Sophie Ellis-Bextor (born 10 April 1979 in Middlesex, England) is a Multi-platinum-selling English pop singer. Her music is a mixture of mainstream pop, indie, disco, and '80s electronic influences.
Biography
Sophie Ellis Bextor was born on
10 April,
1979, in
London,
England, to
Janet Ellis, then an actress, but later better known as a presenter on the TV series
Blue Peter (on which Sophie appeared with her mother at the age of six, modelling
snoods), and
Robin Bextor, an award-winning film director. Ellis and Bextor divorced when Sophie was four years old. Her official website hyphenates her surname, which is the joining of her parents' surnames; some other sources separate the names with a space.
An advocate for animal rights, she posed for PETA's anti–fur clothing advertisement.*
theaudience
Ellis-Bextor began her career in
1997, with an indie band called
theaudience. She sang the lead vocal in the band. While she was a band member, readers of
Melody Maker elected her to the Number 1 position among the 'most sexy people in rock'. She recorded a duet with
Manic Street Preachers—"Black Holes for the Young"—as a B-side for their
1998 single "
The Everlasting". Some songs released by theaudience are "I Got the Wherewithal", "If You Can't Do It When You're Young; When Can You Do It?", "I Know Enough (I Don't Get Enough)", and "A Pessimist Is Never Disappointed" (perhaps their best-known single). The band split in December
1998.
Rise to stardom
After theaudience split, Sophie took a year off from singing; she tried modelling, but didn't like it and soon quit. She also started writing a novel. In 2000, Sophie collaborated with Italian DJ
Spiller on the song "
Groovejet (If This Ain't Love)", her first recorded work since that with theaudience. "Groovejet (If This Ain't Love)" entered the
U.K. charts at No. 1, just beating former Spice Girl
Victoria Beckham. Since then, the two have been known as rivals to each other. "Groovejet" won several awards: No. 1, Pop Top 20; No. 1, ILR; No. 1, Radio 1; No. 8, top dance track of 2000. In the
Metro Newspaper, it received ninth place in the contest for the Greatest No. 1 of all time, beating the likes of
Madonna.
In 2000, it was a finalist in The Record of the Year. In that same year, it won the awards for Best Single and Best Ibiza Tune at the Ericsson Muzik Awards.[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/979958.stm
Solo career
In
2001, Sophie released her debut album,
Read My Lips. It reached No. 2 on the UK charts and spawned four top-20 hit singles. Her part cover of
Cher's "
Take Me Home" reached No. 2, as did "
Murder on the Dancefloor", which became Sophie's biggest single to date and was on charts for 23 weeks.
In 2002, "Murder on the Dancefloor" became Europe's most played song of the year. Her third single, "
Get Over You" was released in June
2002 and reached No. 3. The fourth single, "
Music Gets the Best of Me", rose to No. 14 in December. In 2002,
Read My Lips was re-released, and Ellis-Bextor won the Recording Artist Award, at that year's Showbusiness Awards.[http://www.varietyclub.org.uk/news/viewstory.asp?newsid=147
Beginning in 2002, Ellis-Bextor was nominated, three years in a row, for the "British Female Solo Artist" Brit Award.***
Her second album, Shoot from the Hip, was released in October 2003. Although it was not as commercially successful as her previous material, it held two further top-10 singles. The album reached no higher than No. 19 on the UK charts; its two singles were "Mixed Up World", which reached No. 7, and "I Won't Change You" (No. 9). Around this time, rivalry against Victoria Beckham was suggested again; Victoria's single "This Groove"/"Let Your Head Go" reached a higher position in the charts than "I Won't Change You".
Since then, Sophie has paused her musical career to take care of her first-born baby, Sonny, with her husband, Richard Jones, who is bass guitarist for The Feeling. In early 2005, she performed on a track by the duo Busface, entitled "Circles (Just My Good Time)"; she is credited under the temporary pseudonym "Madmoiselle E.B." because she didn't want the track to be mistaken as a single from her next album. In 2004, she announced that she was working on a third album. Although its future release date is unclear, she is working with Fred Schneider of The B-52s to create a fun dance/party album, expected to be released in 2006 and entitled Trip the Light Fantastic.Her next single, "Catch You", is expected to be released this summer.[http://www.sophieellisbextor.net/pm/comments.php?id=104_0_1_0_C
Discography
Albums and their singles
| Album
| Information
|
| Read My Lips
| - Released September 03, 2001
- 2 UK, #9 AUS and Platinum
- BPI UK Sales Certificate: 3× Platinum [http://www.bpi.co.uk
- IFPI European Sales Certificate: 1× Platinum (1,000,000 shipments in Europe)*
- Singles:
- "Take Me Home" (August 2001) #2 UK, #7 IRE, #18 NZ
- "Murder on the Dancefloor" (December 2001) #2 UK, #2 NZ #3 AUS and Platinum, #17 United World Chart, #26 US (Hot Dance Music/Club Play).
- "Get Over You" (June 2002) #3 UK, #3 NZ, #3 AUS and Platinum, #18 United World Chart.
- "Music Gets the Best of Me" (November 2002) #14 UK, #25 NZ, #28 AUS
| Shoot from the Hip
|
|
| Trip The Light Fantastic
|
Other works
- "Groovejet (If This Ain't Love)" (August 2000); (Spiller, featuring Sophie Ellis-Bextor): No. 1, UK; No. 1, Australia; No. 1, New Zealand; No. 8, United World Chart.
- Watch My Lips, a DVD of her first album, includes all of her music videos, theaudience videos, and footage from a concert at Shepherds Bush Empire, and has sold over 3,000,000 copies.
- "One Way or Another", for the The Guru soundtrack.
- "Want You More", for the Suzie Gold soundtrack.
- "Circles (Just My Good Time)" (March 2005); (Busface, featuring Sophie Ellis-Bextor (as Madamoiselle E.B.)): No. 1, Music Week Commercial Club Chart; No. 10, Australia Top 20 Dance chart; No. 63, Australia.
External links
1979 births | Living people | English female singers | British dance musicians | Dance/Club music artists
Sophie Ellis-Bextor | Sophie Ellis-Bextor | Sophie Ellis-Bextor | Sophie Ellis-Bextor | Sophie Ellis-Bextor | Sophie Ellis-Bextor | Sophie Ellis-Bextor | Sophie Ellis-Bextor