Leila K
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Leila K | |
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Cover of "Rok the Nation"
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Background information | |
Birth name | Leila El Khalifi |
Born | September 6, 1971 |
Origin | Bergsjön, Gothenburg, Sweden |
Genre(s) | Pop, Euro dance |
Years active | 1989–1999 |
Leila K (born September 6, 1971 as Leila El Khalifi) is a Swedish Eurodance singer and former rapper of Moroccan descent.
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[edit] Biography
She was born in Bergsjön, Gothenburg. Her parents decided to send her to a school in Morocco, but she did not fit into the system so after one year she returned to Sweden.
She was discovered by the musical duo Rob'n'Raz when singing in a music contest. They liked her music and offered her a recording contract in 1988. Together with Rob'n'Raz she had her first hit in 1989 with the song "Got To Get" (#8 UK, #3 Germany).
During the first years of her career she had many chart-topping hits and her music was played all over Europe. She broke up with Rob'n'Raz and went on her own to Ibiza, where she was treated like a superstar and managed to set up concerts on her own. Her solo career started in 1991 with the single "Time" which she followed up with many other popular singles, such as her biggest hit "Open Sesame" (#23 UK, #5 Germany) and a cover version of Plastic Bertrand's "Ça plane pour moi" (#13 Germany). In 1993 she was the best selling female artist in Europe[citation needed].
In 1995 Leila K was back on the music scene with the hit single "Electric". She kept releasing new music until 1997, but since then nothing new has been released by her.
In 1998, SVT made a documentary about Leila K's claim for stardom called Fuck you, fuck you very much. The event focuses on an incident that happened during the 1996 Swedish Grammis awards.
In 2000, she appeared on Daisy Dee's "Open Sesame" video, a cover of her own 1991 hit. Daisy Dee was the presenter of the show "Viva Club Rotation" at the time.
In 2005, the Swedish cartoonist Martin Kellerman conducted an interview with her for his own Comic book magazine Rocky.
In 2007, on June 15, Swedish media reported[1] that she turned up as a surprise guest at a release party for the gay blog Bögjävlar, performing the songs "Ça plane pour moi", and her old hit, "Electric". She was said to still be living as a homeless person.
[edit] Discography
[edit] Albums
- Rob'n'Raz feat Leila K (1990) (#14 SWE)
- Carousel (1993) (#30 SWE)
- Manic Panic (1996) (#17 SWE)
- Leila K's Greatest Tracks (2003) (#40 SWE)
[edit] Singles
- "Got to Get" (1989) (#10 SWE)
- "Rok the Nation" (1990) (#3 SWE)
- "Just Tell Me" (1990)
- "It Feels So Right" (1990)
- "Hello Afrika (Dr. Alban song)" (with Dr. Alban) (1990) (#7 SWE)
- "Time" (1991)
- "Magic Ball" (1991) (#30 SWE)
- "Open Sesame" (1992) (#21 SWE)
- "Open Sesame Remixes" (1992)
- "Ça Plane Pour Moi" / "Check the Dan" (1993) (#25 SWE)
- "Slow Motion" (1993) (#27 SWE)
- "Close Your Eyes" (1993)
- "Electric" (1995) (#8 SWE)
- "Electric Remixes" (1995)
- "C'Mon Now" (1996) (#21 SWE)
- "Rude Boy" (1996) (#29 SWE)
- "Blacklisted" (1996)
- "Open Sesame '99" (1999)
- "Burning Up" (1999)
- "I Love To Roll" (With Backyard Babies) (2000)