Dido (singer)

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Dido
Dido performing in 2019
Dido performing in 2019
Background information
Birth nameFlorian Cloud de Bounevialle Armstrong
Born (1971-12-25) 25 December 1971 (age 52)
Kensington, London, England, UK
Genres
Occupation(s)Singer, songwriter
Years active1995–present
Labels
Spouse(s)
Rohan Gavin
(m. 2010)
Websitedidomusic.com

Florian Cloud de Bounevialle Armstrong

MTV Europe Music Award for Best New Act. The first verse of "Thank You" is sampled in "Stan", a critically acclaimed collaboration with American rapper Eminem. Her next album, Life for Rent (2003), continued her success with the hit singles "White Flag" and "Life for Rent". In 2004, Dido performed with other British and Irish artists in the Band Aid 20 version of the charity single "Do They Know It's Christmas?
".

Dido's first two albums are among the best-selling albums in UK chart history, and both are in the top 10 best-selling albums of the 2000s in the UK.[7] Her third studio album, Safe Trip Home (2008), received critical acclaim but failed to duplicate the commercial success of her previous efforts. Dido was ranked No. 98 on the Billboard chart of the top Billboard 200 artists of the 2000s (2000–2009) based on the success of her albums in the first decade of the 21st century.[8] In 2011, Dido's duet with A. R. Rahman, "If I Rise", was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song at the 83rd Academy Awards.[9][10]

Dido made a comeback in 2013, releasing her fourth studio album,

British Academy of Songwriters, Composers, and Authors.[12] In 2020, Dido co-released The Last Summer (Deluxe Edition), a studio album in collaboration with her brother R Plus
(Rollo Armstrong).

Early life

Dido was born Florian Cloud de Bounevialle Armstrong, at St. Mary Abbot's Hospital in Kensington, on Christmas Day in 1971.[13][14][15] As she was born on Christmas Day, she also celebrates an "official birthday" on 25 June, following the example of Paddington Bear.[16][17] Her mother, Clare (née Collins), is a poet of French ancestry,[14][18] and her father, William O'Malley Armstrong (1938–2006), was an Irish publisher and former managing director of Sidgwick & Jackson.[19][20] Her elder brother, Rowland Constantine O'Malley Armstrong,[21] is better known as record producer Rollo, part of the British electronica trio Faithless.

Despite their birth names, the pair were known from childhood by the names Dido and Rollo.

Queen of Carthage
.

Dido was educated at Thornhill Primary School in Islington, Dallington School, City of London Girls' and Westminster School, where she was taught by the contemporary musician and Head of Academic Music, Sinan Savaskan. After she stole a recorder from school at the age of five,[23] her parents enrolled her at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London. By the time she reached her teens, she had learned to play the piano, recorder, and the violin. She later studied law at Birkbeck, University of London, while working as a literary agent. She never completed the degree, deciding instead to take up music full-time.

Career

1995–1996: Early recordings

In 1995, Dido began recording 10 demo tracks which were put together on a collection entitled

Cheeky Records.[24] Of the tracks included on Odds & Ends, "Take My Hand" was included on all editions of No Angel as a bonus track; "Sweet Eyed Baby" was remixed and renamed to "Don't Think of Me", while "Worthless" and "Me" were released exclusively on the Japanese edition. Peter Leak became Dido's manager during the recording of No Angel after Edge played some of the in-progress recordings and been "blown away" by them.[24]

1998–2002: No Angel and breakthrough

In 1998, the music producer for the film Sliding Doors selected her track "Thank You" for the soundtrack. Cheeky Records, to which Dido was signed, was sold to BMG records in 1999. This delayed the release of the album No Angel in the United Kingdom, but also allowed her to concentrate on promoting No Angel in the United States, including a slot on Sarah McLachlan's Lilith Fair tour. Through touring, both before and after the album was available, Dido's music began to receive more exposure. The first official single chosen by Dido and her label, "Here with Me", initially struggled to make an impact on radio, but while the label were considering switching to an alternative track, the song made a breakthrough as a result of its use in television programme Roswell.[24] The song was used as the theme music of the show, but it was actually when it was played in its entirety during the season finale that it really made an impact with audiences.[24]

Manager Peter Leak told HitQuarters that sales jumped from 2,000 to 9,000 units during the week of the show's transmission.[24] Arguably it was this, as well as the airplay on MTV throughout Europe of the single's video, which brought her mass attention. Subsequently, the song was used in the British romantic comedy Love Actually. No Angel was released in 1999, and Dido toured extensively to promote the record.

