Coco Star

Susan Brice, better known by her stage name Coco Star (or simply Coco), is an English singer and songwriter.[1] She is currently signed to Universal Music and EMI.[2][3][4] Coco Star has collaborated with artists such as Craig David, Artful Dodger[5] and Fragma for the number 1 hit, "Toca's Miracle".[4]

Coco Star
Coco Star – Electric Zoo Festival 2010
Background information
Birth nameSusan Brice[1]
Also known asCoCo
Born(1974-03-16)16 March 1974
OriginWelwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, England
GenresElectronic dance music, UK garage, gospel, dubstep, drum and bass
Occupation(s)Singer, songwriter
InstrumentsVocals
Years active1992–present
LabelsUniversal, Positiva
Associated actsArtful Dodger, Fragma, Sublove
Websitewww.facebook.com/cocostar.uk

Early life

Coco Star was born in Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire. Her parents were both musical artists and singers although not professionally. She was musically active before the age of just 5 with hopes of having a number one hit record,[3] which she later achieved. Coco can play the cello and all of the recorder family, and some piano.[6]

At the age of just 12, Coco was writing and performing her own songs and had recorded her first track at the age of 15.[6]

Coco attended The University of West England, Bristol where she achieved a BA Hons degree in fashion and textiles. Prior to this, she had completed an art foundation course and a national diploma in art and design.[6]

Musical career

During her time at The University of West England (not to be confused with The University of Bristol), she met up with Jody Wisternoff, Massive Attack and Tricky and began to further enhance her live performances and songwriting skills, landing underground hits with "One By One"[7] and "Always on my Mind".[8]

In 1994, Coco Star was signed by Universal MCA music publishing as part of a development deal where she worked alongside Paul Connolly on live showcases. Coco was coached by Whitney Houston's vocal coach and had dance tuition at Pineapple Dance Studios, as well as meeting Rob Davis regularly to work on music he wrote, and "I Need a Miracle" was just one of a few projects Coco worked on between 1994 and 1997. The ad libitum parts and sections of the melody line in "I Need a Miracle" including harmonies are exclusively the creation of Coco, who gave the song its iconic stamp. Coco also spent some time working with Roger McKenzie (AKA Wildchild) who died in 1995 aged 24.[9]

By 1997, Coco had entered the main UK charts with "I Need a Miracle" at No. 39[10] following its debut live performance at Pacha, Ibiza. It later went on to be the feature of a bootleg by UK DJ Vimto[4] with huge success. Originally called "Fragma vs Coco", the mashup of the two records "Toca Me" by Fragma, and "I Need a Miracle" by Coco resulted in the name "Toca's Miracle".[4] By the time of its official release in April 2000, the energy surrounding it was such that it went straight in at No. 1 in the UK, selling in excess of 500,000 copies.[4]

Coco Star is an accomplished songwriter, also signed to Universal Music Publishing for her works, including "It Ain't Enough" which features on the Artful Dodger album It's All About the Stragglers; this version also featuring Coco's vocals. "It Ain't Enough" was a top 20 hit for the Artful Dodger in 2001 but featured vocalist MZ MAY.

Coco also wrote the track "Driftaway", which was covered by Kele Le Roc.

Coco worked on an EP of songs by songwriter/producer Peter Wright. "Take You There" was released in April 2011.

She has also signed a deal with DJ Smash, for a release of her self penned "Get Over You". This collaboration was part of the 2011 DJ Smash album, 23,[11] and featured production by another Russian, DJ She.

Ahead of the Miami Winter music conference 2011, Coco Star featured at No. 12 in the official buzz chart[12] with a revocal of "I Need a Miracle", in a fresh new collaborative work with MYNC and Australian house music star Christian Luke form Melbourne. As with "Toca's Miracle", the new release entitled "A Miracle in Melbourne" is a mashup of the iconic vocal from "I Need a Miracle" and the track "London to Melbourne" released in late 2010 by MYNC and Christian Luke on CR2 Records, London.[13]

Collaborations

Coco Star has collaborated with artists including Sub Love (Way out West) in 1993 (both writing and performing with DJ Die & Jody Wisternoff),[14] Tricky, Massive Attack, Victor Imbres (Deep Dish engineer), Rob Davis from 1994–'97 (Kylie Minogue's songwriter), Craig David and the Dreem Teem (Timmi Magic and DJ Spoony), Artful Dodger, Brian Harvey (East 17), Fragma (on the remix of "I Need a Miracle" 2000 & 2008[15]) and Photek under his moniker of 'Sentinel'.[16] In 2011, Coco Star teamed up with MYNC and Christian Luke for collaborative works involving "I Need a Miracle".[12]

Coco Star is also associated with Andy Levy and Simon Bartholomew of the Brand New Heavies with whom she collaborated with during the production of some of her self written music.

