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Surfacing is the fourth studio album by Canadian singer-songwriter Sarah McLachlan, released on 15 July 1997. It was produced by McLachlan's frequent collaborator, Pierre Marchand , and its release coincided with the start of McLachlan's Lilith Fair tour.
Surfacing was also nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Pop Album. At the 41st Annual Grammy Awards, "Adia" was nominated for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance. McLachlan's 1999 live album, Mirrorball was also very successful. It topped the chart in Canada and reached number three in the US.
Adia" was released as the third North American single from Surfacing on 2 March 1998; in Europe, it served as McLachlan's debut single, [2] receiving a UK release in September 1998. "Adia" was McLachlan's first top-five song on the US Billboard Hot 100 , peaking at number three, totalling 14 weeks in the top five, and ending 1998 as the country ...
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It was released in 1997 as the second single from her fourth studio album, Surfacing (1997). The song peaked at number two in Canada and number 28 on the US Billboard Hot 100. In 2001, a maxi-single with remixes by DJ Tiësto was released peaking at number six on the US Hot Dance Club Play chart, three years after its original release.
The song first appeared on McLachlan's fourth studio album, Surfacing, in 1997 and was released as the album's fourth and final single in September 1998. The lyrics are about the death of musician Jonathan Melvoin (1961–1996) from a heroin overdose, [ 1 ] as McLachlan explained on VH1 Storytellers .
Surfacing, a 1981 film directed by Claude Jutra based on Atwood's novel Wet Bum (released as Surfacing in some international markets), a 2014 film directed by Lindsay Mackay "Surfacing", a song by the band Slipknot from their album, Slipknot
The album version of "Building a Mystery," and the live albums Afterglow Live and Mirrorball contain the line, "A beautiful fucked up man." The radio version replaces this line with "A beautiful but strange man" or the original lyric garbled beyond recognition, and during performances on radio or television, Sarah often sings the line "A beautiful messed up man."