Known as: Dido
Birth Name: Dido Armstrong
Birth Date: December 25, 1971
Date of Birth: London, England, U.K.
Occupation: Singer
b. Dido Armstrong, 25 December 1971, England. Armstrong
is the sister of Faithless mastermind and leading UK
dance music producer, Rollo. She sang "Flowerstand
Man' on Faithless" 1996 debut, Reverence and contributed
backing vocals to several other tracks, while maintaining
a day job in a London office and studying for a law
degree part-time. Like her peer, Sonique, Dido's first
solo successes were in the USA, rather than her native
UK. Musically gifted from an early age, Dido (named
after the Queen of Carthage) attended London's Guildhall
School of Music and played recorder, piano and violin
by the age of 10. Her teenage years were spent listening
to her brother's record collection and touring with
a classical ensemble. She began singing with various
London-based bands before becoming involved in her brother's
project, Faithless. After the million-selling success
of Reverence, Dido toured with the band for 18 months
and contributed to Faithless' second album, Sunday 8pm.
At this stage, Dido was writing her own material and
had assembled an album's worth of demo tapes. These
demos led to a publishing deal in the UK with Cheeky
Records and a deal with the US arm of Arista Records
in 1999. Her debut, No Angel, was produced by Rollo
and Youth and received its US release in June 1999.
The track "Here With Me" was used as the theme
for the hit US television series Roswell, and "Thank
You" was used on the soundtrack of the Gwyneth
Paltrow movie, Sliding Doors. Dido's media profile was
raised enormously when rap star Eminem sampled "Thank
You" for his single "Stan", which became
a huge hit on both sides of the Atlantic. With the emphasis
very much on quality song writing, No Angel combined
electronic and acoustic elements to create a lush, down-tempo
style. It was released in the UK in October 2000 in
conjunction with live performances on the east coast
of the USA. Phenomenal sales followed as the album became
the preferred listening at a million middle-class dinner
parties.