Alexandra Prince

Alexandra Prince
Also known as Alex Prince
Born 1975
Hamburg, Germany
Genres Dance, House
Occupation(s) Singer, songwriter
Years active 1997present
Website www.alexandraprince.com

Alexandra Prince (born 1975) is a German singer and songwriter. She was born in 1975 in Hamburg. Her mother is Brazilian and her father is German.

Career

Her early career started in Germany with the Booya Family, for which she sang many top hits and also Nana’s Number 1 Hit "Lonely". Her first solo single "How we livin" was a top 30 hit and stayed in the German Charts for a full 16 weeks.

Since the song "So many Times" by Gadjo feat. Alexandra Prince became a massive international club hit in 2005, Alexandra earned a place as an established, well-respected house diva. The song which she not only sung but also wrote, reached Number 1 in the Worldwide Dance Charts, and number 22 in the official UK Single Charts.

Currently, Alexandra is working together with major house music producers from around the world in the making of her debut album. She has so far being recording with producers such as Steve Angello, Sebastian Ingrosso, Syke‘n'Sugarstarr and Till West & DJ Delicious. On top of this she has written songs for Oliver Moldan, DJ Moguai and the label Deep Dish.

According to the Eurodance Encyclopaedia she is rumored to have been the lead singer of Sqeezer, with frontwoman Lori Stern miming onstage and in video clips to Prince's vocals .[1] It is debated that she may also have been the true singing voice behind Fernanda Brandao from Hot Banditoz and the '90s German teen pop star Blümchen, where Prince took over the highly pitched vocals, while Jasmin Wagner took over the spoken/yelled parts.[2][3]

Discography

References

  1. Sqeezer at Discogs
  2. "Hat Blümchen nicht selbst gesungen?". www.tagesspiegel.de. Retrieved 2016-07-30.
  3. "Bilder für Blümchen - Herz An Herz". www.discogs.com. Retrieved 2016-07-30.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.