Nana Mouskouri
Biography
Globally speaking, Nana Mouskouri is the biggest-selling female artist of all time. Her fluency in multiple languages — Greek, French, English, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese — enabled her to reach audiences all over Europe, the Americas, and even Asia. Possessed of a distinctive, angelic soprano — the product of having been born with only one vocal cord — Mouskouri was sometimes described as Europe's answer to Barbra Streisand. Her repertoire was varied enough to support the universal appeal she aimed for: jazz standards, well-known pop tunes from before and after the rock era, French cabaret chansons, movie songs, classical and operatic repertory, religious music, folk songs from her native Greece and elsewhere, and more. Television ads for Mouskouri collections (a major North American marketing tool) leave the impression that her chief strength was interpreting familiar songs in that lovely voice; however, her early fame in Europe was built largely on songs written for and associated with her, most notably her first hit, "The White Rose of Athens." She was particularly successful in her eventual adopted home of France, where her trademark large black glasses were viewed as highly unorthodox visual style. Mouskouri recorded steadily from the 1960s into the new millennium, tailoring specific releases to specific international markets with tremendous success.. Ioana Mouskouri (Joanna in English; nicknamed "Nana" from a young age) was born October 13, 1934, on the island of Crete, in the town of Chania (or Carée in French). Her father worked as a movie projectionist, and moved the family to Athens when she was three. Much of her childhood was colored by the Nazi occupation of Greece — during which time her father worked for the resistance movement — and the four-year civil war that broke out on the heels of World War II. She started taking singing lessons at age 12, and listened regularly to radio broadcasts of American jazz singers (Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald, and Billie Holiday in particular) and French chanson stars (Edith Piaf, etc.). In 1950, Mouskouri was accepted into the Athens Conservatory, where she studied classical music with an emphasis on singing opera. In 1957, it was discovered that Mouskouri had been singing with a jazz group by night, and she was summarily kicked out of the Conservatory.
Top Albums |
1. Tragoudia Ap..
| 2. At Her Very ..
| 3. The Christma..
| 4. 20th Century..
| 5. Passport
|
6. Vieilles cha..
| 7. Nana Mouskou..
| 8. I'll Remembe..
| 9. Falling In L..
| 10. Gold collect..
|
11. Les 50 plus ..
| 12. Serie Top Te..
| 13. Je chante av..
| 14. Serie Millen..
| 15. Les triomphe..
|
16. An Evening W..
| 17. Nana Latina
| 18. Ich hab gela..
| 19. La dame de c..
| 20. Nana Swings
|
|
Top Songs |
| Name | Album | Time | Price | |
1. | Ntari Ntari | Tragoudia Apo Ta Ellinika N.. | 4:07 | $0.99 | |
2. | Quand On S'aimait | Douces Mélodies D'ét
|