American rapper Eminem helped introduce Dido to a US audience in 2000 when he received permission from Dido herself to sample the first verse of "Thank You" in his hit single "Stan". Dido also appeared in the music video as Stan's pregnant girlfriend. She did not want to do the video at first, as she was uncomfortable with the scene in the video where she had to be tied up and have her mouth covered with duct tape, but later agreed to it and got along well with Eminem and the crew on set. In North America, the video usually aired with the trunk scene censored.[25] Interest soared in her debut album, leading it to hit charts in Europe on import sales alone, charting in the top five on the UK Albums Chart before its official UK re-release.

No Angel went on to become the top-selling album of 2001 worldwide,[26] debuting at, and returning to, number one in the official UK Albums Chart many times throughout the year. It spawned two top ten hit singles, "Here with Me" and "Thank You", a further top twenty hit, "Hunter" and a fourth and final single release "All You Want" which reached the top 25. It was certified platinum in over thirty-five countries, and is estimated to have sold over 21 million copies worldwide.[6] In America, "Don't Think of Me" was released as the second single, peaking at number 35 on the US Billboard Adult Top 40
in May 2000.

Dido's widely emulated hairstyle at this time became known as the "Dido flip". Her sold-out worldwide tour featured hip-hop artist Pete Miser as her live band's DJ. No Angel claimed No. 97 according to the Decade-end Album Chart by Billboard.[27]

2003–2005: Life for Rent and Live 8

Dido and Youssou N'Dour performing "7 Seconds" at Live 8 in Hyde Park

Life for Rent was released in 2003. Preceded by the hit single "White Flag", the album sold over 152,000 copies in the first day alone in the UK, and went on to sell over 400,000 in the first week. Three further singles—"Life for Rent", "Don't Leave Home" and "Sand in My Shoes"—were lifted from the album, with Dido embarking on a worldwide tour in support of the album (a DVD of footage from the tour was released in 2005 entitled Live at Brixton Academy).

Following her sold-out world tour of 2004, Dido was asked to perform at three of the Live 8 concerts on 2 July 2005—performing in London, then at the Eden Project in Cornwall, before flying over to Paris, performing both solo ("White Flag") and duetting with Youssou N'Dour ("Thank You" and "Seven Seconds").

Also in 2005, Dido provided vocals for her brother's side project Dusted on the album Safe from Harm. She sings on the tracks: "Time Takes Time", "Hurt U" and "Winter" and she co-wrote three tracks on the album: "Always Remember to Respect & Honour Your Mother, Part 1", "The Biggest Fool in the World" and "Winter".

2006–2008: Safe Trip Home and hiatus

Dido's third album,

Look No Further" was made available to download from her official website for a limited time. The album failed to sell as well as No Angel or Life for Rent, and Dido opted not to tour in support of the album due to her difficulties with performing the material that was written about the death of her father.[30] It was nominated for a Grammy Award in the category Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical.[31]

In December 2008, Dido's Safe Trip Home song "Let's Do the Things We Normally Do", was criticised by

Getty Images Inc for unauthorised use of this photo in September 2010.[34] The case was settled under undisclosed terms on 14 January 2011.[35]

2009–2018: Girl Who Got Away and Greatest Hits

Shortly after the release of Safe Trip Home, Dido returned to the studio to start recording new material for inclusion on her fourth studio album. In July 2009, Dido said that the album would have an electronic approach, in an attempt to take it in a totally different direction to her previous albums.[36] In September 2010, Dido released the single "Everything to Lose" via digital download,[37] following its appearance on the soundtrack of the film Sex and the City 2 (released in May 2010).

In January 2011, Dido released "

Broadcast Film Critics Association Award for Best Song
.

