Irish singer/songwriter
Damien Rice launched his music career in the late-'90s with the hard-hitting indie rock outfit
Juniper. The group signed to Polygram in 1997 and released two singles, "The World Is Dead" and "Weathermen," which did moderately well on Irish radio, but when it came time to record a full-length album, contractual rules from the label prevented
Juniper from doing so, and
Rice split. After a brief respite in Europe,
Rice returned to Dublin to focus on music once again, scrounging up enough money to record a demo. He sent it to producer/film composer
David Arnold (
Björk,
Nina Persson,
Paul Oakenfold), and luckily for him,
Arnold loved it and set
Rice up in his very own mobile studio to make a record. His first single, "The Blower's Daughter," was an instant Top 20 hit when it appeared in fall 2001. Shared gigs with McAlmont & Butler and folkie
Kathryn Williams followed in summer 2002 when
Rice released
O in the U.K. The album hit the States in 2003, which earned the Irishman a dedicated group of American fans in addition to his European ones, and after satiating all of them with a collection of B-sides in 2005,
Rice released his sophomore record,
9. ~ MacKenzie Wilson, All Music Guide