| Olivia Ong (オリビア・オング) | |
|---|---|
| Born | Olivia Ong October 2, 1985 Singapore |
| Other name(s) | オリビア・オング |
| Official website | |
Olivia Ong (オリビア・オング Olivia Ong, born October 2, 1985) is a Chinese Singaporean singer. She sings mostly in English but developed her career singing in English and, later, Japanese. In addition, she has also released rare tracks, recorded in Mandarin Chinese, which can be found on limited edition album tracklistings.
Likened to Seiko Matsuda, she won a singing contest and was signed to a Japanese recording company S2S Pte Ltd at only 15. Olivia, along with 2 other Singaporean girls formed the Japanese pop group, Mirai. Their first single, Open Up Your Mind, was 1 of the theme songs in the Japanese anime (Gensoumaden Saiyuki).
After taking her O-level examinations in Singapore, Olivia moved to Japan to further her studies as well as her career as a solo artist. In Japan, she became a member of a Japanese pop (J-pop) group called Mirai, before she released her bestselling début, "A Girl Meets Bossa Nova" at only 19. With her sultry, soulful, pristine and innocent vocals, she reinterprets Frank Sinatra's hits such as "Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars", among other jazz and pop numbers. She is one of the new wave of Singaporean talent being exported internationally. So far, Olivia is the only pop sensation exported exclusively to Japan; previous stars such as Mavis Hee, Kit Chan, Tanya Chua, Joi Chua, Stefanie Sun, Michelle Saram etc, have only been exporting to the Greater Chinese market.
Olivia became a big hit back home in Singapore after she sang the theme song of the drama serial, "The Little Nyonya". She had stated that her paternal grandfather is Peranakan.
Albums
| Year of release | Title (English) |
|---|---|
| 2005 March 24 | A Girl Meets Bossanova |
| 2005 October 26 | Precious Stones |
| 2006 August 9 | Tamarillo |
| 2006 November 22 | A Girl Meets Bossanova 2 |
| 2007 July 6 | Fall In Love With |
| 2007 November 21 | Touch In The Sky |
| 2008 March 20 | Kiss In The Air |
External links
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| This article on a Singaporean musician is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
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