Dido's fourth album,

Sony Music Entertainment in March 2013.[43][44][45] "No Freedom" was released as the album's lead single in January 2013.[46] The album was recorded in London and California[47] and features production from Rollo Armstrong, Sister Bliss, Lester Mendez, A. R. Rahman, Rick Nowels, Greg Kurstin, Brian Eno, and Jeff Bhasker. Dido appeared on the second series of televised singing competition The Voice UK in May 2013, serving as an advisor to coach Danny O'Donoghue during the show's battle rounds.[48]

In November 2013, Dido released the album Greatest Hits, a compilation of previous material and remixes that also included a new track, "NYC".[49] The release of Greatest Hits completed Dido's contractual obligations with RCA Records, and she spoke of her plans to release her music independently.[50] By late 2013, she was writing material for a fifth studio album.[51]

2018–present: Still on My Mind and The Last Summer

Dido performing in 2019

Dido signed to BMG to release her fifth album in early 2019.[52] Dido worked with her brother and long-time collaborator Rollo Armstrong,[53] along with Rick Nowels and Ryan Louder. On 9 November 2018, Dido announced her new album's title, Still on My Mind, along with its cover. It was released on 8 March 2019 and charted at number 3 on the UK Albums chart, number 1 on the UK Indie Album chart and sold over 60,000 copies in the UK.[54] The teaser single "Hurricanes" was released on 12 November 2018. The official lead single "Give You Up" was premiered 22 January 2019 on BBC Radio 2.[55] The single peaked at number 32 on the UK Singles Download chart.[56] It peaked at number 1 on the US Dance Club Songs chart.[57] "Give You Up" was followed by edited versions of "Take You Home" (released 5 April 2019) and "Friends" (released 22 July 2019) as singles. Dido toured in support of the album from May 2019, making it her first world tour in 15 years.[58] The deluxe edition of the album was released on 15 November 2019[59] but failed to chart, despite the release of another single, "Just Because".[citation needed]

Dido was featured on her brother Rollo's The Last Summer album, which was released on 11 October 2019,[60][61][62] under the alias "R Plus". The album charted at number 96 on the UK Album Sales Chart.[63][64] Dido featured on the singles "Summer Dress",[65] "Those Were The Days"[66] and "My Boy",[67] with another feature appearing on "Together (In These Times)" and alternate version of The Last Summer album track "Together".[68] The deluxe version of The Last Summer was credited to both R Plus and Dido.[69]

In February 2023, Dido appeared on American singer-songwriter Caroline Polachek's album Desire, I Want to Turn Into You on the track "Fly to You"[70] alongside Polachek and singer Grimes, and is credited as a co-writer.[71][72] On May 18, 2023, Jason Derulo released the single "When Love Sucks", which samples "Thank You", and includes a feature credit for Dido.[73] In December 2023, Belgian-Greek DJ duo Dimitri Vegas & Like Mike released "Thank You (Not So Bad)" alongside Dido, Tiësto and W&W, which was a reimagining of Dido's "Thank You";[74] she re-recorded her vocals for the remake.[75] It peaked at number 74 on the UK Singles Chart, and became Dido's first song to place on the main UK singles chart since "No Freedom" in 2013.[76]

Other work

In addition to her solo work, Dido has co-written and provided vocals for tracks with

.

She provided guest vocals for each of the six studio albums by Faithless, from 1996's Reverence to 2010s The Dance. Dido worked with her brother on a CD to accompany the children's book he wrote with Jason White, Safe from Harm; the CD is also titled Safe from Harm and the artist is listed as "Dusted". She co-wrote Britney Spears's worldwide number one hit "I'm Not a Girl, Not Yet a Woman", soundtrack feature track to Spears's first major film debut, and co-wrote the song "Never Ending" on Rihanna's 2016 album Anti. Dido's song "Thank You" was also sampled by Rihanna for "Never Ending".

Dido has provided guest vocals to tracks by other artists including "

Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason film soundtrack. A sample of the Dido track "Do You Have a Little Time" is used on the song "Don't You Trust Me?" by Tupac, on the album "Loyal to the Game
", which was almost entirely produced by Eminem in 2004.

Dido joined

World Aids Day on 1 December 2007, in conjunction with Lennox's appearance at the Nelson Mandela
46664 concert in South Africa.

Personal life

After releasing No Angel in 1999, and after much time spent promoting the album, Dido broke up with her fiancé, entertainment lawyer Bob Page, after a twelve-year relationship.[78] Dido then married author Rohan Gavin in 2010. They have one son, Stanley, who was born in July 2011.[79]

Dido says she is a "diehard" lifelong supporter of Premier League football club Arsenal.[80]

She holds dual British-Irish citizenship by virtue of having an Irish father.[81]

Discography

Tours

  • No Angel Tour (1999–2001)
  • Life for Rent Tour (2004)
  • Still on my Mind Tour (2019)

Awards and nominations

References

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External links