Nelly Furtado: Biography

Nelly Furtado
Born:
Dec 2, 1978 in Victoria, British Columbia, Canad

Genres:
Rock Music, Alternative Rock Music, Singer/Songwriter Rock Music, Adult Alternative

Decades Active:
1990's|2000's


Artistic Quality
Low
Cultural Impact
Low
Popularity
Low



Singer/songwriter Nelly Furtado heavily credits her ethnic background and childhood for culturally and crucially spawning her creativity as a female and as an inspiring musician. Born and raised in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, Furtado's working-class parents, whom are of Portuguese decent, instilled a hardcore work ethic during her upbringing. She spent eight summers working as a chambermaid with her housekeeping mother, quickly realizing what it meant to honestly make a living. She turned to music for enjoyment, learning to play the guitar and the ukulele, and listened to mainstream RB like Mariah Carey, TLC, Jodeci, Salt-N-Pepa, and Bell Biv DeVoe. Later, she delved into her older brother's collection of Radiohead, Pulp, Oasis, Portishead, the Verve, and U2, pushing Furtado to fully embrace different musical genres, specifically Brazilian music and material by Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and Amalia Rodrigues. Hip-hop was also a big catalyst in shaping Furtado's musical appreciation. After high school, she headed to Toronto where she worked at an alarm company by day and experienced the music scene by night. She joined a hip-hop duo tagged Nelstar, and this opportunity led Furtado back to her hip-hop influences of De La Soul and Digable Planets. This allowed her to get comfortable with writing her own melodies and freestyle rhymes. When Furtado started cutting loose at a local Toronto club during the week, her musical aspirations began to swirl. Brian West and Gerald Eaton, who were of the Canadian funk-pop group the Philosopher Kings, were instantly impressed by her strong sense of performing and asked to produce her demo. During those sessions, Furtado created some of the moving work which landed on her debut for Dreamworks; these solid collaborations led to the pertinent introduction of Nelly Furtado and the critical acclaim of her debut Whoa Nelly, released in fall 2000. A headling tour of the U.S in spring 2001 sparked more interest from fans and critics, and a spot on Moby's ~Area:One summer tour allowed singles "I'm Like a Bird" and "Turn Off the Radio" to receive bigger praise. Furtado's greatest achievement followed a year later when she earned four Grammy nods, including "Song of the Year" for "I'm Like a Bird."

- MacKenzie Wilson, All Music Guide

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