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Teri Moïse

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Teri Moïse (born March 25, 1970, Los Angeles, California – died May 7, 2013, Madrid, Spain) was a Haitian-American French singer.[1]

Her parents emigrated Haiti to South Central, Los Angeles. After high school she studied economics at the University of California, Berkeley. In 1990 she went to France, where she studied Literature at the Sorbonne and worked as an au pair. After returning to the United States, she began studying at the Los Angeles Musician Institute.

In 1992, Moïse again moved to Paris and pursued a career in music working as a choir singer, bass player and songwriter. She eventually met Etienne De Crécy and Stéphane "Alf" Briat, with whom she collaborated on her 1996 self-titled debut album, which sold 500,000 copies. The album and its two singles Les poèmes de Michelle and Je serai là were among the most influential French Soul releases of the 1990s.

Teri Moïse is the final winner of the Victoire de la musique in the category »Artiste interprète ou groupe francophone,« receiving the award in 1997.

She committed suicide in her hotel room in Madrid, Spain, on May, 7th, 2013.[2]

Discography

Albums

  • 1996 : Teri Moïse – #13 in Belgium, #12 in France
  • 1999 : Teri Moïse – #54 in France

Singles

  • 1996 : "Les Poèmes de Michelle" – #30 in Belgium, #11 in France
  • 1996 : "Je serai là" – #4 in Belgium, #8 in France
  • 1998 : "Fais semblant" – #28 in France
  • 1999 : "Star" – #89 in France

References

  1. ^ "Teri Moïse, la chanteuse des Poèmes de Michelle est décédée". Lefigaro.fr. 2013-05-16. Retrieved 2013-05-17.
  2. ^ "Singer Teri Moise Commits Suicide in Spain". Retrieved 3 April 2014.