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Vanessa-Mae was born on 27 October 1978 in Singapore, to Singaporean mother Pamela Soei Luang Tan and Thai father Vorapong Vanakorn. After adoption by a British father, she moved to London at the age of 4 where she began playing the violin.
Tchaikovsky & Beethoven Violin Concertos is the name of one of three conventional classical albums by classical musician Vanessa-Mae before her rise to pop stardom. It was released in 1991 on the Trittico label. [1] At age 13, Vanessa-Mae was the youngest in violinist in the world to have recorded both the Tchaikovsky and Beethoven violin ...
Choreography is the eighth and most recent album by Vanessa-Mae featuring work by Vangelis, Bill Whelan, A. R. Rahman, Tolga Kashif, and Walter Taieb. She performs with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. "Emerald Tiger" is a composition by Riverdance's Whelan, an Irish/Asian fusion.
The Violin Player features a varied blend of music – covers of classical music (J.S. Bach's Toccata and Fugue in D minor), remakes of old favourites (including American composer Mason Williams' "Classical Gas"), original compositions (seven tracks composed by British musician and songwriter Mike Batt), and one original track by Vanessa-Mae herself, co-written with Ian Wherry ("Red Hot").
This is a comprehensive discography of Vanessa-Mae, a Singaporean-born British violinist. Studio albums. Title Album details Peak chart positions Certifications; UK
China Girl was the sixth album by classical and pop musician Vanessa-Mae, released in 1997 (see 1997 in music).. China Girl contains only three tracks. The first is a recording of the Butterfly Lovers' Violin Concerto performed with the London Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Viktor Fedotov.
Storm is the seventh album by classical and pop musician Vanessa-Mae. It was released in the UK on her 19th birthday, 27 October 1997. It was released in the UK on her 19th birthday, 27 October 1997. [ 2 ]
Singaporean-born British singer-violinist Vanessa-Mae released a cover of "I Feel Love" in December 1997. It peaked at number 41 on the UK Singles Chart, and spent two weeks on the chart. [97] The song was the second single from Vanessa-Mae's 1997 album Storm. [98]