| Birth name | Nelly Kim Furtado |
|---|---|
| Born | December 2, 1978 |
| Origin | Victoria, British Columbia, Canada |
| Genres | Pop, rock, folk, R&B, Latin pop, hip hop, dance pop, world music |
| Occupations | Singer-songwriter, record producer, musician, actress |
| Instruments | Vocals, guitar, keyboards, ukulele, trombone |
| Years active | 1996–present |
Furtado was born on December 2, 1978, in Victoria, British Columbia, to Portuguese parents, Maria Manuela and António José Furtado, both immigrants from the Azores.She was named after Soviet gymnast Nellie Kim. Her parents were born on São Miguel Island and emigrated to Canada in the late 1960s. Her siblings are Michael Anthony and Lisa Anne. She was raised in a Roman Catholic home.At age four, she began performing and singing in Portuguese. Furtado's first public performance was when she sang a duet with her mother at a church on Portugal Day. She began playing musical instruments at the age of nine, learning the trombone, ukulele and – in later years – the guitar and keyboards. At the age of 12, she began writing songs,and as a teenager, she performed in a Portuguese marching band.
Furtado has acknowledged her family as the source of her strong work
ethic; she spent eight summers working as a chambermaid with her mother,
along with her brother and sister, who was a housekeeper in Victoria.She has stated that coming from a working class background has shaped her identity in a positive way.Furtado continued the collaboration with Eaton and West, who co-produced her debut album, Whoa, Nelly!, which was released in October 2000. Following the release of the album, Furtado headlined the "Burn in the Spotlight Tour" and also appeared on Moby's Area:One tour. The album was an international success, supported by three international singles: "I'm like a Bird", "Turn off the Light", and "...On the Radio (Remember the Days)". It received four Grammy nominations in 2002, and her debut single won for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance. Furtado's work was also 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". 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".According to Maclean's magazine, Whoa, Nelly! had sold six million copies worldwide as of August 2006. Portions of the song "Scared of You" are in Portuguese, while "Onde Estás" is entirely in Portuguese, reflecting Furtado's Portuguese heritage.The International Release of "Whoa Nelly" featured fellow Canadian Esthero on the song titled "I Feel You". In 2002, Furtado appeared on the song "Thin Line", on underground hip hop group Jurassic 5's album Power in Numbers. The same year, Furtado provided her vocals to the Paul Oakenfold's song "The Harder They Come" from the album Bunkka and also made the song "These words are my own". She also had a collaboration with Colombian artist Juanes, in the song "Fotografia" where she showed her diversity of yet another language. Furtado was also featured in "Breathe" from Swollen Members "Monsters in the Closet" release; the video for "Breathe," directed by Spawn creator Todd MacFarlane, won the 2003 Western Canadian Music Awards Outstanding Video and MuchVIBE Best Rap Video.


Da! Arata bine site-ul vostru!
RăspundețiȘtergereAstept sa il traduceti in limba engleza. Cu rabdare. Puteti avea si mai putine postari...doar cate 2 fiecare din voi. Numai sa fie in engleza.
Well done!
Keep up the good work!
C.