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Thomas Dolby

 
Artist: Thomas Dolby
 
Thomas Dolby

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Followers:

Tigercity, Rabbits Against Magic, Greenskeepers, To My Boy, Oingo Boingo, Isadar

Performed Songs By:

Lost Toy People, Matthew Seligman

Worked With:

Paddy McAloon, Bruce Woolley, Cliff Brigden, Ofra Haza

Formal Connection With:

  • Born: October 14, 1958, Cairo, Egypt
  • Active: '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Keyboards, Synthesizer, Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "The Best of Thomas Dolby: Retrospectacle," "The Golden Age of Wireless," "Hyperactive"
  • Representative Songs: "She Blinded Me With Science," "Hyperactive!," "Europa and the Pirate Twins"

Biography

Though he never had many hits, Thomas Dolby became one of the most recognizable figures of the synth-pop movement of early-'80s new wave. Largely, this was due to his skillful marketing. Dolby promoted himself as a kind of mad scientist, an egghead that had successfully harnassed the power of synthesizers and samplers, using them to make catchy pop and light electro-funk. Before he launched a solo career, Dolby had worked as a studio musician, technician, and songwriter; his most notable work as a songwriter was "New Toy," which he wrote for Lene Lovich, and Whodini's "Magic's Wand." In 1981, he launched a solo career, which resulted in a number of minor hits and two big hits -- "She Blinded Me with Science" (1982) and "Hyperactive" (1984). Following "Hyperactive," his career faded away, as he began producing more frequently, as well as exploring new synthesizer and computer technology. Dolby continued to record into the '90s, but by that time, he was strictly a cult act.

Dolby's interest in music arose through his interest in computers, electronics and synthesizers. The son of a British archeologist, Thomas Dolby (b. Thomas Morgan Robertson, October 14, 1958) originally attended college to study meteorology, but he was soon side-tracked by electronics, specifically musical equipment. He began building his own synthesizers when he was 18 years old. Around the same time, he began to learn how to play guitar and piano, as well as how to program computers. Eventually, his schoolmates gave him the nickname of "Dolby," which was the name for a noise-reduction technology for audiotapes; he would eventually take the nickname as a stage name.

In his late teens, Dolby was hired as a touring sound engineer for a variety of post-punk bands, including the Fall, the Passions and the Members; on these dates, he would use a PA system he had built himself. In 1979, he formed the arty post-punk band Camera Club with Bruce Woolley, Trevor Horn, Geoff Downes and Matthew Seligman. Within a year, he had left the group and joined Lene Lovich's backing band. Dolby gave Lovich his song "New Toy," which became a British hit in 1981. That same year, he released his first solo single, "Urges," on the English independent label Armageddon. By the fall, he had signed with Parlophone and released "Europa and the Pirate Twins," which nearly cracked the UK Top 40.

Dolby started playing synthesizer on sessions for other artists in 1982. That year, he appeared on Foreigner's 4, Def Leppard's Pyromania and Joan Armatrading's Walk Under Ladders. Also in 1982, he wrote and produced "Magic's Wand" for Whodini; the single became one of the first million-selling rap singles. Even with all of these achievements, 1982 was most noteworthy for the release of Dolby's first solo album, The Golden Age of Wireless, in the summer of 1982; the record reached number 13 in England, while it was virtually forgotten in America. "Windpower," the first single from the record, became his first Top 40 UK hit in the late summer.

In January of 1983, Dolby released an EP, Blinded by Science, which included a catchy number called "She Blinded Me with Science" that featured a cameo vocal appearance by the notorious British eccentric Magnus Pike, who also appeared in the song's promotional video. Blinded by Science was a minor hit in England, but the EP and the single became major American hit in 1983, thanks to MTV's heavy airplay of the "She Blinded Me with Science" video. Eventually, the song reached number five on the US charts and it was included on a resequenced and reissued version of The Golden Age of Wireless, which peaked at number 13 in America.

