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Edie Brickell videos
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  3. Edie Brickell
Edie Brickell
Brickell, Bricknell, E. Brickel
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Artist
Video
Album
Edie BrickellGood TimesRock America Mainstream September 1994
Edie Brickell And New BohemiansWhat I AmRock America AOR December 1988
Edie Brickell And New BohemiansCircleRock America Mainstream April 1989
Edie Brickell And New BohemiansLove Like We DoRock America Mainstream September 1989
Edie BrickellGood TimesTelegenics Number 138C. Top 40. September 1994
Edie Brickell And New BohemiansA Hard Rain's A Gonna FallRock America Mainstream February 1990
Edie Brickell And New BohemiansWhat I AmThe Video Pool UK March 1989
Edie Brickell And New BohemiansWhat I AmTelegenics Number 69A. Progressive. December 1988
Edie Brickell And New BohemiansA Hard Rain's A Gonna FallTelegenics Number 83C. Top 40. February 1990
Edie Brickell And New BohemiansWhat I AmETV ET-VideoLink Reel 154. January 1989
Edie Brickell And New BohemiansCircleTelegenics Number 75C. Top 40 Pop. June 1989
Edie Brickell And New BohemiansWhat I AmHot Video Classics Best Of 87-89 Vol.4
Edie Brickell And New BohemiansWhat I AmMixMash Dance Classics Vol.11
Singer-songwriter, born March 10, 1966, Dallas, Texas, USA. Third wife of Paul Simon
Edie Brickell was born in 1966 in the Oak Cliff section of Dallas. She attended Southern Methodist University for a year and a half before mustering the courage in a bar one night in 1985 to get up on-stage with a local band, the New Bohemians. She joined the band and wrote songs over the next year as the band changed and evolved. They finally settled on the personnel of Brad Houser (bass), Kenny Withrow (guitar), and Matt Chamberlain (drums) before taking off for Rockfield Studios in Wales to record their debut album. That album, Shooting Rubberbands at the Stars, released by Geffen Records, revealed Brickell to be a songwriter with a unique perspective and a singer with an intimate, conversational style. The album was hailed by critics and became a massive hit, selling over a million copies and producing the Top Ten hit "What I Am." After the disappointing performance of their follow-up album, Ghost of a Dog, the New Bohemians disbanded. Brickell married Paul Simon and the couple had a child. After several years of remaining artistically quiet, she released her first solo album in late summer 1994. While Picture Perfect Morning was pleasantly received, it wasn't a return to the million-selling heights of the New Bohemian zenith. This was fine with Brickell, who had burned out from the press attention and touring that followed Rubberbands' success, and was content to quietly issue the record while focusing on her and Simon's young son. Geffen naturally thought otherwise, but Brickell was resolute. She wouldn't return to recording until almost ten years later. In the interim, two greatest-hits packages appeared: Best Of on MCA International and Hip-O's Ultimate Collection from 2002. Of these, the latter was most comprehensive, drawing on material both with and without the Bohemians and featuring seven previously unreleased tracks. Brickell finally hit restart on her solo career in 2003 with Volcano (Cherry/Universal). Produced by Charlie Sexton, the LP explored some new stylistic avenues inside the familiar rootsy landscape, and showed off Brickell's newly acquired acoustic guitar skills. She supported the effort with the usual round of late-night TV appearances and a brief tour. In 2006, she reunited with some of the original members of the New Bohemians for Stranger Things, the first studio album from the group in almost 16 years. Tragedy struck the band a year later when keyboardist Carter Albrecht was shot in the head and killed in a bizarre misunderstanding involving his neighbor. Two Brickell projects were released in 2011, an eponymous solo album (her third) and a collaboration with Steve Gadd, Pino Palladino, and Andy Fairweather Low called the Gaddabouts.
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