Paula Cole

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Paula Cole
Paula Cole photograph.
Paula Cole photograph.
Background information
Birth name Paula Cole
Born April 5, 1968
Origin Rockport, Massachusetts
Genre(s) Pop, Rock
Occupation(s) Singer, Songwriter
Instrument(s) Vocals
Years active 1992–Present
Label(s) Imago / Warner Bros. (1993–2003)
Columbia (2003–2005)
Decca / Universal (2006–)
Website Paula Cole Official Site

Paula Cole (born April 5, 1968 in Rockport, Massachusetts) is an American Grammy Award-winning Singer/Songwriter. Her singles "Where Have All the Cowboys Gone" and "I Don't Want to Wait" entered the Billboard Hot 100 in 1997.

Contents

[edit] Early Life & Rise to Fame

Cole was born to visual artist mother Stephanie and polka-playing entomologist father Jim Cole. She has a sister named Irene. Cole entered the Berklee College of Music in Boston when she was 18, where she studied jazz singing and improvisation, shortly after her high school graduation. She did live in Manchester, CT with her Parents and Attended Elementary School there. Although some press and stories focused on Cole being an unpopular and lonely child during her schooling in Rockport High School, this is almost purely fiction. She was, in fact, from middle school on, a very popular student, holding office as class president and student counselor. In addition, she was very active in the school's theatre arts program starring in many productions, among them "Flower Drum Song" and "Whose Life Is It Anyway?". She was a French club member and traveled to France as part of a well-established exchange program founded by Foreign Language department head Mary Hayes. Although it has been reported otherwise, she did, in fact, attend proms[1].

[edit] Recording Career

Paula got her first big professional break when she was invited to perform on Peter Gabriel's 1992-1993 world tour. Shortly after this, she was signed on with her first record company Imago Records. Through this record company, she released her first album Harbinger in 1994. Within that year of Harbinger's release, Imago Records went out of business. This prevented Cole's album from getting radio exposure. However, she wasn't without a record company for long. In 1995, she was signed on to Warner Bros. Records. The record company reissued Harbinger in the Fall of 1995.

[edit] The Harbinger Album

Cole released her debut album, Harbinger, in 1994 with Imago Records. Once on tour her fellow Rockporters supported her: elementary school teacher Selma Bell, middle school science teacher Richard Grey, and classmates turned out to attend Cole's concerts on the east coast, mid-west, and west coast. She appeared with Melissa Etheridge to sing a duet on VH1 though she was not well-known at the time.

Harbinger featured songs dwelling on Cole's personal thoughts on discrimination and unhappiness. The songs were musically lush but driven and bleak. The accompanying artwork featured photographs of Cole with a boyishly short haircut, wearing loose fitting black sweatclothes, combat boots and nose ring. Unfortunately the Imago label folded and promotion of Harbinger was limited, affecting its sales. A single, "I Am So Ordinary", was released with a bleak, low-budget black and white video that reflected the album's artwork.

[edit] The Success of the This Fire Album

In late 1996 Cole released her second album on Warner Bros. Records, This Fire, which was entirely self-produced. The albums's debut single, "Where Have All the Cowboys Gone", became an instant smash radio (reaching #8 on Billboard magazine's pop chart) and MTV hit. The follow up single, "I Don't Want To Wait", was a #11 pop hit single, thanks in part to the fact that it was made the theme song to the popular teen drama Dawson's Creek. (The song was considered by many to be so overplayed that it was lampooned on various sketch comedy shows. Memorably, a sketch on MADtv that spoofed Dawson's Creek had an outsider burst in on a romantic scene and destroy a radio playing the song.) The single "Me" (#35) was also released.

Cole toured with the Lilith Fair and garnered even more critical acclaim for her live performances. Cole was nominated for several Grammy awards in 1997. Among them was "Producer of the Year" (Cole was the second woman to ever be nominated in this category); she did not win it, but did win "Best New Artist".

[edit] The Amen Album

Cole took a hiatus to have and begin raising her daughter Sky. In 1999 Cole released Amen with the newly formed "Paula Cole Band". The album's debut single "I Believe In Love" was initially not a success but was remixed into a successful dance song. The album failed to match the success of This Fire. A fourth album was recorded but the label refused to release it; in 2005 Cole uploaded one of the tracks, "Singing Out My Life," to her own website to get her sound out there. She also recorded a song called "It's My Life" during these sessions, which can be heard in Mercury automobile commercials. Paula also made a home recording of a politically charged song called "My Hero Mr. President." [1]

[edit] Controversy

In the past, Paula Cole created some controversy by appearing in public wearing tank tops and sleeveless shirts, and even totally nude on the This Fire album cover, without shaving her armpits. One magazine, Entertainment Weekly enraged Cole after airbrushing her armpit hair out of its cover photo. They eventually ran the unaltered photo and Paula's letter to them, citing that the editors of the magazine thought it was a smudge on the photograph "until we saw the Grammys."

[edit] In Popular Culture

Paula Cole's songs are frequently used in TV shows (The Simpsons, South Park, Saturday Night Live) and films (Urban Legend, Scary Movie). "I Don't Want To Wait" was the theme song for the series "Dawson's Creek".

[edit] Current Status

Her official website is now managed by The Colomby Group. She is scheduled for a future tour and the tag "great things are happening" on the site would suggest Ms. Cole is ready to release her fourth studio album, "Courage", under her new record company Decca[2] on the 12 June 2007.

Paula Cole performed a two hour set at Berklee Performance Center in Boston, Massachusetts on February 16, 2007 during which she debuted several songs from her upcoming album. The set began with a solo piano version of "Where Have All the Cowboys Gone" which was replayed toward the end of the concert by the full band. Her performance was reviewed favorably in the Boston Globe on February 19, 2007.

In March 2007, her official myspace previewed three new songs from "Courage," which include "Comin' Down," "El Greco," and the album's first single entitled "14."

[edit] Audio Sample

[edit] Discography

[edit] Albums

[edit] Singles

Year Single Chart Positions Album
US Hot 100 U.S Adult Contemporary U.S. Adult Top 40
1997 "I Don't Want to Wait" #11 #3 #9 This Fire
1997 "Where Have All the Cowboys Gone" #8 #27 #4 This Fire
1998 "Me" - - #17 This Fire
1999 "I Believe In Love" - - #22 Amen
2007 "14" - - - Courage

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ http://www.paulacole.net/

[edit] External links

In other languages