Gabrielle (singer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gabrielle
Origin England
Years active 1993—present
Genres Pop, Soul, Blues, Jazz, Urban,
Labels Go Disc Records

Louise Gabrielle Bobb (born April 16, 1970, London) is an English singer who records under the name Gabrielle. She has a problem with one eye and in her career, has worn an eyepatch, a long sideswept fringe or more recently (post c. 2000) dark glasses to conceal her eye problem.

Her debut single "Dreams" topped the UK charts in June 1993. A sample of Tracy Chapman's "Fast Car" was requested but refused. The single entered the British charts at #2, which was the highest chart entry a debut act ever scored in the UK at that time. The following week it climbed to the top spot and spent the next three weeks there.

Using a sample from Bob Dylan's "Knocking on Heaven's Door", "Rise" became Gabrielle's second UK number one in 2000. The album of the same name also reached the topspot and even spent 87 weeks in the chart.

Other notable singles include "Give Me A Little More Time", "Walk on By" (a cover of the Burt Bacharach/Dionne Warwick classic), "If You Ever" - a duet with East 17 and "Out of Reach" from the soundtrack to Bridget Jones's Diary.


Contents

[edit] Discography

[edit] Albums

[edit] Singles

  • 1993: "Dreams" (#1 UK, #4 AU, #35 US)
  • 1993: "Going Nowhere" (#9 UK)
  • 1993: "I Wish" (#26 UK)
  • 1994: "Because of You" (#24 UK)
  • 1996: "Give Me a Little More Time" (#5 UK)
  • 1996: "Forget About the World" (#23 UK)
  • 1996: "If You Really Cared" (#15 UK)
  • 1996: "If You Ever" [With East 17] (#2 UK, #16 AU)
  • 1997: "Walk on By" (#7 UK)
  • 1999: "Sunshine" (#9 UK)
  • 2000: "Rise" (#1 UK, #44 AU)
  • 2000: "When a Woman" (#6 UK, #50 AU)
  • 2000: "Should I Stay" (#13 UK)
  • 2001: "Out of Reach" (#4 UK, #9 AU)
  • 2001: "Don't Need the Sun to Shine (to Make Me Smile)" (#9 UK)
  • 2004: "Stay the Same" (#20 UK)
  • 2004: "Ten Years Time" (#43 UK)
  • 2004: "You Used to Love Me" (never released)

[edit] External links

In other languages