Wednesday, 4 June 2008
Isabelle Boulay
Artist: Isabelle Boulay
Genre(s):
Country
Ethnic
Pop
Discography:
De Retour a La Source
Year: 2007
Tracks: 12
Du Temps Pour Toi
Year: 2005
Tracks: 19
Tout Un Jour
Year: 2004
Tracks: 14
Mieux Qu'ici-Bas
Year: 2003
Tracks: 14
Scenes D'Amour
Year: 2000
Tracks: 17
Fallait Pas
Year: 1996
Tracks: 11
Isabelle Boulay (Advance)
Year:
Tracks: 12
Isabelle Boulay vaulted from success on the theatrical stage and in telecasting to outside fame as one of the chancellor Francophone pop divas of her coevals. Born July 6, 1972, in Sainte-Félicité, Quebec, Boulay fatigued much of her childhood in and or so her parents' eating house, where she frequently performed to the delight of friends and patrons. In time she began entering local talent contests, and claimed her number one victory at the age of seven. She harbored few if any dreams of a professional music calling, however, studying literature ahead friends surreptitiously entered her in the 1990 Petite-Vallée Song Festival. Boulay's public presentation was even so a enormous success with the book of Judges, and a class later she took home top prize at the Granby Song Festival with her rendition of Jacques Brel's "Amsterdam," resulting in an invitation to contend in Les FrancoFolies de Montréal. In 1993 Boulay delineated Radio Canada at Périgord, France's "Truffe de Périgueux" fete, rising as the winner of the "Chanson Francophone" category. The exposure captured the attention of composer and producer Luc Plamondon, wHO cast her to interchange Luce Dufault as Marie-Jeanne in a revival meeting of his David Bowie-inspired rock opera house Starmania. Boulay future surfaced as the vocalizing voice of Alys Robi in the tv series of the same bring up. In late 1996, she also issued her debut solo LP, Fallait Pas, marking a minor Canadian hit with the single "J'enrage." The 1998 review, États d'Amour, proven Boulay's commercial-grade breakthrough, galvanized by the Plamondon-penned bang up "Je T'oublierai, Je T'oublierai." She besides earned Best Female Singer of the Year at the annual Félix Awards. Boulay's 2000 tone ending Mieux Qu'ici Bas made her a star in France, where she won Best New Artist honors at the Victoires de la Musique awards. She toured both Quebec and France in the year to fall out, with a pair of dates at Montreal's Wilfried-Pelletier yielding the live release Au Moment d'Être à Vous. Benjamin Biolay and Pierre Jaconelli co-produced Boulay's 2004 drive Tout un Jour. De Retour à la Source followed three years afterwards, stretch the number deuce spot on the Canadian pop charts.
Cotton quits X Factor for US career