Jeanette Jurado

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Birth nameJeanette Livier Jurado
Born (1965-11-14) November 14, 1965 (age 59)
Occupation(s)Vocalist, songwriter, actress
Jeanette Jurado
Jeanette singing at the Exposé reunion concert in 2007
Jeanette singing at the Exposé reunion concert in 2007
Background information
Birth nameJeanette Livier Jurado
Born (1965-11-14) November 14, 1965 (age 59)
GenresDance-pop, house, hi-NRG, dance, adult contemporary, freestyle
Occupation(s)Vocalist, songwriter, actress
Years active1986–present
LabelsArista (1986–1996)
Member ofExposé

Jeanette Livier Jurado (born November 14, 1965, East Los Angeles, California) is a member and lead vocalist of the popular American girl group, Exposé,[1][2] along with Ann Curless, Gioia Bruno and, in the group's later years, Kelly Moneymaker.

She provided lead vocals on many of the group's songs, including its three biggest hits, "Come Go with Me", "Point of No Return" and "Seasons Change".[3] She has also performed in at least one film, My Family (Mi Familia). In addition, Jurado has performed in Las Vegas as a part of several bands and in the show MadHattan.

Jurado was active in Exposé from 1986 to 1996, when the group disbanded. Exposé was among the biggest stars of the late-1980s Latin freestyle boom.[4][5] She sang lead on the group's biggest hits, including their #1 hit ballad "Seasons Change". The trio was the first group in music history to have four top-ten hits from their debut album, Exposure.[6]

When a new version of the group Exposé was created in 1986 out of the band X-Posed, Jurado was brought in by Lewis A. Martinée as the new lead singer.[4] At the time, she was singing for an R&B cover act that opened for the original version of Exposé.[4]

After the group quickly began racking up hits early on and began touring, Jurado experienced homesickness and lethargy while touring Europe.[7]

Jurado has been compared with fellow Latin freestyle group vocalist Lisa Velez of Lisa Lisa & Cult Jam. Jurado's voice is commanding while projecting an "almost-untrained innocence" described as giving an "appealingly raw and sentimental R&B delivery" to "Seasons Change" that helped to make it a radio hit.[4]

Personal life

References

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