The Flat Earth, Dolby's second album, appeared in early 1984 and was supported by the single "Hyperactive." The single became his biggest UK hit, peaking at number 17. Though The Flat Earth reached number 35 on the US charts, Dolby's momentum was already beginning to slow -- none of the singles released from the album cracked the American Top 40. Nevertheless, Dolby was in demand as a collaborator and he worked with Herbie Hancock, Howard Jones, Stevie Wonder, George Clinton, and Dusty Springfield. During 1985, he produced Clinton's Some of My Best Jokes Are Friends, Prefab Sprout's Steve McQueen (Two Wheels Good in the US), and Joni Mitchell's Dog Eat Dog, as well as supporting David Bowie at Live Aid. Also in 1985, he began composing film scores, starting with Fever Pitch. In 1986, he composed the scores for Gothic and Howard the Duck, to which he credited himself as Dolby's Cube. That credit led to a lawsuit from the Dolby Labs, who eventually prohibited the musician from using the name "Dolby" in conjunction with any other name than "Thomas."

Aliens Ate My Buick, Dolby's long-delayed third album, appeared in 1988 to poor reviews and weak sales, even though the single "Airhead" became a minor British hit. That same year, Dolby married actress Kathleen Beller. For the rest of the late '80s and early '90s, Dolby continued to score films, producing and he began building his own computer equipment. His fourth album, Astronauts & Heretics, was released in 1992 on his new label, Giant. Despite the presence of guest stars like Eddie Van Halen, Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir and Ofra Haza, the album was a flop. The following year, Dolby founded the computer software company Headspace, which released The Virtual String Quartet as its first program. For the rest of the '90s, Headspace occupied most of Dolby's time and energy. In 1994, he released The Gate to the Mind's Eye, a soundtrack to the videotape Mind's Eye. Also that year, Capitol released the greatest-hits collection, Retrospectacle. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
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Actor: Thomas Dolby
Top
  • Born: Oct 14, 1958
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '80s-'90s
  • Major Genres: Music, Comedy
  • Career Highlights: Toys, Gothic, Wildcats
  • First Major Screen Credit: Fever Pitch (1985)

Biography

Innovative musician, synth pop artist, and songwriter Thomas Dolby was briefly popular during the early '80s. He had two major hits, "She Blinded Me With Science" (1982) and "Hyperactive" (1984). Though his recording career quickly faded, Dolby found new success as a producer, studio musician, and a composer of film scores for films such as Gothic (1987) and Toys (1992). Dolby has also made occasional appearances in films, notably in Rockula (1990). ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
 
Wikipedia: Thomas Dolby
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Thomas Dolby
Dolby  at TED conference 2006
Dolby at TED conference 2006
Background information
Birth name Thomas Morgan Robertson
Born October 14, 1958 (1958-10-14) (age 50), London, England, UK
Genre(s) Synthpop
New wave
Pop rock
Occupation(s) Singer-songwriter,
Musician,
Record Producer,
Entrepreneur
Instrument(s) Keyboards, Synthesizers, Guitar, Vocals
Years active 1981–present
Label(s) Armageddon
Venice In Peril
EMI
Capitol Records
Virgin Records
Invisible Hands Music
Website http://www.thomasdolby.com/

Thomas Dolby (born Thomas Morgan Robertson, on 14 October 1958) is an English musician and producer.

Contents

Life and career

Contrary to the alluring story from most 1980s United Kingdom press releases, Dolby was not born in Cairo, Egypt; he was born in London, England, UK. His father, Martin Robertson, was an internationally distinguished professor of classical Greek art and archaeology at the University of London and Oxford University, and in his youth Thomas lived or worked in Greece and France. Dolby married actress Kathleen Beller in 1988; the couple have three children together.

Stage name

Thomas Dolby

The "Dolby" nickname comes from the name Dolby Laboratories, and was given to him by school friends for his seemingly inseparable relationship with his cassette machine. Dolby Laboratories was reportedly very displeased with Robertson using the company name as his own stage name and sued him, trying to stop him from using the name Dolby entirely. Dr. Ray Dolby incidentally has a son named Thomas. Eventually, the case was settled out of court and it was agreed that he would refrain from using the word Dolby in any context other than with the name Thomas.

