Fefe Dobson
Template:Infobox musical artist 2
Felicia Lynn (Fefe) Dobson (born February 28, 1985) is a Canadian singer and songwriter.
Early life
Felicia Lynn Dobson was born on February 28, 1985, in the Toronto, Ontario district of Scarborough. Fefe Dobson is biracial. Her mother is of Irish, Dutch and English ancestry, while her father is of Jamaican Heritage[1] Dobson has three siblings, two younger brothers, and an older sister. Often at school Dobson and her older sister Tanya were picked on because of her skin color. Although her real name is Felicia, she has always been called Fefe. Her father left the family when she was young, and she only saw him periodically. She eventually stopped seeing and talking to him when she turned 13. Her anger is expressed in her song "Unforgiven". Dobson went to a performing arts community center when she was young. In the fifth grade, she played Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz at her school. "After that, I felt a spiritual connection with Judy Garland," she said. She has also said that her biggest musical inspiration growing up was Michael Jackson, "I swore I was Michael Jackson. Then I found out I wasn't Michael Jackson and it broke my heart."[2]
When she was 11, her mother had given her a karaoke machine for her birthday. After she learned how to use the machine, she made a demo tape of 24 songs by such artists as Janet Jackson, Mariah Carey, Selena, and Madonna. She began sending the demo tape to record labels, but with little success. By this time Dobson had also begun writing her own songs.
She went to Wexford Collegiate Institute, a high school in Scarborough known for its performing arts program. She still kept looking for a record company that would make a record deal with her. Before signing with Universal Music Canada and Island Records, Fefe Dobson considered signing to her first record deal years earlier.
In the year 2000 she was discovered by Jive Records and they signed her immediately. The record label wanted to give her a traditional pop star image. Dobson, however, wanted more guitar and to include some of her own written songs. Jive rejected the idea, so she left the record company. She found herself singing in a Toronto bar at 8:30 in the morning. It turned out a CEO at The Island Def Jam Music Group was in the bar that very morning. He wanted to sign her. They signed her up on the wrong lyrics. She sang her song "Stupid Little Love Song" and what the people thought she sang was "Stupid Little Buzz Saw" which they thought was "genius". She met producer Jay Levine through Island Records and they began working on her music. “He just really let me be free. He found something in me that he really thought was special, it was just fate”. When in the recording studio, she hung up inspirational pictures of Kurt Cobain, Judy Garland, Coldplay, Jeff Buckley and the Vines, to help motivate her sound and to commemorate the artists who influenced her.[3]
With Island Records
Dobson's first album, Fefe Dobson, was released on December 9, 2003 by Island Records which has sold 304,000 copies in the United States, according to Nielsen SoundScan. Her first two singles, "Bye Bye Boyfriend" and "Take Me Away", were released well before that date. The second single, "Take Me Away", received more radio airplay than "Bye Bye Boyfriend" in the United States.
Dobson joined the Camplified Tour, along with Skye Sweetnam. She also appeared on the soundtracks for Raising Helen (If You Walk Away) and The Perfect Score (Everything).
During much of 2004, Dobson did a lot of promotion for her debut album, appearing for a live performance on TRL, and numerous magazine covers and articles. She was asked to open for Justin Timberlake for his European tour. In July 2004, she released a download-only digital audio single, "Don't Go (Girls and Boys)", which was also featured in a Tommy Hilfiger commercial staring the singer. Her album was later reissued with the single added. Dobson received considerable attention throughout 2004, appearing, for instance, as a spokesperson for the Got Milk? ad campaign.
As 2005 rolled around, Dobson recorded a song, titled "Truth Anthem", on the Much Dance 2005 CD, where the profits would benefit the Canadian branch of the charitable organization War Child. In April 2005, Dobson was nominated for two Juno Awards, one for album of the year and the other, Fan Choice Award; both categories were won by Avril Lavigne that year. In the summer of 2005, Dobson was in a public service ad called "Make Poverty History" which brings awareness to child poverty worldwide. Dobson is devoted to this campaign, due in part to her having grown up in a poor family.
By 2006, Dobson had returned to the studio to add some finishing touches to her second album Sunday Love. During the recording process, early in the studio, she collaborated with many of the music industry's legends such as Nina Gordon, Kay Hanley, Marilyn Manson guitarist John 5, Billy Steinberg, Matthew Wilder, Cyndi Lauper, Courtney Love, Joan Jett, and Rancid's Tim Armstrong.
