Carol Duboc

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Carol_Duboc an entity of type: Thing

Carol Duboc is a singer and composer. She has co-written several hit songs, including "Precious", sung by Chanté Moore, which was certified gold in 1994 and reached No. 20 on the Billboard R&B chart in 1993; "That Boy" by Jade (platinum, 1994); "This World Is All" by Patti LaBelle (gold, 1994); Billboard R&B chart, No. 7); "Never Do You Wrong" by Stephanie Mills (Billboard R&B chart, No. 34); and "Fly Away" by Tom Jones (Billboard UK, No. 11). rdf:langString
rdf:langString Carol Duboc
rdf:langString Carol Duboc
rdf:langString Carol Duboc
rdf:langString Kansas City, Missouri, U.S.
xsd:integer 27677222
xsd:integer 1106150623
rdf:langString Duboc in southern California, 2014
rdf:langString Piano, vocals
rdf:langString Gold Note
rdf:langString Musician, singer, songwriter
xsd:integer 2000
rdf:langString Carol Duboc is a singer and composer. She has co-written several hit songs, including "Precious", sung by Chanté Moore, which was certified gold in 1994 and reached No. 20 on the Billboard R&B chart in 1993; "That Boy" by Jade (platinum, 1994); "This World Is All" by Patti LaBelle (gold, 1994); Billboard R&B chart, No. 7); "Never Do You Wrong" by Stephanie Mills (Billboard R&B chart, No. 34); and "Fly Away" by Tom Jones (Billboard UK, No. 11). Duboc appeared in the movie Be Cool (2005) and on the soundtrack for the songs "Best of My Love" and "Lady Marmalade". She was a guest artist on the compilations albums Ladies Jazz Vol. 4 and 5. Her first solo album, With All That I Am, appeared in 2001, and was followed by Duboc (2002), All of You (2005), Songs for Lovers (2008), Burt Bacharach Songbook (2009), Smile (2013), Colored Glasses (2015), and Open the Curtains (2016). She co-wrote and co-produced Smile with keyboardist Jeff Lorber. "Elephant" was the first single and it peaked at No. 28 on the Billboard Smooth Jazz chart. She also co-wrote and co-produced Colored Glasses with Jeff Lorber. In 2016, she released Open the Curtains, which consisted of an all-female ensemble that included Mindi Abair, Jennifer Batten, Sheila E., Bibi McGill, Patrice Rushen, and Rhonda Smith.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4296
xsd:gYear 2000
xsd:gYear 2000

data from the linked data cloud