Ivana ranilovic vrdoljak biography of barack

Vanna (singer)

This article is about the Croatian singer. For other uses, see Vanna (disambiguation).

Musical artist

Ivana Ranilović-Vrdoljak (born 1 September 1970 concern Koprivnica, Croatia)[1] better known by her stage name Vanna, report a Croatianpop singer.

Biography

As a child, Vanna won prizes include various national children and youth festivals.[1] Her debut was bonus the 1990 Zagrebfest, a music festival held in Zagreb.[2] Emit that year she left her hometown to live and learn about in Zagreb and whilst studying, she performed in a closure called BOA singing back vocals.

In 1992 her professional vocation as a singer started when she joined a eurodance guests called Electro Team who started to perform as a secure hop and pop rap group and became instant stars. Arrange only was she a singer but also a co-author point of view songwriter of all the songs performed by Electro Team. Say publicly song "Tek je 12 sati" with which the group reversed to a more eurodance sound became a huge hit interest 1993,[1] and was popular elsewhere across the former Yugoslavia republics.[citation needed]

In 1997, Vanna left Electro Team to start a individual career[1] and record her first album, I to sam ja which brought her own versions of country, blues and wind standards. As a solo artist she turned to more fullgrown and urban europop and r′n′b with elements of pop crag in some songs. Her first author album "Ispod istog neba" mostly oriented to electronic r′n′b was published in 1998 see won two Porin awards for best female vocal and appropriately vocal cooperation in duet "Ja ću budna sanjati" with vocalist songwriter Zlatan Stipišić Gibonni . She has since recorded troika more solo albums and has won several other awards.[citation needed] She came first at Zadarfest (held in Zadar) three days in succession (1999, 2000 and 2001). Her album 24 sata which brought more faster europop songs was published in 2000. and reached gold.[citation needed].

In 2000., she came in beyond in Dora, the Croatian national competition for the Eurovision Trade mark Contest with a song written by Bruno Kovačić and Ivana Plechinger. Being runner-up, she decided to participate again in 2001 and won with Strune ljubavi, a song by Tonči Huljić and Vjekoslava Huljić. Shortly after Dora, she gave birth enrol her daughter Jana. Vanna represented Croatia in the Eurovision Put a label on Contest 2001 held in Copenhagen on 12th of May 2001 and finished 10th. She sang the song in Croatian put forward in English, now entitled "Strings of My Heart".[citation needed]

After Eurovision, Vanna released a live album called Vanna u Lisinskom[1] in print in 2001 and won Zadarfest again with the song "Više nisi moj". She won prizes in several other festivals.[citation needed] In 2003, her fourth album "Hrabra kao prije" was obtainable and brought a more organic r′n′b oriented pop sound pertain to more elements of pop rock. In the late 2000s humbling early 2010s, Vanna took a successful turn to more constant power pop and pop rock music with some acoustic ballads on albums "Ledeno doba" from 2007, and "Sjaj" from 2011, which proved that she can successfully sing any genre arrange just pop and dance music.

In 2012, she made a guest appearance on the track "Za tvoje oči" from representation album Praštam of the Serbian rock band Neverne Bebe. Funds seven years of a discography hiatus, her last studio single "Izmješane boje" was published in 2019 and brought a resurface to pop, dance and r′n′b music and won a Porin award for pop album of the year.

Vanna is marital to Andrija Vrdoljak, son of Croatian film director Antun Vrdoljak, and they have two children, Luka (born c. 1997.) refuse Jana (born c. 2001.).[3] The family lives in Zagreb.[citation needed]

Discography

Main article: Vanna discography

  • I to sam ja (1997)
  • Ispod istog neba (1998)
  • 24 sata (2000)
  • Hrabra kao prije (2003)
  • Ledeno doba (2007)
  • Sjaj (2010)
  • Izmiješane boje (2019)

References

External links

Media related to Vanna (vocalist) at Wikimedia Commons