 | TONI BRAXTON
With an impressive catalog of five albums (alongside 2003's best-selling Ultimate Collection),
Toni Braxton has built a worldwide base of music lovers since she first burst onto the
contemporary music scene in 1991 with "Love Shoulda Brought You Home" (from the
soundtrack of the hit movie "Boomerang").
As the 'First Lady Of LaFace Records,' Toni's
creative partnership with Antonio 'L.A.' Reid and Kenneth 'Babyface' Edmonds yielded a non-
stop run of multi-platinum albums with 1993's Toni Braxton, 1996's Secrets and the 2000 set
The Heat through to the 2001 Snowflakes holiday album and 2003's highly personal and
thought-provoking More Than A Woman CD, which featured a number of songs written by Toni
herself as well as production from The Neptunes and Rodney
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Jerkins among others.
Along the way, Toni distinguished herself with unforgettable hit singles such as "Another Sad
Love Song," "Breathe Again," "Un-Break My Heart," "You're Makin' Me High" and "He Wasn't
Man Enough" picking up five Grammy Awards in the process (in 1993 for "Best New Artist" and
"Best R&B Vocal Performance, Female"; in 1994 for another "Best R&B Vocal Performance,
Female" award; and in 1997, as winner in both the "Best R&B" and "Best Pop" Female Vocal
Performance categories).
With natural musical skills that were immediately evident when she started singing in church
with her four sisters in Severn, Maryland and inspired by the likes of Stevie Wonder, Anita
Baker, Chaka Khan and Whitney Houston, Toni had set her sights on a singing career from her
earliest days. It was while studying to become a teacher at Bowie State University that she
came to the attention of LaFace owners L.A. Reid and Babyface. Her decade with LaFace was
filled with both accomplishment and challenge; while she constantly achieved chart success
globally, racking up some forty-million worldwide sales through her five LaFace albums, Toni
dealt with a much-publicized bankruptcy in 1997 which she recalled was "a major learning
opportunity for me." Resolved in 1998, Toni began her first Broadway run that year with a
starring role in "Beauty & The Beast." The 2000 success of The Heat, her third album was
typified by Top 10 status in over a dozen countries including the U.S., France, Germany,
Holland, Norway, Poland, Sweden, Hong Kong, South Africa, Greece, Denmark, Austria,
Belgium, Israel and Switzerland. The album's gold single "He Wasn't Man Enough" earned Toni
a 2000 Grammy Award for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance" while the album won two
American Music Awards.
While doing promotional work on The Heat, Toni made her silver screen debut with "Kingdom
Come" which featured an all-star cast and earned her a BET Black Oscar. In 2000, she was
also given the coveted Aretha Franklin Soul Train Award for career achievement. The October
2001 release of Snowflakes, Toni's critically-acclaimed holiday album provided further
validation for her popularity. In 2002, Toni began work on More Than A Woman which she
described as "more 'in your face' than my previous albums." At the time she explained, "My first
love has always been R&B and I've been into hip-hop since it first started. On each of the
albums I've done since my first one, I've done things to introduce people to other aspects of
what I'm about musically.
In 2005, following the release of her fifth album Libra, Toni headlined her own show at the
Flamingo Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas. The show Toni Braxton: Revealed was originally only
scheduled for a three month run, however the show's success prompted an extension through
April 2008. In August 2008, Toni competed on ABC's Dancing with Stars and headlined the
Dancing with the Stars tour. Toni recently signed with Atlantic Records and and released her
debut single "Yesterday". She followed them up with "Hands Tied" and "Make My Heart". Her
album Pulse will be released in May 2010.
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