History

Dolby is associated with New Wave, a form of pop music incorporating electronic instruments. Most of Dolby's work covers a wide range of musical styles and moods distinct from the high-energy pop sound of his few, better known commercial successes. His most recognized song is "She Blinded Me With Science" with sound samples from Magnus Pyke, although he describes this track as his least favorite.[citation needed] The song reached #5 on the U.S. Hot 100. It was featured very shortly in the "Treehouse of Horror XIV" episode of The Simpsons, where Professor Frink was winning an award at a science convention. It was also sampled at a slower speed by the group Mobb Deep in the song Got it Twisted.

Early in his career, he played keyboards with Bruce Woolley and the Camera Club and is credited on their debut album. The instrumental track WW9 in the album 'English Garden' is the first recorded example of Thomas's writing. Dolby played some synthesizer parts on the Thompson Twins album Set. He is also the author of Lene Lovich's hit single "New Toy," and co-wrote "Magic's Wand" with Whodini. He also formed a short-lived band called The Fallout Club.

Thomas worked as keyboard player on Def Leppard's 1983 Pyromania album. Dolby appeared on Pyromania using the alias Booker T. Boffin as his affiliation to another label restricted the use of his real name.

By far the most significant session relationship for Thomas in the early days was when he contributed the signature synthesizer sound on the track "Urgent" on Foreigner's 1981 album 4. On the same album he played the atmospheric synthesizer intro to the mega-hit "Waiting For A Girl Like You". The fees from this work, including tour dates, bankrolled the studio time for the recording of the 1980s benchmark album 'The Golden Age Of Wireless' from which his solo career began.

In a 1985 news clip about synthesized music Dolby was shown (along with the industrial musician, Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails fame) with Trent's early band, The "Exotic Birds".

In 1985, Dolby appeared at the Grammy Awards, which were televised, along with Stevie Wonder, Herbie Hancock, and Howard Jones. All four musicians were successful in the mid-1980s music scene, and they were also all keyboard and synthesizer experts. That same year, Dolby performed at the Live Aid concert in London as part of David Bowie's band.

In the same year, Dolby appeared as co-producer on Joni Mitchell's album Dog Eat Dog.

Dolby was also the producer for Prefab Sprout's albums Steve McQueen, From Langley Park to Memphis and Jordan: The Comeback.

Dolby continued to perform live in the late 1980s and early 1990s. He supported Depeche Mode in their Rose Bowl concert on June 18, 1988. In 1990, he appeared in the huge Roger Waters charity concert performance of Pink Floyd's rock opera The Wall in Berlin. Dolby played keyboards in "Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)" (sung by Cyndi Lauper), and then played the Teacher's role in the sequence "The Trial".

He appeared on-stage with the reunited Soft Boys in San Francisco on April 7, 2001 and played synthesizer on "You'll Have To Go Sideways", "Evil Guy" and Pink Floyd's "Astronomy Domine". "Evil Guy", from that evening's sound-check, wound up on the Soft Boys' 2002 EP Side Three. It was not the first time Dolby and members of the Soft Boys appeared on record together. Dolby played keyboards on Robyn Hitchcock's first solo album, Black Snake Diamond Role. Meanwhile Hitchcock appeared on Dolby's The Flat Earth, performing the role of Keith on "White City." Soft Boys bassist Matthew Seligman recorded and toured with Dolby in the 1980s, including the Live Aid performance.

2006 musical return

Dolby returned to his musical career in 2006. He performed his first solo public show in 25 years at the Red Devil Lounge in San Francisco, California on January 21, 2006, surprising the crowd who were there to see local band Notorious. He then launched an American tour, the Sole Inhabitant Tour, on April 12, comprising a string of small dates in California, a mall opening in Boulder, Colorado, and gigs across America before receptive crowds.

