Suze DeMarchi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Suze DeMarchi
Born February 14, 1964 (1964-02-14) (age 44)
Origin Perth, Western Australia, Australia
Genre(s) Hard Rock
Rock
Pop
Years active 1985Present
Label(s) Mushroom Records

Suze DeMarchi (born February 14, 1964) is an Australian singer/songwriter best known for fronting the band Baby Animals (1989-1994).

Contents

[edit] Biography

DeMarchi was born in Perth, Australia to Walter and Shirley DeMarchi and has three older siblings. One sister, Denise, is also a singer. DeMarchi began her singing career in the early 1980s when she was just 17, playing in local bands in Australia. In 1985, she moved to London, England where she was signed to EMI and had a fairly successful solo career in pop music. Where she released a number of singles, "Young Hearts", "Big Wednesday" and "Dry Your Eyes".

During this time she dated Gavin Rossdale, former lead singer and guitarist for the band Bush. It is rumored that Bush's song "Glycerine" from 1994's Sixteen Stone is about their relationship.[citation needed]

Disheartened by the record company's attempt to slide her into a pop career, and missing not working with a band, she returned to Australia in mid 1989, where she and fellow Perth musicians Frank Celenza, Eddie Parise, and Dave Leslie formed the band Baby Animals. The band met with success in their native Australia, releasing two albums, touring with Van Halen, and winning various awards before permanently disbanding in 1996. [1] This was mostly due to legal battles with their record label Imago and Suze's throat surgery in 1993, which forced the band to cut short the tour for their second album.

During this time, DeMarchi met Nuno Bettencourt, guitarist at that time for hard rock band Extreme. They co-wrote and performed the song "Because I Can" for Baby Animals' second record Shaved and Dangerous. On August 27, 1994 the couple married in the Azores, Portugal where Bettencourt's family is from. On February 2, 1996 they had their first child, daughter Bebe Orleans whose first name comes from her nickname Big Bang because she kicked so much while in the womb and whose middle name comes from the city where she was conceived, New Orleans.[citation needed]

After the demise of Baby Animals in 1994, DeMarchi pursued a solo career. Although living in Boston with her husband and young daughter (apparently temporarily in her mother-in-law's basement at one point), she signed to Mushroom Records Australia and released 1999's Telelove, which featured the single "Satellite". DeMarchi supported the album with a May tour around Australia as the singles "Karma" and eventually, "Open Windows" hit the shelves. DeMarchi was also nominated for an ARIA in 1999 for 'Best Female Artist'. A second national tour was pencilled in for September, but it never materialized.

In 2001 it was rumoured that DeMarchi to be joining INXS as their new frontperson to replace Michael Hutchence who died in 1997 [2], following her performance with them at a concert in December 2000 where she sang "Shine Like It Does", "Never Tear Us Apart", and dueted with Jon Stevens (frequent replacement frontman for INXS, and formerly of the band Noiseworks) for "Good Times" and "Don't Change".

On August 12, 2002 DeMarchi and Bettencourt welcomed their second child, Lorenzo Aureolino in Los Angeles, California where they now reside. [3]

In June 2004 DeMarchi was recognized by the West Australian Music Industry Association and inducted as one of the inaugrual inductees into the WAM Hall of Fame.

When asked about the Baby Animals reunion rumors that started around 2004 with the sightings of all four members at a recording studio in Perth, Suze replied that the time was not yet right.

2007 brings confirmation that all original members of Baby Animals have reformed.

[edit] Discography

[edit] Albums

[edit] Singles

[edit] Young Hearts

Cover of "Young Hearts"
Cover of "Young Hearts"

"Young Hearts" is the debut single by Suze DeMarchi, released by EMI Records in 1986.

[edit] Track listing
  1. "Young Hearts" (Extended mix) 5:52
  2. "Young Hearts" (7" version) 3:32



[edit] Big Wednesday

Cover of "Big Wednesday"
Cover of "Big Wednesday"

"Young Hearts" is the second single by Suze DeMarchi, released by EMI Records in 1987.

[edit] Track listing
  1. "Big Wednesday"
  2. "Don't Go Away"


[edit] Dry Your Eyes

Cover of "Dry Your Eyes"
Cover of "Dry Your Eyes"

"Dry Your Eyes" is the third single by Suze DeMarchi, released by EMI Records in 1988.

[edit] Track listing
  1. "Dry Your Eyes"
  2. "Big Wednesday"


[edit] God Took A Picture

Cover of "God Took A Picture"
Cover of "God Took A Picture"

"God Took A Picture" is a promotional single by Suze DeMarchi from the film Highlander III: The Final Dimension. It was released by Colourblind Records in 1995 as a one-track promotional single only. It can not be found on the soundtrack and is heard only on the US video release at the closing scene.

[edit] Track listing
  1. "God Took A Picture" (Suze Demarchi/Nuno Bettencourt) - 4:24


[edit] Satellite

Cover of "Satellite"
Cover of "Satellite"

"Satellite" is the first single taken from Suze DeMarchi's album Telelove. It was released by Mushroom Records in December, 1998. The single reached #90 on the Australian singles charts.

[edit] Track listing
  1. "Satellite"
  2. "Trapped in Amber"
  3. "Satellite" (Mothership) Longview Version


[edit] Karma

Cover of "Karma"
Cover of "Karma"

"Karma" is the second single taken from Suze DeMarchi's album Telelove. It was released by Mushroom Records in March, 1999. The acoustic live version of "Satellite" was recorded at Triple M in Melbourne during DeMarchi's promotional tour in October, 1998.

[edit] Track listing
  1. "Karma"
  2. "Satellite" (acoustic live)


[edit] Open Windows

Cover of "Open Windows"
Cover of "Open Windows"

"Open Windows" is the third single taken from Suze DeMarchi's album Telelove. It was released by Mushroom Records in July, 1999.

[edit] Track listing
  1. "Open Windows"
  2. "Everest"


[edit] Links

[edit] References

  1. ^ source
  2. ^ Sydney Morning Herald
  3. ^ source