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Hozier was born near Bray, County Wicklow, Ireland on 17 March 1990, the son of Raine Hozier-Byrne and John Byrne.He has one older brother named Jon. Around the time he was born, his father John worked a daytime job as a local banker and had an evening side hustle as a jazz and blues drummer.
The official music video for "Almost (Sweet Music)" was released on 16 April 2019. The video was directed by Blythe Thomas and stars dancers Cameron Boyce and Christine Flores. [ 12 ] It intertwines footage of Hozier playing guitar in an empty warehouse with performers interpretive dancing to a "rhythm that works in every environment, from a ...
Irish singer-songwriter and musician Hozier has released 3 studio albums, 8 EPs, and 23 singles (including one as a featured artist). His debut studio album, Hozier , was released in September 2014. The album peaked at number one on the Irish Albums Chart .
Hozier has never been about chasing the hit, but he’s got one regardless, as the Irish singer-songwriter’s “Unheard” EP quickly generated the first No. 1 Hot 100 single of his career, in ...
Hozier returned to Saturday Night Live for the show’s final episode of 2024, where he performed a cover of The Pogues’ classic Christmas song, “Fairytale of New York”.. Fans praised the ...
On 12 April 2024, it reached Number 1 with 61,000 chart units and 6.7 million streams, becoming Hozier's first UK number one single. [12] In the United States, "Too Sweet" debuted at number five on the Billboard Hot 100 the week of 6 April 2024, marking Hozier's first top 10 debut and second top 10 after "Take Me to Church". [13]
Wasteland, Baby! is the second studio album by Irish musician Hozier, released on 1 March 2019 by Rubyworks Records. [1] It is Hozier's first album since 2014. [2] The album includes the songs "Nina Cried Power" and "Shrike" from the 2018 EP Nina Cried Power, as well as the single "Movement". [1]
"Nina Cried Power" was lauded by critics. The Telegraph stated that he upheld the legacies of the aforementioned artists with "purposeful swagger" [3] while The Irish Times wrote that "from the first track, Hozier fuses his righteous political anger ("It is the bringing of the line, it is the baring of the rhyme, it’s not the waking it’s the rising") with what you can only call a "tune ...