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The song won the Juno Award for Single of the Year in 1998. The track also made Sarah McLachlan the recipient of the Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance at the Grammy Awards of 1998, beating Mariah Carey, Shawn Colvin, Paula Cole and Jewel. [2] It came in at number 91 on VH1's "100 Greatest Songs of the '90s". [3]
This is the discography of Canadian musician, singer, songwriter and pianist, Sarah McLachlan.Her debut album, Touch was released in 1988 and included first singles: "Vox", "Steaming" and "Ben's Song".
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.
The singer confessed that even she can't watch those heart-wrenching ASPCA ads featuring her 1998 hit paired with images of homeless pets. Even Sarah McLachlan says her sad ASPCA ads are 'brutal ...
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 ...
Sarah McLachlan thinks of her first trip to Los Angeles as a cautionary tale. Signed to Clive Davis’ Arista Records when she was all of 20, the Canadian singer and songwriter from Halifax ...
Sarah Ann McLachlan OC OBC (born January 28, 1968) is a Canadian singer-songwriter. As of 2015, she had sold over 40 million albums worldwide. [ 2 ] McLachlan's best-selling album to date is Surfacing (1997), for which she won two Grammy Awards (out of four nominations) and four Juno Awards .
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 .