Anneke Grönloh
Anneke Grönloh | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Johanna Louise Grönloh |
Born | Tondano, Dutch East Indies | 7 June 1942
Died | 14 September 2018 Arleuf, France | (aged 76)
Genres | Pop, jazz, kroncong |
Years active | 1959–2017 |
Johanna Louise "Anneke" Grönloh (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈɑnəkə ˈɡrʏnloː]; 7 June 1942 – 14 September 2018)[1] was an Indonesian-born Dutch singer. She had a successful career starting in 1959 that lasted throughout the 1960s, and scored a hit with "Brandend zand", one of the best-selling Dutch songs of all time.
Early life
Grönloh was born in Tondano, North Sulawesi, Dutch East Indies (present-day Indonesia), and spent her early years in the Japanese-occupied Dutch East Indies in a Japanese concentration camp. Her father, an officer of the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army (KNIL), had been interned before her birth. After the war, the family moved to the Netherlands, and Grönloh grew up in Eindhoven.
Career
During her time in secondary school, she met Peter Koelewijn with whom she began performing at parties. In 1959, her career took off after she won a talent show. On 31 August 1964 she married Wim-Jaap van der Laan, a DJ at the Dutch radio station Radio Veronica, and in 1965 began singing in the Sleeswijk Revue.[2]
Throughout the 1960s she scored hits, especially with "
Besides popular music, Grönloh performed songs in the kroncong genre, such as "Bengawan Solo", "Boeroeng Kakatua", and "Nina Bobo", as well as jazz songs, which according to her was her favourite musical genre.
In 2000, Grönloh was named "Singer of the Century" in the Netherlands because of the record-breaking sales of "Brandend zand". In the same year, she was also a participant on the television program
Grönloh had retired due to health problems, having played her last show on 26 August 2017.[citation needed] She died on 14 September 2018 in Arleuf, France, aged 76.[3][4]
Discography
- "Asmara" (1960, in Indonesian)
- "Flamenco Rock"
- "gold
- "platinum
- "Soerabaja" (1963)
- "Cimeroni" (1963)
- "Oh Malaysia" (1963)
References
- ^ "Penyanyi Nina Bobo, Anneke Grönloh Tutup Usia". Female Radio (in Indonesian). 2018-09-17. Archived from the original on 2021-02-28. Retrieved 2021-02-28.
- ^ "Anneke Gronloh – europopmusic" (in Dutch). Retrieved 21 August 2013.
- ^ ‘Bengawan Solo’, ‘Asmara’ singer Anneke Gronloh dies Archived 2018-09-24 at the Wayback Machine, Star2.com, 23 September 2018; retrieved 26 September 2018.
- ^ "Overleden: Johanna Louise (Anneke) Grönloh (14-09-2018)". Online Familieberichten. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
External links
- Anneke Grönloh at IMDb