Sylvia Tella

Sylvia Tella
Birth name Silifatu Mornii Wehabie Tella
Born 1961
Origin Manchester, England
Genres Lovers rock
Occupation(s) Singer-songwriter
Instruments Vocals
Years active 1970s–present
Associated acts Boney M

Sylvia Tella (born Silifatu Mornii Wehabie Tella in 1961) is a British lovers rock singer, who after working as a vocalist for Boney M embarked on a successful solo career, releasing her first album in 1981. She had a top 40 hit in 1989 in collaboration with the Blow Monkeys and again in 1990/1991 with Pop Will Eat Itself.

Biography

Born in 1961 in Manchester, England to Ghanaian parents, Tella's career began as a vocalist for Boney M. in concert only as a back up singer[1] After the group split up, she recorded as a solo artist, initially under the guidance of veteran reggae artist Lloyd Charmers.[1] Her 1981 debut album, Spell, became one of the best-selling lovers rock albums of all time.[2] In 1983 she provided backing vocals on the Alton Ellis album Daydreaming. In the late 1980s she had a major success on the UK reggae chart with "Spell", and contributed to a charity record in aid of victims of Hurricane Gilbert released under the collective name Windjammer.[1] She then collaborated with the Blow Monkeys, having a hit single in 1989 with "Choice" (which reached number 22), and another minor hit with "Slaves No More" (#73) three months later.[3] Sylvia provided lead vocals for 92°F on Pop Will Eat Itself's 1990 EP "Very Metal Noise Pollution" (#45) and subsequent album Cure for Sanity (#33), and backing vocals for the single version of 92°F which reached 22 in the singles charts in 1991. In 1996 she had several successes on the reggae chart both with Vivian Jones, and solo with "Searching For The One" and "Happy Home".[1] In 1997 she toured internationally with Saint and Campbell, appeared at London's Notting Hill Carnival alongside Beenie Man and the Main Street Crew, and received a nomination for Best British Reggae Artist at the MOBO Awards.[1] A second album was issued in 2000, recorded mostly in New York City and produced by Sidney Mills of Steel Pulse.[2]

Discography

Compilations

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Larkin, Colin (2006) The Encyclopedia of Popular Music, Oxford University Press
  2. 1 2 Barrow, Steve & Dalton, Peter (2004) The Rough Guide to Reggae, 3rd edn., Rough Guides, ISBN 1-84353-329-4, p. 400
  3. "Blow Monkeys Featuring Sylvia Tella", ChartStats
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