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Sharon O'Neill : ウィキペディア英語版
Sharon O'Neill

Sharon Lea O'Neill〔(【引用サイトリンク】 publisher= APRA )〕 (born 23 November 1952, Nelson, New Zealand) is a singer-songwriter and pianist from New Zealand, who had an Australasian hit single in 1983 with "Maxine" which reached No. 16 on both the Australian Kent Music Report and Recording Industry Association of New Zealand charts.〔 Note: () version established at White Room Electronic Publishing Pty Ltd in 2007 and was expanded from the 2002 edition.〕〔 NOTE: Used for Australian Singles and Albums charting from 1974 until ARIA created their own charts in mid-1988. In 1992, Kent back calculated chart positions for 1970–1974.〕
==Biography==
O'Neill began her solo career in the early 1970s in her home country after a short stint with kiwi band Chapta, then gained moderate success in Australia with the hit "Words" (AUS #56) and the subsequent singles "How Do You Talk to Boys?" (AUS No. 25, 1980), "Maybe" (AUS No. 38, 1981), "Losing You" (AUS No. 26, 1983), and "Power" (AUS No. 36, 1984).〔〔
The early 1980s proved her most commercially successful period, composing and performing the soundtrack to the 1981 film ''Smash Palace'', and with the ''Foreign Affairs'' album in 1983 spawning her biggest hit "Maxine" (AUS No. 16, 1983)〔 a song which chronicled the life of a Kings Cross prostitute.〔(Filmarchive.org.nz )〕 A legal battle with her then record company Sony caused a delay in her career. During the enforced hiatus, O'Neill wrote songs for ABC TV series ''Sweet and Sour'' (1984) including the title song performed by Deborah Conway (later recorded by O'Neill as "In Control") and "Glam to Wham".〔 O'Neill met American keyboardist and songwriter, Alan Mansfield on Dragon's Body and the Beat Tour of New Zealand in 1984—they later became domestic and professional partners.
In 1987 O'Neill returned with her album ''Danced in the Fire'' on Polygram which featured some biographical songs about the legal wrangles with Sony.
O'Neill's last album of new material, ''Edge of Winter'', was released in 1990. A mature work, two singles were taken from this album, "Satin Sheets" and "Poster Girl", both of which failed to find chart success.
In 1991, O'Neill collaborated with Robert Palmer and they wrote "True Love" together for Palmer's ''Don't Explain'' album. She also contributed vocals on that release. In 1994, O'Neill, Palmer, and Palmer's girlfriend Mary Ambrose co-wrote "Love Takes Time" for Palmer's ''Honey'' album. O'Neill contributed vocals to that release, as well as to Palmer's 1999 ''Rhythm & Blues'' and 2003's ''Drive''.
In 2001 she toured as a guest artist with New Zealand female act When The Cat's Away. In 2005 she toured Australia as a support act for Leo Sayer and a comprehensive collection of her greatest hits was released on CD. In 2006 and early 2007 O'Neill again toured Australia supporting Leo Sayer.
In August–September 2007 O'Neill toured as part of the 'Countdown Spectacular 2' concert series Australia-wide〔(【引用サイトリンク】 publisher= Frontier Touring Co. )〕 and toured Australia and New Zealand on The Let It Be Tour (The Beatles tribute show) in November–December 2007.

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