Friday, 6 June 2008
Jo Dee Messina
Artist: Jo Dee Messina
Genre(s):
Other
Discography:
Burn
Year: 2000
Tracks: 11
Delicious Surprise
Year:
Tracks: 13
Part of area music's late-'90s crop of female crossing over stars, Jo Dee Messina's invoke notwithstanding remained more with land fans than pop audiences. Messina was born August 25, 1970, in Framingham, MA, and grew up in nearby Holliston. She american ginseng in musical plays starting at age eight but observed state music at age 12 and got aquiline on the likes of the Judds, Reba McEntire, and Dolly Parton. She shortly started acting live, and by 16 she was acting local clubs with a beat section made up of her pal and sister. At age 19, she moved to Nashville in search of greater exposure and american ginseng regularly for prize money in local endowment competitions. One gain light-emitting diode to a regular gig on the radio demonstrate Live at Libby's, which in turn caught the pursuit of producer Byron Gallimore, wHO helped her get together a demonstration tape. Gallimore was as well running with the young Tim McGraw around the same time, and Messina befriended him. Backstage at one of his concerts, Messina met an executive from his label, Curb, and jestingly suggested that they needed a redhead. Producer James Stroud, wHO had just heard Messina's demo, stepped up to guarantee for her, and she presently wound up on Curb, with Gallimore and McGraw helping as her producers.
Messina's self-titled debut album was released in 1996 and gave her two Top Ten hits in "Heads Carolina, Tails California" (number deuce) and "You're Not in Kansas Anymore." The record album sold well, mise en scene the stage for Messina's star-making soph elbow grease, I'm Alright. Released in 1998, it made Messina the first-class honours degree female country artist to score trey multiple-week number 1 hits from the like album: "Good-bye Bye," "I'm Alright," and "Bandstand Beside Her." She nigh had a fourth, merely "Lesson in Leavin'" stalled at number deuce. Honored by both the CMA and ACM in 1999, Messina staked out level pop-friendlier territory on her third album, 2000's Fire. It became her first-class honours degree numeral i album, and the lead undivided, "That's the Way," her one-fourth numeral i single. Two more than Top Tens followed in "Glow" and "Downtime," and a quartern single, the Tim McGraw duet "Bring on the Rain," as well topped the charts, helping Burn deal over a gazillion copies. Messina followed it with the holiday album A Joyful Noise in late 2002, and just months by and by, with only three albums to her credit, Curb released a Greatest Hits digest. Finally, in 2005, she released her official follow-up to Burn, Delicious Surprise.
France Gall