado awards and accolades.
****
References
-
^ a b c d e f g h Exclusive
LAUNCH Artist Chat. Yahoo! Music. Retrieved on 28 May 2006.
-
^ a b c d Nelly Furtado
Biography. MapleMusic. Retrieved on 27 May 2006.
-
^ a b Furtado Goes Portuguese.
Rolling Stone. Retrieved on 27 May 2006.
-
^ a b c d Nelly Furtado
Biography. All Music Guide. Retrieved on 27 May 2006.
-
^ a b c d e f g Why Is Nelly
Furtado's New Album So Loud?. Rolling Stone. Retrieved on 1 July 2006.
-
^ Shepherd, Julianne. How Nelly
Furtado Got Her Ghetto Pass. MTV. Retrieved on 16 August 2006.
-
^ a b c Nelstar* (Nelly Furtado)
Biography. Nelstar-Project.com. Retrieved on 9 December 2005.
-
^ Whoa, Nelly!. Slant. Retrieved
on 28 May 2006.
-
^ Singer Nelly Furtado Loving
Motherhood. Associated Press. Retrieved on 28 May 2006.
-
^ Nelly Furtado: Free As A Bird.
Blender. Retrieved on 1 July 2006.
-
^ a b c d Interview: Nelly
Furtado. Interview. Retrieved on 29 May 2006.
-
^ Folklore. Amazon.com. Retrieved
on 28 May 2006.
-
^ a b Folklore. BBC. Retrieved on
28 May 2006.
-
^ Nelly Furtado Gets Her Kicks.
Rolling Stone. Retrieved on 9 December 2005.
-
^ Universal Music Snags
DreamWorks Records. Blogcritics.org. Retrieved on 29 May 2006.
-
^ a b Nelly Furtado Brings the
Punk-Hop. Rolling Stone. Retrieved on 28 May 2006.
-
^ Serious female singers harder
to find on the charts. USA Today. Retrieved on 14 June 2006.
-
^ a b Nelly Furtado :: Loose.
umusic.ca. Retrieved on 21 June 2006.
-
^ Loose by Nelly Furtado.
Metacritic. Retrieved on 16 August 2006.
-
^ Murphy, John. Nelly Furtado -
Loose (Polydor). MusicOMH. Retrieved on 16 August 2006.
-
^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. Loose
Review. All Music Guide. Retrieved on 16 August 2006.
-
^ Lynskey, Dorian. Nelly Furtado,
Loose. Guardian Unlimited Arts. Retrieved on 16 August 2006.
-
^ Nelly on the Loose!. Genre.
Retrieved on 26 July 2006.
-
^ Best. Lesbian. Week. Ever..
AfterEllen. Retrieved on 26 July 2006.
-
^ Furtado red-faced over loose
tongue. The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved on 11 August 2006.
-
^
http://www.nellyfurtado.com/news/default.aspx?nid=9323
-
^ Timbaland Nabs 50 Cent, Dr. Dre
For LP, Starts Timberlake Gossip Frenzy. MTV News. Retrieved on 1 December
2006.
-
^
http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,2004580002-2006540535,00.html
-
^
http://cgi.ebay.com/2-Tix-and-Meet-NELLY-FURTADO-in-Los-Angeles-12-8-06_W0QQitemZ110063282755QQihZ001QQcategoryZ16122QQssPageNameZWDVWQQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem?hash=item110063282755
-
^ Nelly Furtado Signs on for
Movie Role. andPOP. Retrieved on 31 May 2006.
-
^ a b U.S., UK, and German charts
positions: Charts-Surfer.de
-
^ a b Irish chart positions:
ChartTrack.co.uk
-
^ a b Chart data:
Mariah-Charts.com
-
^ New Zealand chart positions:
Charts.org.nz
-
^ http://www.apcchart.com/
-
^ "Watch!! Nelly On Tyra
Show!!!". Official Nelly Furtado Fans Forum. November 1, 2006. Retrieved
November 16, 2006.
****
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