| Eva Avila | |
|---|---|
Eva Avila on the cover of her debut album, 'Somewhere Else'
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| Background information | |
| Birth name | Eva Gougeon-Ávila |
| Also known as | Eva le dragon |
| Born | February 25 1987 |
| Origin | |
| Genre(s) | Pop/R&B |
| Years active | 2006-present |
| Label(s) | Sony-BMG |
Eva Avila (born Eva Gougeon-Ávila, in Ottawa, Ontario, February 25, 1987) is a Canadian singer from Gatineau, Quebec and the winner of the 2006 season of Canadian Idol, the fourth year or installment of the show. Avila is the second female winner. She auditioned for the competition in Ottawa. Her father introduced her to music[1] and she has been singing in public since the age of 2, and at the age of 9 was a winner on Homegrown Cafe, a talent show on CJOH-TV, in Ottawa. Prior to Idol, Avila worked as a postal clerk and a beauty consultant. She is a former winner of the Jeune Diva du Québec contest.[2] Avila is fluent in French, English and Spanish, her father being from Peru. Her nickname, given by her family when she was a small child, is Eva le dragon (English: Eva the dragon). On September 12, 2006, Avila and fellow Idol finalist Chad Doucette revealed they have been dating for about three weeks, but had wanted to keep it private until the competition was over.[3] To date, she is one of only four singers from Quebec or Francophone Canada to crack the top ten and the first to win the event: Season one's Audrey de Montigny was the first to reach the top ten, Steffi DiDomenicantonio in season four and Khalila Glanville in season five.
Contents |
2006 Canadian Idol Final
On September 16, 2006, a day prior to the public announcement of the Idol results, Sony BMG Music Entertainment began offering Avila's version of the first single, Meant to Fly, for sale on the website.[4] Although the page was subsequently blanked, the artwork for the single can currently be located within the image files of the webpage.[5] This occurrence led to many rumours regarding the winner of the competition. During the final show, hundreds of Avila's supporters were gathered at Gatineau City Hall while Canadian Idol crews were filming scenes occasionally during the show. Several local politicians such as Gatineau mayor Marc Bureau, Hull-Aylmer federal MP Marcel Proulx, as well as Hull provincial MNA Roch Cholette were in attendance.[6] Cholette and Proulx published a full page newspaper ad to ask local residents to vote for Avila. This drew criticism from local residents, who claimed it was a waste of taxpayers' money. It was later ruled that the two politicians had to pay the costs.[7] During the finale show, Judge Zack Werner said that Avila was the show's most obvious candidate for international stardom, but he thought Craig Sharpe would win the competition. While winning the 2006 crown, the vote separating her and runner-up Craig Sharpe was only 131,000 votes or 3%.[8]
Pre-Canadian Idol Career
Prior to Canadian Idol, Avila sang several songs predominantly in French, including one that caused a stir the day immediately following her Idol victory. Gatineau TVA-affiliate station CHOT and newspaper Le Droit reported that a record company from Ottawa, Productions Vision Recordz, released a French song performed by local artist Kareem featuring Avila and titled Poursuivre mes rêves. The song was inadvertently made available for sale on the Archambault Zik record company website. There will be an investigation. Avila mentioned that the songs done in the past were for her own pleasure and was unaware about the launch of the single with Kareem. Avila will also be featured on two singles by rapper ZPN from the rap group Afro Connexion.[9] Avila also participated in another competition for a Quebec TV soap-opera aired on SRC called Virginie.
Post-Canadian Idol Career
Hours after her victory, she signed with the record label Sony-BMG and will record an album which will feature Meant to Fly, a song written by Chantal Kreviazuk along with Raine Maida and Gaby Moreno which is already playing on several radio stations across Ottawa and much of the country. In addition, she recorded a song written and produced by Cyndi Lauper for her debut album. Her debut album, Somewhere Else , was released on November 14, 2006.[10] The second single was titled "I Owe It All To You",[11] and the third Fallin' For You. On October 5, 2006, the CTV television network reported that Avila has signed a modelling contract with Ford Model.[12] Avila started the 2006 NHL season on October 4 when she performed the Canadian national anthem at the Toronto Maple Leafs vs. Ottawa Senators game. She performed the anthem again before another Battle of Ontario game at the Scotiabank Place on October 26 following an autograph session on the same afternoon at Gatineau's Les Galeries de Hull shopping centre. On November 19, 2006, Avila performed the national anthem at the 94th Grey Cup game in Winnipeg. Her album debuted at 6th on the Top 100 Album Charts with 16,000 CDs sold, then the next week it fell to 17th. Eva and her predecessor as Idol, Melissa O'Neil, were both nominated for the 2007 Juno Award for Best New Artist, but Tomi Swick took the award. On March 26, 2007, eTalk confirmed that she now is the new face for Maybelline New York and is the first Canadian to be a face for them. In 2007 Eva also participated on the Hip Hop compilation "Les 40 Voleurs" with La Dynastie on the song "La Fausse Raison". Eva has been reported to have sung the song: "Canada (You're a Lifetime Journey)", which is the finale tune to the film "O Canada!" is shown at the Canadian pavilion in Epcot in Orlando Florida.
