Biography A
Al jarreau
The only vocalist in history to net Grammy Awards in three different categories (jazz, pop, and R&B, respectively), Al Jarreau was born in Milwaukee, WI, on March 12, 1940. The son of a vicar, he earned his first performing experience singing in the church choir. After receiving his master's degree in psychology, Jarreau pursued a career as a social worker, but eventually he decided to relocate to Los Angeles and try his hand in show business, playing small clubs throughout the West Coast. next
Aerosmith
was one of the most popular hard rock bands of the '70s, setting the style and sound of hard rock and heavy metal for the next two decades with their raunchy, bluesy swagger. The Boston-based quintet found the middle ground between the menace of the Rolling Stones and the campy, sleazy flamboyance of the New York Dolls, developing a lean, dirty riff-oriented boogie that was loose and swinging and as hard as a diamond. next
Alice Cooper
Originally,
there was a band called Alice Cooper led by a singer named Vincent Damon Furnier.
Under his direction, Alice Cooper pioneered a grandly theatrical and violent
brand of heavy metal that was designed to shock. Drawing equally from horror
movies, vaudeville, heavy metal, and garage rock, the group created a stage show
that featured electric chairs, guillotines, fake blood, and huge boa
constrictors, all coordinated by the heavily made-up Furnier. By that time,
Furnier had adopted the name for his androgynous on-stage personality. While the
visuals were extremely important to the group's impact, the band's music was
nearly as distinctive. Driven by raw, simple riffs and melodies that derived
from '60s guitar pop as well as show tunes, it was rock & roll at its most
basic and catchy, even when the band ventured into psychedelia and art rock.
After the original group broke up and Furnier began a solo career as Alice
Cooper, his actual music lost most of its theatrical flourishes, becoming
straightforward heavy metal, yet his stage show retained all of the trademark
props that made him the king of shock rock. next
Avril Lavigne
Wild child Avril Lavigne hit big in summer 2002 with her spiky-fun debut song, "Complicated," shifting pop music into a different direction. Lavigne, who was 17 at the time, didn't seem concerned with the glamour of the TRL-dominated pop world and such confidence allowed her star power to soar. The middle of three children in small-town Napanee, Ontario, Lavigne's rock ambitions were noticeable around age two. By her early teens, she was already writing songs and playing guitar. The church choir, local festivals, and county fairs also allowed Lavigne to get her voice heard, and luckily, Arista Records main man Antonio "L.A." Reid was listening. He offered her a deal, and at 16, Lavigne's musical dreams became reality. next