Damien Rice
Born:
197z in County Kildare, Ireland
- Genre: Folk
- Active: '90s, 2000s
- Instruments: Vocals, Guitar
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Results for Damien Rice
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Born:
197z in County Kildare, Ireland
| Damien Rice | |
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Damien Rice at The Troubadour nightclub,
2003
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| Background information | |
| Birth name | Damien Rice |
| Born | December 7 1973 |
| Origin | County Kildare, Ireland |
| Genre(s) | acoustic, folk, indie |
| Associated acts |
Juniper, Bell X1 |
| Website | www.damienrice.com |
Damien Rice (born December 7, 1973) is an Irish folk singer, famous for his two albums O and 9.
He was born in Dublin, Ireland, to George and Maureen Rice and was raised in Celbridge, County Kildare, Ireland.[1]
Rice was originally a member of Juniper, a rock band which released the singles "The World Is Dead" and "Weatherman". On the eve of recording their first full album for Polygram in 1999, Rice became disenchanted with the commercial label and quit. His Juniper band mates became Bell X1. He moved to rural Italy where he played acoustic guitar, wrote songs, and busked around Europe until he was able to form a band and get coffee shop gigs in the Dublin area. Exploiting a lucky connection to David Arnold, his second cousin, Rice was able to record O, for which he won the Shortlist Music Prize in 2003.[2] The members of his band are cellist Vyvienne Long; percussionist Tom Osander (aka Tomo), a member of the 1990s jam band God Street Wine; and bassist Shane Fitzsimons. Rice recently decided that his professional relationship with Lisa Hannigan, who performed vocals and occasionally the guitar and bass, "has run its creative course." As a result, Hannigan will not be appearing at any of his upcoming live shows. She is embarking on her own artistic endeavours and there are no plans for them to work together in the foreseeable future.[3]
Rice recorded an old Juniper track, "Crosseyed Bear" (originally titled "Jewellery Box"), for the new War Child album. He spent 2004 and 2005 recording the follow-up to O. His latest album, 9, was released on November 3 in Ireland, 2006, on November 6, 2006 in Europe and the rest of the world, except for North America, where it was released on November 14, 2006.[4]
In recent years, with the increase of digital cameras and mobile phone cameras, Rice has stopped mid-song to ask the audience members to simply watch the concert rather than record it. At a gig in Toronto in 2006, he changed the lyrics of his song, "I Remember" from "I remember it well, taxied out of a storm, to watch you perform, and my ships were sailing" to "I remember it well, when we used to watch concerts, not through a camera, please turn, them off please".[1]
Rice played on the Friday night at the Glastonbury Festival 2007, in the
Acoustic Tent. On 7 July 2007 Rice performed with David Gray at the
UK leg of Live Earth at Wembley Stadium, London. Rice played the backing rhythm to Gray's "Babylon" before Rice played "Blower's
Daughter" (Gray now doing the rhythm). The pair then finished with a cover of "Que Sera Sera". On 8 July Rice played at the T in the Park music event in Scotland. He also headlined the Latitude
Festival in Suffolk on 12 July and the V Festival at
Weston Park in
Rice also headlined his first outdoor show in Ireland[citation needed] in Marlay Park on 26 August, backed by Fionn Regan, Willy Mason, Guillemots, and KT Tunstall.
Rice is also scheduled to play the Austin City Limits Music Festival in Austin, Texas on 15 September. He has also scheduled a limited number of appearances in North America through autumn, called An Evening with Damien Rice. These shows include a second guitarist, bassist, cellist, and a drummer to support Damien. There are no supporting acts on this tour.
Rice's songs have been featured several times on popular films and television shows. "The Blower's Daughter" and "Cold Water"
featured prominently in the
In addition to his music being included in films and T.V. shows, Rice himself has been a guest performer on such shows as The Ellen DeGeneres Show (December 6, 2006), Late Night with Conan O'Brien (2006), the Tonight Show with Jay Leno (multiple appearances) and the Late Show with David Letterman (2004).[2]
Rice has helped the Freedom Campaign and the US Campaign for Burma to free Burmese democracy movement leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who is presently being subjected to her third term of house arrest in Rangoon by the Burmese military junta.[16] Aung San Suu Kyi has been confined to her home since September 2003. Rice and Hannigan recorded a charity song, campaigning for her release, called "Unplayed Piano". In addition, Rice has links on his website for the following organizations: Greenpeace, Action Burma, The Donkey Sanctuary Ireland, The Donkey Sanctuary UK and Native Woodland Trust. [3]
| Year | Title | Album | UK |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2001 | "The Blower's Daughter" | O | 27 |
| 2002 | "Cannonball" | O | 32 |
| 2002 | "Volcano" | O | 29 |
| 2003 | "Woman Like a Man" | - | 43 |
| 2004 | "Moody Monday/Lonelily" (Vinyl only) | - | 143 |
| 2004 | "Lonely Soldier" | - | 142 |
| 2004 | "Cannonball (Re-released)" | O | 10 |
| 2004 | "The Blower's Daughter (Re-released)" | O | - |
| 2005 | "Volcano (Re-released)" | O | - |
| 2005 | "Unplayed Piano" | - | 24 |
| 2006 | "9 Crimes" | 9 | 29 |
| 2007 | "Rootless Tree" | 9 | 50 |
| 2007 | "Dogs" | 9 | 84 |
| 2007 | "Elephant" | 9 | - |
Damien releases albums under his record label Heffa (originally named DRM) in Ireland. For album releases in North America and Canada, they are handled by Vector Records. Record releases in the UK, Europe and the Rest of the World are handled by 14th Floor Records (through Warner Music). [4]
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