Dublin-born singer
Róisín Murphy moved from Ireland to Manchester, England, with her family when she was 12, and remained there even after her parents returned to Dublin four years later. On her own at 16,
Murphy had no aspirations of singing until she met producer
Mark Brydon, with whom she formed the eclectic electronic pop duo
Moloko. The pair's stylish-yet-quirky sound scored them several hits, including "Sing It Back," "The Time Is Now," and "Fun for Me." By the time of
Moloko's fourth album, 2002's
Statues,
Murphy and
Brydon's personal and professional relationships were strained, and
Moloko called it a day after completing the tour supporting that album.
Murphy moved to London and began working with forward-thinking electronic producer
Matthew Herbert, who had previously worked on a remix of "Sing It Back" with
Moloko. He encouraged
Murphy to bring typically non-musical items like notebooks into the studio and use them in musical ways; the results were first released as three limited-edition vinyl EPs, Sequins #1, Sequins #2, and Sequins #3. In 2005,
Moloko's label, Echo, released the EPs as the full-length album
Ruby Blue. In spring 2006,
Ruby Blue was released in the U.S. Overpowered, which featured productions by Bugz in the Attic and Groove Armada members and some of
Murphy's most pop-oriented songs to date, arrived in late 2007.
–
Heather Phares, Rovi