Ronney Abramson
This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (March 2010) |
Ronney Abramson | |
---|---|
Born | Paris, France |
Genres | Rock Pop |
Occupation(s) | Singer-songwriter |
Years active | 1971 | –1985
Labels | True North |
Website | ronneyabramson.com |
Ronney Abramson is a Canadian singer-songwriter. She was born in France.
Early life[]
Ronney Abramson was born in Paris, but in her early childhood moved to Canada and grew up in Montreal. She enrolled at McGill University and attended The Faculty of Arts as well as the Faculty of Music where she studied classical guitar.
Musical career[]
Early career[]
After leaving university, she began performing in coffee houses of Quebec and Ontario, before recording her first album in 1971 produced by Andre Perry, which was released in 1972 by Capitol Records.
For her second album Stowaway she signed a contract with True North Records. This album contained her first hit "Your Love Gets Me Around".[1]
In 1978 she released her third album Jukebox of Paris featuring the song "Trouble" with guest star David Clayton-Thomas of Blood Sweat & Tears, and her hit "Light Up Your Love".[2][3]
The Rugrats[]
The Rugrats were a Canadian children's musical group created by Abramson with Ron Garant and Fred Mollin. The group's 1983 debut album, Rugrat Rock, was produced by Mollin;[4] it won the Best Children's Album category at the Juno Awards of 1984.[5]
In 1985 the band recorded a second album, The Rugrats Rock On,[2] which featured Fred Mollin.
Later life[]
Ronney is now living in Ottawa, Ontario. She is continuing to write new material as well as performing her well-known songs. She recently performed at Hugh's Room in Toronto as part of Tin Pan North 2019. https://hughsroomlive.com/tag/ronney-abramson/
Discography[]
- 1972 Ronney Abramson (Capitol)
- 1977 Stowaway (True North)
- Tracks:
- "Your Love Gets Me Around"
- "Moon's Memory/Sometime"
- "Long Lonely Winter"
- "S-T-O-Please"
- "Baby Brown Eyes"
- "Two Faces Of Woman"
- "As Time Sneaks By"
- "Never Seem To Get Along Without You"
- "Song For Canaan"
- "The Best Friend I've Ever Known"
- 1978 Jukebox of Paris (True North)
- Tracks:
- "Trouble" (with David Clayton-Thomas)
- "Sweet Love in Your Eyes"
- "Where Are We Going"
- "Walking Me Home"
- "He Needs You Anyway"
- "Beggar on Fire"
- "Jukebox of Paris"
- "Rocking Your Way Through School"
- "A Million Miles Away"
- "Wake Me This Time"
- "Light Up Your Love"
Singles[]
- 1977 "Question For An Answer" (True North)
- 1977 "Your Love Gets Me Around" (True North)
- 1977 "Never Seem To Get Along Without You" (True North)
- 1979 "Light Up Your Love" (True North)
- 1979 "Trouble" (True North)
- 1980 "I'm a Big Girl" (True North)
- 1980 "Je Suis Libre" (True North)
See also[]
References[]
- ^ "For the Record". Brandon Sun, via Newspaper Archives. 30 April 1977 – Page 17
- ^ Jump up to: a b c "Pop Encyclopedia article about Ronney Abramson!". Retrieved 3 March 2010.
- ^ "Answers.com article about Ronney Abramson!". Retrieved 5 March 2010.
- ^ Stapleton, Lynn (1996). "An Interview with Fred Mollin". Fortune City. Archived from the original on 27 September 2003.CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) at the Wayback mMachine.
- ^ "Best Children's Album 1984". Juno Awards website
External links[]
- Ronney Abramson official website
- Ronney Abramson official Myspace profile
- CanConRox bio Bio from CanConRox on CanadianBands.com
- The Other Rugrats' unofficial Page
- Paterson, Gary H. (1988). "Canadian Children's Records V" (#49). Canadian Children's Literature. pp. 80–84. Archived from the original on 6 December 2006.
- 20th-century births
- Living people
- French emigrants to Canada
- Canadian country singer-songwriters
- Canadian female singer-songwriters
- Singers from Montreal
- Singers from Paris
- McGill University alumni
- 20th-century Canadian singers
- 20th-century Canadian women singers