2007 Parti Québécois platform controversy
Avila's name was mentioned in the Outaouais Parti Québécois 2007 election platform [13] recognizing local culture, including Avila and Pierre Lapointe. After complaints from her record company, Sony, the party decided to remove her name.
Discography
Albums
| Statistics | Singles |
|---|---|
Somewhere Else
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Singles
| Year | Song | Canada | Album |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | "Meant To Fly" | 1 (9) | Somewhere Else |
| "I Owe It All To You" | 9 | ||
| 2007 | "Fallin' For You" | 15 |
Other Recordings
- "Canada (You're a Lifetime Journey)"
Appeared On
- Canadian Idol: Spotlights (August 2006)
Canadian Idol Performances
Avila's performances on Canadian Idol included two ('Powerless' and 'How Come You Don't Call Me') which the judges called 'signature performances'. In order, they are:
- Audition: On My Own (Les Miserables)
- Top 22: Angel (Sarah McLachlan)
- Top 18: Killing Me Softly (Roberta Flack)
- Top 14: Ain't No Mountain High Enough (Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell)
- Top 10: Powerless (Say What You Want) (Nelly Furtado)
- Top 9: Wild Horses (The Rolling Stones)
- Top 8: White Wedding (Billy Idol) - Bottom 3
- Top 7: Who Wants to Live Forever (Queen)
- Top 6: How Come You Don't Call Me (unplugged version by Prince)
- Top 5: Here You Come Again (Dolly Parton) - Bottom 2
- Top 4: Would I Lie to You? (Eurythmics)
- Top 4: Old Skool Love (Divine Brown)
- Top 3: God Bless the Child (Billie Holiday)
- Top 3: They Can't Take That Away from Me (Fred Astaire)
- Top 2: Wild Horses (Natasha Bedingfield), How Come You Don't Call Me (Alicia Keys), Meant to Fly (winner's single)
- Grand Finale: Powerless (Say What You Want) (Nelly Furtado) - Declared 4th Canadian Idol
References
- ^ LCN (September 18, 2006). Eva se remet de ses émotions!.
- ^ CTV News. Eva Avila takes Canadian Idol title by 3 % margin.
- ^ CTV News (September 12, 2006). Eva admits she's been dating Chad for three weeks.
- ^ EvaAvila.com. EvaAvila.com Eva Avila. Retrieved on 2007-03-31.
- ^ http://evaavila.com/images/packshot.jpg Evaavila.com Retrieved on 05-21-07
- ^ La Haye, Dominique. "Tous unis pour Eva (All united for Eva)", Le Droit, September 18, 2006, p. 2.
- ^ Duquette, Patrick. "Les politiciens montent dans le train d'Eva Avila (Politicians join the Eva Avila bandwagon)", Le Droit, September 9, 2006, p. 7.
- ^ CTV (September 17, 2006). Eva or Craig? Canadian Idol to crown champ tonight.
- ^ Turcot, Geneviève. "De vieilles chansons d'Eva déjà en vente (Old songs by Eva already on sale)", Le Droit, September 19, 2006, p. 20.
- ^ Turcot, Geneviève (September 19, 2006). Eva Avila sortira un album en novembre.
- ^ Poirier, Dominique. "Eva: La vie après Canadian Idol (Eva: Life after Canadian Idol)", La Revue de Gatineau, November 1, 2006, p. 17.
- ^ CNW Group (October 5, 2006). Exclusive: Canadian Idol Eva Avila Signs Modeling {sic} Contract.
- ^ Radio-Canada Gatineau/Ottawa (March 9, 2007). Le P.Q. de l'Outaouais fait son mea-culpa.
External links
| Preceded by Melissa O'Neil |
Canadian Idol Winner Season 4 (2006) |
Succeeded by Brian Melo |
| Canadian Idol winners | |
|---|---|
| Ryan Malcolm | Kalan Porter | Melissa O'Neil | Eva Avila | Brian Melo | |


