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Born in Long Island, NY, as the daughter of a
former opera singer and vocal coach -- and named after the song
"They Call the Wind Mariah" from the popular Lerner and
Loewe musical Paint Your Wagon - Mariah began singing at the age
of four, and was writing her own songs by the time she was
attending Oldfield Middle School. She moved to New York City, the
day after graduating from high school. Honing her songwriting
skills and lending her vocals to several local acts, she first
garnered industry attention when singing backup for Brenda K.
Starr, who gave Mariah's demo tape to Sony Music Entertainment
chief Tommy Mottola at a party. As legend has it, Mottola played
the demo on his ride home and ordered his driver to immediately
return to the party so that he could meet the young singer. Soon
afterwards, Mottola signed Mariah to a Columbia Records contract.
Mariah has since become the best-selling female performer of all
time, with an incredible 15 #1 singles and two Grammy Awards.
Along the way she became the only artist to top the charts in each
year of the 1990s, and, with "Heartbreaker," she pushed
ahead of the Beatles as the artist with the most cumulative weeks
spent atop Billboard's Hot 100 Singles chart. Mariah has proven
that she is equally at home with sweeping ballads and pop, often
incorporating elements of dance and hip-hop into the mix. Perhaps
even more impressive, she composes all of her own material. In May
2002, Mariah signed an exclusive recording contract with the
Universal Music Group's Island. Carey has formed her own label,
MonarC Music. Mariah's new album features the songstress writing
and co-producing with such a-list names as Jimmy Jam and Terry
Lewis and Jermaine Dupri among others. The album, which is
lyrically very personal, showcases Mariah's stunning voice,
prolific songwriting and incredible versatility. This is fully
evident on the first single, the sweeping epic ballad,
"Through The Rain" which is a perfect example of what
Mariah does best.
Mariah's self-titled Columbia debut, released in 1990, spawned an
extraordinary four #1 singles: "Vision of Love,"
"Love Takes Time," "Someday" and "I Don't
Wanna Cry," and led to Grammy Awards for Best New Artist and
Best Female Vocalist. The following year's album, Emotions, was
another smash, with the title track scoring her fifth consecutive
#1 single and two other titles - "Can't Let Go" and
"Make It Happen" - reaching the Top Five. Her next
release, 1992's MTV Unplugged EP, scored another #1 with her cover
of the Jackson 5's "I'll Be There." Music Box (1993)
became her biggest seller to date, with "Dreamlover" and
"Hero" again topping the charts, and was followed by
1994's Merry Christmas, which contained another hit with "All
I Want for Christmas is You." Daydream (1995) contained the
club-friendly "Fantasy," which debuted at #1 - making
Mariah the second artist in history, and the first female
performer, to accomplish that feat. The follow-up single,
"One Sweet Day" (recorded with Boyz II Men), followed
suit and stayed at the top of the charts for a record 16 weeks.
Butterfly (1997) revealed an even greater hip-hop flavor than its
predecessor, scoring hits with "Honey" and "My
All." The following year witnessed the release of greatest
hits collection #1's, which included a new song, "When You
Believe" (from the film The Prince of Egypt), a duet with
Whitney Houston which paired the two most successful female
recording artists in pop history. Rainbow, with its chart-topping
tune "Heartbreaker," followed in 1999. In 2001, Mariah
signed with Virgin Records, which released Glitter, the soundtrack
album to the film of the same name, with Mariah in her first lead
acting role. She has also been featured in the films The Bachelor
(1999) and Wisegirls (2002).
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