In February 2006 Dobson sang "O Canada" at All-Star Saturday Night, part of the 2006 NBA All-Star Weekend in Houston, TX. In spring 2006 Dobson performed several shows around the United States, and began promoting her new album. The first single Don't Let it Go To Your Head stalled on the charts most likely due to the fact that the video wasn't released until 3 months after the single and it was only available online. The second single This is My Life was edited by her label to make it sound more pop but it had virtually no promotion which led to its flop.
Sunday Love was never released due to the fact that Dobson was dropped from Island Records. A "Sunday Love" promo CD went for sale on eBay. It sold for over $1,000. Sunday Love will not be released due to Dobson being unable to obtain rights to the album. The album was reviewed in both Spin and Vibe Magazine. It received 4/5 from Vibe who loved the new sarcastic rocker approach Fefe adopted for this album. Unfortunately, her label didn't like the image switch and they made her re-record songs on Sunday Love before dropping her days before Sunday Love was due to be released. "My real good fans, my hardcore fans, have it, so that's most important," Dobson says. "At least it got out there to a few hands, and now it's time to make a record on my own terms."[4]
"It was sad," says Dobson. "But instead of sitting there and being depressed and begging people for the record, I went back to the studio, got people that I knew, friends that I knew, and I started again."[5]
Independently
Currently, as Dobson tries to find a new label and tours independently, she continues to write new material and stays optimistic about new opportunities. She recently did a photo shoot with photographer Matt posted on her MySpace page. She wrote a song for Miley Cyrus on the Hannah Montana 2: Meet Miley Cyrus album called, Start All Over.
Song titles mentioned on her personal blog include: "Paranoia", "Somewhere my Lover", "BlackHaired Boy", "Set me Free", "Shame", "Distant Lover", and the unreleased "Troubled Girl" originally set to be on Sunday Love.
After being dropped by Island Records, Fefe decided to go back to her roots and create a new album on her own terms. Dobson says her new efforts, still at the demo recording stage at this point, are coming along nicely and should see the light of day sooner than later.[6] She has been writing new songs with Jon Levine, whose brother, Jay Levine, worked with her on Fefe Dobson. She describes the songs as cool and different. She will finish up writing in Los Angeles, and finish up the production in Toronto. She is looking at a fall release for the new album. Two songs have surfaced from Fefe, she recently sang I'm a Lady during a live preformance, and a new song called Catch Me has leaked as well.
Discography
Albums and EPs
Title | Release date | Type | Notes | Label |
---|---|---|---|---|
Fefe Dobson | December 9 2003 | Studio | First album | Island |
Sunday Love | Unreleased | Studio | Second album | Island (Unreleased) |
Untitled | Fall 2007 | Studio | Third album (Second released) | ??? |
Singles
- Can (Canadian single chart)
Title | Release date | Album | Label | Can | UK | US hot100 | US top40 mainstream |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bye Bye Boyfriend | 2003 | Fefe Dobson | Island | 8 | -- | -- | -- |
Take Me Away | 2003 | Fefe Dobson | Island | 20 | -- | 87 | 25 |
Everything | 2004 | Fefe Dobson | Island | -- | 42 | -- | 39 |
Don't Go (Girls And Boys) | 2004 | Download Single, Fefe Dobson [Reissued Version] |
Island | -- | -- | -- | -- |
Don't Let It Go To Your Head | 2005 | Sunday Love | Island | -- | -- | -- | -- |
This Is My Life | 2006 | Sunday Love | Island | -- | -- | -- | -- |
References
- ^ [1][2][3][4] [5] [6] [7] [8]"Being biracial, my mom being white and my dad being black, I always found it hard to know who liked me, what I belonged to. I had problems with it," Fefe says. "Knowing that they saw it as a beautiful thing was really what inspired me to just feel confidence in this business ... [to] not feel ashamed of being a dark-skinned girl doing rock 'n' roll."
- ^ http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1484252/20040109/story.jhtml MTV.com
- ^ [9]
- ^ [10]"My real good fans, my hardcore fans, have it, so that's most important," Dobson says. "At least it got out there to a few hands, and now it's time to make a record on my own terms."
- ^ [11] "But instead of sitting there and being depressed and begging people for the record, I went back to the studio, got people that I knew, friends that I knew, and I started again."
- ^ [12] Dobson says her new efforts, still at the demo recording stage at this point, are coming along nicely and should see the light of day sooner than later.
External links
Official Sites
Discography Sites
- Fefe Dobson at AllMusic
- Fefe Dobson discography at Discogs
- Template:Last.fm
- Fefe Dobson discography at MusicBrainz
- Fefe Dobson at IMDb