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Marc Anthony Biography |
![]() Date of Birth: September 16, 1968 Place of Birth, New York, New York, USA Birth name: Marco Antonio Muñiz.
Marc Anthony grew up in a home where Latin music was predominant, since his father was a musician. When he was little, he knew that he would one day become a singer. Years later
Growing up in a musically enriched atmosphere, Marc Anthony heard the roots of Caribbean rhythms intermingled with the beat of the concrete street. His father was a Latin music artist proud of his country roots. Marc grew up hearing the traditional "jibaro" music of the mountains where the "le lo lai" crooning of the troubadours inspired community joined with local news. However, Marc ran with the local young talent whose focus was more on the urban hip-hop culture which mixed English lyrics and phrasing to percussive beats. While still in high school, Marc wrote songs for friends such as Safire, who was making a name for herself in the urban street style of performing.
Marc Anthony has sold more records than any other salsa artist, and he has earned multi-platinum status with his self-titled English language album, starred on Broadway in Paul Simon's "The Capeman" and on the silver screen in Martin Scorsese's "Bringing Out the Dead," and sold out Madison Square Garden five times. Having transcended the so-called "Latin wave" of the late 1990s, Marc Anthony is very much his own man. A man, moreover, still shaking his head over how far he's come.
In fact, expectations for the singer born Marco Antonio Muniz ran high from the start. Named by his musician-father after a famous Mexican singer of the same name, he changed his name professionally to avoid being confused with the legendary singer. "He had just the one song," his father recalls, "but, boy, he could belt it out." Marc grew up listening to rock and rhythm and blues, and began singing, in English, in dance clubs in New York, where the audience might number 500 on a good night. He specialized in a terse, minimalist form of dance music called "house music," in which a singer repeats a musical phrase over and over, with slight variations, to the accompaniment of a rhythm track.
He also sang background on records with a band called the Latin Rascals, who Marc's club days were rapidly nearing an end, however. In 1992, the legendary Latin percussionist and bandleader Tito Puente asked Vega and Anthony to open his revue at Madison Square Garden. They were a hit, and Marc found singing before such an enormous crowd intoxicating. Yet the real turning point in his career still lay ahead, the result of a song heard on the radio by chance. His manager had suggested he sing in Spanish, but Anthony wasn't interested. Then one day, while driving in a car in Manhattan, Marc heard a song on the radio by a singer named Juan Gabriel. "It was called "Hasta Que Te Conoci"" Marc recalls, "which means 'Until I Met You,' and it ripped me apart. I don't know why and I don't want to know why. I called my manager and asked if I could record it in salsa."
When he finished, he left the stage so quickly his manager had to grab him and point out that he was receiving a standing ovation. Several of the disc jockeys were dialing their cell phones. "Find this kid's CD," he heard one of them say. "I threw it out this morning, it's in the trash. Find it, and play it!"
Later that day, he appeared on a television show called "Carnaval Despite his growing fame in other countries, however, Anthony remained relatively unknown outside the Latin music world in the country of his birth, the result of having sung almost exclusively in Spanish. All of that changed with the September 1999 release of Marc Anthony, his self-titled English-language Pop CD. The album debuted at #8 on the Billboard 200 Album chart and was certified platinum six weeks later. Seven months after its release, it was still resting comfortably in the Top 40, having sold more than two million copies in the US alone. The album has since been certified triple platinum by the RIAA.
One of Anthony's electrifying live performances was lensed for an exclusive HBO special, "Marc Anthony: The Concert from Madison Square Garden," which debuted on Valentine's Day 2000. The special was produced and directed for Cream Cheese Productions by Marty Callner, whose previous HBO credits include specials starring Madonna, Garth Brooks and Jerry Seinfeld. The special showcased Anthony's English-language hits, along with smashes from the Spanish-language salsa albums that have established him as the world's top-selling salsa singer.
Yet, Anthony's success has not been limited to the music world. He was cast by music legend Paul Simon in the Broadway musical "The Capeman" and has graced the silver screen with significant roles in Martin Scorsese's "Bringing Out the Dead" and Stanley Tucci's "Big Night." He also appeared in "The Substitute," "Hackers," and the Showtime original film "In the Time of the Butterflies."
And Anthony continued to delight sold-out crowds on tour with a highly successful concert series across North America in the winter and summer of 2000. In places where Spanish is spoken, and especially in Puerto Rico, Anthony is held in a regard approaching reverence. A concert review in Puerto Rico's #1 newspaper El Nuevo Dia proclaimed him "a prophet in his native land." One of his fans in Spanish Harlem--quoted in a profile of Anthony which ran in The New Yorker--summed up Marc Anthony with the memorable image: "He is like a flame that walks." Libre captures the sizzling sound of that flame.
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