Thursday 18 August 2011

Sheila (born Annie Chancel, 16 August 1945, Créteil, France)





Sheila (born Annie Chancel, 16 August 1945, Créteil, France) is a French pop singer, who became successful as a solo artist in the 1960s and 1970s and later fronted a disco act called Sheila and B. Devotion. Sheila has sold over 23,676,060 copies of records and was the top selling artist in France in the 1960s and 1970s,

Her stage name "Sheila" came from the title of her first release, a French cover version of the American hit by Tommy Roe.
Contents
Sheila started her musical career in 1962, after being noticed by Claude Carrère, a French music producer and songwriter. Since she was 16, her parents signed for her a contract with Carrère. This artistic collaboration lasted for more than 20 years. In 1995 a lawsuit put an end to this life-time deal. She finally won a royalties battle against her former producer.

Sheila had numerous hits in the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s and 1990s, playing the well-behaved young girl. Her first hit was "L'école est finie" (School is over), in 1962 (1 million copies).

In the Eight Women movie, Ludivine Sagnier sang her 1963 hit "Papa t'es plus dans l'coup" (Daddy, you are not in on it anymore). Sheila's music also features in the 1996 French film Une robe d'été (A Summer Dress). The character Sébastien is a fan of Sheila, and Sheila's version of Cher's "Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)" is on the soundtrack.

After 15 years of pop music mainly sung in French but also in Spanish, German and Italian, she started singing in English as Sheila and B. Devotion (in some countries records were under the name "Sheila B. Devotion") and changed her style to disco music. Sheila was accompanied by three male dancers who made up the "Black Devotion" in her routine. She enjoyed international success with hits like "Singin' in the rain", "Love me baby", "You light my fire" or "Spacer" (from the album King of the World, produced by Chic), which was later sampled for the song "Crying at the Discothèque" by Swedish pop group Alcazar. "Spacer" is one of her biggest hit with more than 5 million copies sold worldwide. According to different interviews, she often said her experience with Chic completely changed her way of working and singing. It was the beginning of a deep artistic disagreement with her French manager Carrère. She then decided to leave France, moved to New York "to start all over again" and studied at the Actors Studio.

After her Disco period, Sheila (without the "B.Devotion") recorded in 1981 a rock album called "Little Darlin'" produced by Keith Olsen (Pat Benatar, Blondie, Fleetwood Mac) and was back in the U.S. Billboard. This album is often considered by many fans as one of her finest work.

She put an end to her artistic collaboration with her manager Carrère at the beginning of the 1980s. She took a brand new musical direction in 1983 when she met Yves Martin, a composer and producer who later became her husband. She recorded 3 albums under his direction between 1983 and 1988 and her new songs were critically acclaimed. Becoming disillusioned with the music business and record industry, she abandoned her music career between 1989 and 1998. During this break, she wrote 3 successful books, had her own regular TV show, played in a TV series and started making sculptures.

However Sheila had a successful comeback in music in 1998 with a new CD of re-recordings of some of her hits and also new songs, it went gold within one month of release. Thanks to this unexpected success, another CD called "Dense" was released a year later with brand new songs.

Sheila is still very popular, performing successful concerts in 1998 and 2002 at the Olympia, in 2006 at the Cabaret Sauvage with an unplugged concert or on tour with "La Tournée des Idoles" in 2009 and 2010. CD's, VHS or DVD's from her live performances all went gold or platinum.

In 2005 she signed a deal with Warner Music France after many years of negotiation. All of her recordings, including her self-produced albums can now be released on CD under the same label. Following this agreement, her complete recordings were issued in an 18 CD box set in 2006. It includes more than 400 songs, unknown recordings, demos, alternative takes, duets, TV performances and German, Italian, Spanish and English versions of her hits. In 2007 Warner Music France decided to release separately each of her album on CD with its original artwork and bonus tracks. Most of them are also re-issued on vinyl LP format.

Her album "Little Darlin" was remastered and released in Japan in January 2011 on SHM-CD. This reissue is the replica of the original LP with its Japanese cover. The pictures and artwork are completely different from other international pressings. It also contains the title "Prisoner" as on the first Japanese release in 1981 (it remained unknown on other markets until 1996). The sound has been definitively improved thanks to the SHM-CD quality and the remastering work of a Japanese team.

Sheila will be celebrating her 50 years in music business on stage in 2012.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.