The US leg of the "Sole Inhabitant Tour 2006" was captured on a "live" CD and DVD. The CD represents a recording of two gigs played by Dolby at Martyrs in Chicago, while the DVD was filmed at the Berklee Performance Center at Berklee College of Music. The DVD also includes a 30-minute interview, and a lecture by Dolby at the Berklee College Of Music. Both the CD and DVD were released in November 2006, and are distributed through CD Baby and iTunes. Dolby autographed and numbered the first 1,000 copies of the CD and DVD.

A show at the 800 capacity Scala club in London was booked for July 3, 2006 as a warm-up for Dolby's Hyde Park set opening for Depeche Mode. The show sold out in a matter of days and prompted Dolby to reprioritise the UK, resulting in him moving with his family from California back to England, and a nine-date Sole Inhabitant tour of the UK in October 2007, coinciding with the release of a lavish box set of the Sole Inhabitant CD and DVD by UK independent label Invisible Hands Music.

Thomas toured throughout the months of November and December 2006 with electronic musician BT. This tour included a version of "Airwaves" that BT added his own technique to, which was the opening song on the UK leg of the Sole Inhabitant tour (sans BT).

Thomas Dolby's March 15, 2007 performance at the SxSW festival[1] was released as the live EP "Thomas Dolby & The Jazz Mafia Horns, Live at SxSW" through iTunes and on CD Baby.

The 2007 UK Sole Inhabitant tour included three new songs previously played on the US tour, one called "Your Karma Hit My Dogma" another called "Jealous Thing" and a cover version of The Special AKA's "What I Like Most About You Is Your Girlfriend". "Your Karma Hit My Dogma" was inspired by Kevin Federline' unauthorised use of a sample from Mobb Deep's Got It Twisted which in turn had used an authorised sample of She Blinded Me With Science. The tag-line from that story became the title of the song. The wording was lifted by Thomas from a bumper sticker on a car that he saw whilst living in the San Francisco Bay area. In a move close to performance art, Dolby tried to post a 'cease and desist' legal letter on Kevin Federline's MySpace page when other attempts to contact him proved fruitless.[2] [3] The song is on the Live at SxSW EP.

The second new song, "Jealous Thing" was performed at least at The Graduate in Cambridge and London's Islington Academy on the UK tour in Summer 2007 and features a Bossa-Nova type rhythm.

2009 plans

A CD + DVD set entitled 'The Singular Thomas Dolby' has been released by EMI on May 18, 2009. As the name suggests it is a digitally remastered compilation of previously released singles. The DVD contains all the video singles which were available on the original VHS/BETA/LASERDISC release of The Golden Age Of Video, as well as the videos for the songs Silk Pyjamas, I Love You Goodbye and Close But No Cigar. These three missing videos are for the singles taken from the 1992 album 'Astronauts & Heretics', which received critical acclaim but which garnered unimpressive sales.

Dolby is currently working on a new studio album which will include songs performed on the Sole Inhabitant tour called "Your Karma Hit My Dogma" and "Jealous Thing". Known contributors to the album so far include Kevin Armstrong, Mathew Seligman (both had played together with him as part of David Bowie's Live Aid appearance), Bruce Woolley and Imogen Heap. Thomas stated in October 2008 that the latest estimate for the release of the new album was, "when it's finished". It will be his first studio album since 1994.

Other interests

In 1993, Dolby successfully established the Headspace company. Headspace developed a new downloadable file format designed specifically for Internet usage called Rich Music Format with the RMF file extension. It had the advantage of small file size like MIDI but allowed recorded sampled sounds to be included at a higher bitrate for better overall reproduction. RMF music files could be played in a browser using the free Beatnik Player plug-in. Later versions of RMF permitted artists to place an encrypted watermark in their files that were supposed to prevent unauthorized duplication. [1] [2] Beatnik Inc. now specializes in software synthesisers for mobile phones [3], which it has licensed to mobile phone manufacturers including Nokia.

While still remaining on the company board, Dolby stepped down from his position as CEO of Beatnik Inc. to pursue other technologically innovative interests, such as founding Retro Ringtones LLC in 2002, which produces the RetroFolio ringtone asset management software suite for companies involved in the mobile phone ringtone business. At the second annual Mobile Music Awards, Miami, Florida, in 2004 RetroFolio won "Best of Show" and "Best New Technology" awards.

