Sunday, March 17, 2013

A HEART OF GLASS IS EASY TO BREAK INTO LOTS OF TINY PIECES

Deborah Harry or also named Debbie Harry was born in Miami, Florida on July 1, 1945.  However, she didn't stay there and after a detour inside an orphanage, a pair of gift shop owning business people living in Hawthorne, New Jersey adopted her.  And off Deborah Harry went from Miama, Florida to Hawthorne, New Jersey to live with her adopted family.  Upon graduating Hawthorne High School, Deborah enrolled in a Hackettstown, New Jersey based college called Centenary College of New Jersey.  And she graduated college with a Associates of Arts in an Unknown subject.  Whatever Deborah Harry's major was, she lost interest and chose to become a rock star instead.
She was a backup singer for the rock band the Wind in the Willows which released one album (Which isn't available for sale anywhere and vanished without a trace) and recorded a second album (Which was never released and also vanished without a trace) before breaking up.  And after joining and dropping out of two more temporary rock bands called The Stilettos and also Angel and the Snake, Deborah Harry formed Blondie with Chris Stein (Who was also member of both the Stillettos and also Angel and the Snake.  Deborah Harry and Christ Stein fell in love, but they never married.  Deborah Harry wasn't living in New Jersey anymore, but instead was living in New York City at the time.  She claimed that she was nearly killed by Ted Bundy when he lured her into his car, but that claim was never actually proven.  
Deborah Harry was a regular at both CBGB and Studio 45 as she became both a punk rock icon and a disco icon.  The height of her career was the 1970's and the 1980's where she ruled the charts both with her band Blondie and with her solo albums too.  And at the age of sixty-seven (67), Deborah Harry is still recording albums.  Her latest album, the Panic of Girls, was released in 2011.  




























































 



































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