"I Need a Miracle" and "Toca's Miracle"

"Toca's Miracle"
Single by Fragma and Coco
from the album Toca
Released10 April 2000 (2000-04-10) ("Toca's Miracle")
7 April 2008 (2008-04-07) ("Toca's Miracle 2008")
Recorded1999 (1999)
GenreEuro house
Length5:44 (Original Mix)
5:38 (Vocal Club Mix)
3:22 (Radio Edit)
3:01 (U.S. Radio Edit)
LabelPositiva
Songwriter(s)Dirk Duderstadt, Marco Duderstadt, Ramon Zenker, Rob Davis, Victor Imbres
Producer(s)Ramon Zenker
Fragma and Coco singles chronology
"I Need a Miracle"
(1997)
"Toca's Miracle"
(2000)
"It Ain't Enough"
(2001)

Her most notable work to date is as the vocalist of "I Need a Miracle", released by EMI/Positiva in the UK and by Greenlight Recordings in the US.[17][18] This track is also known worldwide under the guise of the mashup "Toca's Miracle" which was a number 1 hit[19] in 14 countries worldwide in 2000.[20] "Toca's Miracle" is the result of splicing tracks (see mashup (music)) from two separate entities, namely Fragma (the German-based electronic production trio) and their hit "Toca Me", and "I Need a Miracle" which was initially written for solo artist Coco,[4] by Universal Music publishing writers Victor Imbres and Rob Davis in 1994. Despite appearances in the "Toca's Miracle" video and Fragma album line-up, Coco was never part of the Fragma group, and remains a solo artist. Rebranding of the original song "I Need a Miracle" to Fragma's "Toca's Miracle" occurred without permission or prior agreement.[21]

Coco appeared live on Top of the Pops on four occasions, including the Christmas special during 2000 and 2001 to perform "Toca's Miracle" as well as on CD:UK, T4 and the Pepsi Chart Show. Further live performances of "Toca's Miracle" and Coco's other works were given on MTV and Prince Charles' Party in the Park.

"Toca's Miracle 2008"

Coco Star's vocals can also be heard on the 2008 remix of "Toca's Miracle", remixed by brothers Marko and Dirk Duderstadt. Again it uses the vocal parts from Coco's signed release of "I Need a Miracle". The 2008 remix was released by EMI/Positiva on 7 April 2008. Although the original 2000 release topped the charts in several countries exactly eight years previously, the remix climbed to No. 2 in Australia[22] and No. 16 in the UK. The original is acknowledged as one of the top 5 biggest dance anthems ever.[23][24] Remixes of Toca's Miracle were released without authorisation of Coco or Universal Music in 2008 and 2012.

Both poor credit and lip-synching[25] issues were discussed by press in Central Europe in 2010[26] when official singer Coco Star announced on National TV that a passing off act was appearing worldwide claiming to be the singer of the hit,[27] either lip-synching or performing live over Coco's copyright-protected vocals, a scenario compared with the Milli Vanilli scandal, although it relates to only one song "Toca's Miracle", effectively a remix of "I Need a Miracle" written for Coco Star in 1994. The offending passing off artist appears on the cover of the Australian release[28] of "Toca's Miracle 2008" adding to further confusion.

gollark: An omnipotent engineer-god could just not do that.
gollark: There's the entire thing with the appendix, our eyes are *backward* (light sensing bit below the nerves carrying data out), some nerves and such are routed inefficiently.
gollark: If perfection is bad, the thing you're optimizing for is wrong.
gollark: What? That's wrong by definition.
gollark: And really, if humans were created by an omnipotent being, why do we have so many design flaws?

References

  1. "Coco Star – About". Facebook. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  2. "Coco Discography at Discogs". discogs. 10 April 2000. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  3. Coco's Got Her Miracle by Bill Lennon, Hertfordshire Magazine June 2000
  4. "RAMON ZENKER: Recording Fragma's 'Toca's Miracle'". Sound on Sound. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  5. "Dreem Teem Vs. Artful Dodger Feat. Coco And Craig David – "It Ain't Enough"". Last.fm. 15 January 2013. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  6. United States. "Coco Star – Toca's Miracle Vocalist". Myspace.com. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  7. "Sublove* – One By One E.P. (Vinyl) at Discogs". discogs. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  8. Mixmag Music Magazine 1993
  9. "Music – Roger McKenzie". BBC. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  10. "The Official Charts Company | Top 40". Theofficialcharts.com. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  11. "GET OVER YOU (Feat Dj She & Coco Star) – Dj Smash". Djsmash.promodj.ru. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  12. Archived 7 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  13. "CR2 Records". CR2 Records. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  14. "Coco – Drum & Bass Projects by CoCo Star on SoundCloud". Soundcloud.com. 30 October 2012. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  15. "CoCo Star Fragma "Toca's Miracle" 2008 Inpetto Radio Edit by CoCo Star on SoundCloud". Soundcloud.com. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  16. "Sentinel Feat. CoCo – "Toulépleu" by CoCo Star on SoundCloud". Soundcloud.com. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  17. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 31 January 2013. Retrieved 13 November 2012.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  18. "Images for Coco – I Need A Miracle". discogs. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  19. "Radio 1 – Chart – The Official UK Top 40 Singles Chart". BBC. 17 March 2013. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  20. John-Paul. "Coco Star one of the biggest dance vocalists of all time!" Archived 14 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine, "Don't Stay In", 31 December 2008.
  21. "Discography & Flyers". Facebook. 23 November 2012. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  22. "Australia's Official Music Charts | Single, Album, Digital Charts". ARIA Charts. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  23. "Coco Star | MN2S Booking Agency". Mn2s.com. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  24. Archived 3 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  25. "Fragma – "Toca's Miracle" video". Video.mail.ru. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  26. "Coco Star: Nikdy jsem nebyla Fragma – t-music". T-music.cz. 20 September 2010. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  27. Karine Sanche. "Coco (2), biography discography, recent releases, news, featurings of Coco Star eurotrance member – The Eurodance Encyclopædia". Eurokdj.com. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  28. "Toca's Miracle 2008 – Fragma Release Information". Centralstation.com.au. 9 April 2008. Archived from the original on 4 March 2012. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
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