Dolby's musical talents have also been put to use recently creating hundreds of digital polyphonic ringtones now found on mobile phones everywhere (including the polyphonic version of the infamous Nokia signature theme). He is often a major speaker at technology conferences such as Comdex, Websphere and Nokia.

He has also worked as a producer and a soundtrack composer for both films and video games, most notably the third installment of the CGI collection, the Mind's Eye (series). The song "Hyperactive!" is featured in the 2002 PlayStation 2 videogame Grand Theft Auto: Vice City as part of the New Wave radio station Wave 103. Thomas Dolby also created the score for the SegaCD interactive movie "Double Switch".

In July 1998, Thomas received a "Lifetime Achievement in Internet Music" award from Yahoo! Internet Life.

Since 2001 Dolby has acted as Musical Director of The TED Conference [4], an annual event in Monterey California that attracts some of the world's foremost thinkers, inventors, and speakers. In this capacity he provides live musical introductions to sessions, sometimes with an eclectic TED House Band, as well as helping secure guest musicians and entertainers for the event.


Discography

Albums

Year Album UK albums U.S. Hot 200
1982 The Golden Age of Wireless 1 65 13
1983 Blnded by Science (EP) 1 - 20
1984 The Flat Earth 14 35
1987 Gothic (OST) - -
1988 Aliens Ate My Buick 30 70
1992 Astronauts & Heretics 35 -
1994 The Gate to the Mind's Eye (OST) - -
2001 Forty - -
2006 The Sole Inhabitant (Live Album) - -
2009 A Map of the Floating City - -
  • 1 1983 released in U.S.

Compilations

  • Retrospectacle: The Best of Thomas Dolby (1994)
  • 12x12 Original Remixes (1999)
  • Live in Chicago (live concert DVD) (2007)
  • The Singular Thomas Dolby (EMI singles CD re-release with DVD of videos) (2009)

EPs

Soundtracks

  • (as Dolby's Cube) Howard The Duck Soundtrack (split LP, one side by Dolby, the other by John Barry) (1986)
  • Music From The Film 'Gothic' (1987)
  • "The Mirror Song" (from Toys soundtrack) (1992)
  • "Roll Back the Rock (To the Dawn of Time)": written by James Horner and Thomas Dolby (from We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story soundtrack) (1993)
  • The Dark Eye (inSCAPE) (1995)

Singles

Year Single Peak chart positions Album
UK US US Main Rock US Dance
1981 "Urges/Leipzig" Non-album song
"Europa and the Pirate Twins" 48 67 37 The Golden Age of Wireless
1982 "Airwaves"
"Windpower" 31
"She Blinded Me With Science" 49 5 6 3
"One Of Our Submarines" 17
1984 "Hyperactive" 17 62 The Flat Earth
"I Scare Myself" 46
1985 "Dissidents" 90 17
1986 "Field Work" (with Ryuichi Sakamoto) 98 Illustrated Musical Encyclopaedia
1988 "Airhead" 53 6 Aliens Ate My Buick
1989 "Hot Sauce" 80
"My Brain Is Like a Sieve" 89
1992 "Close But No Cigar" 22 Astronauts & Heretics
"I Love You Goodbye" 36
"Silk Pyjamas" 62
1994 "Hyperactive" (re-release) 23 Retrospectacle
"—" denotes the single failed to chart or not released

Collaborations and connections

The following artists have worked with Thomas Dolby:

References

  1. ^ [Jon Zahlaway, SXSW Review: Thomas Dolby at Elysium, LiveDaily 2007-03-15, retrieved 2009-05-05
  2. ^ Corey Moss, Thomas Dolby Won't Turn Blind Eye To Kevin Federline Sample MTV.com 2006-04-05, retrieved 2009-05-05
  3. ^ Jeff Stratton, Before and After Science Miami New Times 2006-12-13, retrieved 2009-05-05

External links




 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Thomas Dolby" Read more

 

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