LeAnn Rimes
Definition
LeAnn Rimes (born Margaret LeAnn Rimes Cibrian on August 28, 1982) is an American singer, songwriter, actress, and author, best known for her powerful vocals and country-pop crossover hits.
She skyrocketed to fame as a child prodigy at age 11 with her debut single 'Blue' (1996), which made her the youngest solo artist to chart at #1 on the Billboard country charts.
Rimes has sold over 48 million records worldwide, earned two Grammy Awards, and ventured into pop, dance, and Broadway with enduring anthems like 'How Do I Live' and 'Can't Fight the Moonlight'.
Examples
I attempted a karaoke rendition of LeAnn Rimes' 'Blue,' but the audience politely suggested I stick to humming.
Nothing says '90s nostalgia' like blasting LeAnn Rimes while dramatically air-guitaring in your sweatpants.
LeAnn Rimes could sing the phone book and it'd still give you chills—unlike my shower concerts.
When life hands you lemons, channel LeAnn Rimes and turn them into a soulful ballad about heartbreak.