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Avril Lavigne

With
her charged up songs and de-glamourised persona, wild child
Avril Lavigne hit big in summer 2002 with her spiky-fun debut
song, "Complicated,"
shifting pop music into an entirely different direction.
Avril, who was just 17 at the time, didn't
seem concerned with the glamour of the glitzy pop world and
such confidence allowed her star power to soar. The middle
of three children in small-town Napanee, Ontario, her rock
ambitions were noticeable at an early age. By her early teens,
she was writing songs and playing guitar at local events.
The church choir, local festivals, and county fairs also allowed
Lavigne to get her voice heard, and luckily, Arista Records
main man Antonio "L.A." Reid was listening. He offered
her a deal, and at 16, Lavigne's musical dreams became reality.
With Reid's assistance and a new Manhattan
apartment, Lavigne found herself surrounded by prime songwriters
and producers, but it wasn't impressive enough for her to
continue. She had always relied on her own ideas to create
a musical spark, and things weren't going as planned. Lavigne
wasn't disillusioned, though. She headed for Los Angeles and
Nettwerk grabbed her. Producer/songwriter Clif Magness (Celine
Dion, Wilson Phillips, Sheena Easton) tweaked Lavigne's melodic,
edgy sound and her debut, Let
Go, was the polished product. Singles such as "Complicated"
and "Sk8er Boi"
hit the Top Ten while "I'm with
You" and "Losing
Grip" did moderately well at radio. Butch Walker
of the Marvelous 3, Our Lady Peace front-man Raine Maida,
and Don Gilmore (Linkin Park, Good Charlotte) signed on to
produce Lavigne's second album, Under
My Skin, which appeared in May 2004. The album
topped the Billboard charts and produced the number one hit
"My Happy Ending."
Other singles like "Nobody's
Home" and "Fall
to Pieces" did respectably well also. Settling
down a bit from her punk rock wild child persona, Lavigne
married her boyfriend of two years, Sum
41 frontman Deryck Whibley, in July 2006.
Although she spent some time dabbling with
a film career - lending a voice to the 2006 animated film Over The Hedge and
appearing in Richard Linklater's fictional adaptation of Fast Food Nation that
same year - Lavigne spent most of '06 working on her third
album, The Best Damn Thing which was released in April of 2007. It marked a return to
the bratty, spunky punk-pop of Let
Go, best heard on the album's first single, the
chart-topping "Girlfriend" The album debuted at number one
on the Billboard charts upon the week of its release and Avril
hasn't looked back since then.
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