Sarina Paris

This article is about the Canadian singer. For album of the same name, see Sarina Paris (album).
Sarina Paris
Born (1973-12-22) December 22, 1973
Origin Toronto, Canada
Genres Dance-pop, electropop / synthpop, Europop, eurodance, eurobeat, italo dance, bubblegum pop
Occupation(s) Singer
Years active 19952005
2011present
Labels Capitol Records, Sony Music Italy
Website http://www.sarinaparismusic.com/

Sarina Paris (born December 22, 1973) is a Canadian dance-pop singer and songwriter, best known for her international dance-club hits "Look at Us" (2000) and "Just About Enough" (2001).

Early life and education

Born on December 22, 1973, Paris is of Italian descent and grew up in Toronto, Canada, in a working-class family who were originally from Italy. She moved back to Italy in 1996 after her mother died to get in touch with her ancestral roots.[1]

Career

In 1995, Paris' debut song "Mystery Man" was released in Canada. In 1996, She was discovered by Italian manager/producer Vince Tempera (Kill Bill). He invited her to become a member of the Gam Gam Project alongside producers Max MOnti and Mauro Pilato in Rimini, Italy which aimed at teaching Italian children to sing in English.

A year later she moved to Milan where she worked as a receptionist at a CX music publishing and production where she was discovered by Charlie Marchino and Nico Spinosa of EMI's Italian division, and began her career as a recording artist.[2] Her initial single, "Look at Us", charted on the Billboard Hot 100 in 2001,[3] but did not reach the Top 40. The song did make it onto the Rhythmic Top 40. It also became a dance-club hit internationally.[4] As a result of the success, she was signed to the U.S. label Priority Records.

In 2001, she released her debut album, Sarina Paris, composed of songs she co-wrote, with the exception of a cover version of Cyndi Lauper's "True Colors".[2] In an interview, she said the album was "nothing too intellectual—just music to make you happy and to make you feel good" and that "I wanted to make an album that kids could listen to with their parents. Songs that were clubby for mom, but weren't x-rated so the kids could play and dance along with."[2] She received feedback from her 14-year-old niece as she wrote and recorded. Indeed, the record label's target demographic was noted to be 12- to 25-year-old women.[2] The single "Just About Enough" was released as a club-exclusive single.[2] She released another dance track, "This Is My Life", found exclusively on a Canadian dance compilation Euro Mix 5 through SPG Records. In 2000 "Do You Love Somebody" was released exclusively on the compilation Dancemania x7 in Japan under Toshiba/EMI record label.

A remix of "Look at Us" (called "Look at Us (Daddy DJ Mix)") appears on the Konami dance simulation video game DDRMAX2.[5]

Paris toured with La Toya Jackson in Hawaii in May 2004. Her music career has since been mostly on hold, although she released a new song, "You Are My Valentine", available only on EuroBeats Vol. 3.

On May 27, 2011,[6] nearly marking the tenth anniversary of "Look At Us", Paris released the single "Sophisticated"[7][8] which is said to be the first single from her second studio album.

Discography

Singles

References

  1. Bonacich, Drago. "Sarina Paris: Biography", Allmusic. Retrieved May 12, 2011.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Housman, Steven (April 21, 2001). "Dance single's success brings Sarina Paris her priority debut", Billboard 113 (16): 10.
  3. Hay, Carla (June 2, 2001). "Popular uprisings", Billboard 113 (22): 31.
  4. Joyce, Mike (June 8, 2001). "Sarina Paris: Sarina Paris", The Washington Post, p. T7.
  5. "DDRMAX2 -music-". Konami.jp. Retrieved May 10, 2011.
  6. https://itunes.apple.com/ca/album/sophisticated-single/id442547434
  7. https://twitter.com/sarinaparis/status/12940574197809152
  8. https://twitter.com/sarinaparis/status/78251771629281282

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/24/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.