Ana Laan

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Paradise 02:46 Tools
Para El Dolor 02:59 Tools
Me Echaras de Menos 02:43 Tools
Ex 03:32 Tools
Chocolate and Roses 03:05 Tools
Mayo 04:14 Tools
Low Tech Lady 03:47 Tools
Pablo's Song 02:21 Tools
Inappropriate 03:41 Tools
Cuentas 03:13 Tools
Odana Road 04:00 Tools
Kling klang klockan slar 02:03 Tools
Happiness Is a Long Discipline 02:53 Tools
Mas Alla De Lo Razonable 03:32 Tools
Me Echaras De Menos (You're Gonna Miss Me) 02:43 Tools
Viene 03:17 Tools
Box Hill 02:59 Tools
Sopa de almendras 03:12 Tools
Blanco 03:22 Tools
Si Te Quedas Conmigo 00:00 Tools
Oxford 02:26 Tools
Oregano 00:00 Tools
Lime Lemon Pie 02:45 Tools
Marigold 01:09 Tools
La Puerta 03:46 Tools
Llamaste 03:59 Tools
Vindaloo 02:29 Tools
Banana Peel 02:40 Tools
Hidra 03:32 Tools
Un juez y un reloj 02:03 Tools
Nuestro Paseo Por La Playa 03:10 Tools
Tanta Pelea 02:32 Tools
Nana Para Pablo 02:44 Tools
Otoño 02:08 Tools
Equilibrio 02:27 Tools
42 02:44 Tools
Tres por cuatro 03:16 Tools
Uti Var Hage 01:41 Tools
Al otro lado del Río 02:08 Tools
Orégano 04:03 Tools
Me Echarás De Menos 04:03 Tools
Camino del Agua 02:59 Tools
The Monsters 03:33 Tools
Gris Profundo 01:41 Tools
I'm Not Here Today 03:33 Tools
01- Para El Dolor (Spain) 02:59 Tools
Me Echaras De Menos(You're Gonna Miss Me) 02:59 Tools
Dionysus 03:33 Tools
Mas allá de lo razonable 03:33 Tools
Me Echarás De Menos (You're Gonna Miss Me) 02:59 Tools
Más allá de lo razonable 03:33 Tools
Para El Dolor [Spain] 03:33 Tools
Blanco (Reprise) 03:33 Tools
Uti 01:41 Tools
Para El Dolor - Ana Laan 01:41 Tools
Me Echaras 01:41 Tools
Me echaras de menos (Youre gonna miss me) 01:41 Tools
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The startling, romantic voice of singer Ana Laan was born in Madrid and matured in Stockholm, Sweden. The daughter of a Spanish professor of literature and an American mother, Ana was raised in a home where learning was revered and multi-culturalism was the norm. As a teenager who spoke several languages fluently (including English, Spanish and Swedish) she returned to Spain to finish her secondary education and then went on to University in Madrid, where she studied English Literature in earnest. To this day, Ana remains a great reader of books and a woman deeply involved in the cultural movements of the world. She is particularly taken with the plight of the outsider, perhaps because she, too, has felt what the outsider feels as she has traveled from country to country. Which makes the intimacy and domestic charm of her debut Nardis Music release all the more remarkable. It is the other side of her internationalism, the voice of the internal emigre, so common in the world today as we all seek our own geographic and emotional roots. Ana Lann has learned to personalize the modern human condition in a very intimate way. She does not come by this artistic sophistication lightly. Upon graduating from the University, she decided to develop her remarkable singing voice by joining a wide range of Spanish-speaking artists both on tour and in the studio. Her list of credits includes supporting the likes of Javier Álvarez, Sergio Dalma, Jorge Drexler, Diego Vasallo, Christina Rosenvinge and even David Broza. Ironically, Ana Laan has recently become something of a celebrity in Spain, not for the truth she likes to sing about on her Nardis Music debut, but for her ability to craft convincing musical characters with her voice: she regularly records for the Spanish indie lounge label Siesta under the pseudonym Rita Calypso and, in 2002, her CD called Apocalypso enjoyed rave reviews and strong sales. (Spain's major daily El País voted Apocalypso CD of the week and awarded it 4 stars.) Ana Laan’s first true solo release, Orégano, featuring her gifts as a singer-songwriter and co-produced by Leo Sidran, was released in 2004 on Sidran’s Nardis Music label. Subsequently, Ana performed in New York, Chicago, Minneapolis, and Buenos Aires, and was a featured showcase artist at the 2005 LAMC in New York. Ernesto Lechner wrote in the Chicago Tribune: “Aside from the intriguing electronic pop of Ana Laan, the year in Latin music was marked by the absence of any exciting new voices...The debut album by this intriguing singer from Spain went by unnoticed in this country. A pity, because Laan's sultry electronic pop could very much turn her into the Hispanic version of Bjork. The title track, a bittersweet vignette describing the quiet frustration of a housewife on the verge of a nervous breakdown, is probably the most poignant Latin song of the year.” Laan spent the summer of 2006 in New York recording her sophomore album, Chocolate and Roses, also co-produced by Leo Sidran. Still in production, it will be ready for release in spring, 2007. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.