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BILLIE NGANJUK EILISH

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Early life


Career
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2015–2017: Don't Smile at Me

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2018–2020: When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?

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2021–2023: Happier Than Ever and Guitar Songs

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2024–present: Hit Me Hard and Soft

Artistry
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Musical style, songwriting, and music videos

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Influences


Public image and recognitions
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Style

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Products and endorsements


Advocacy


Personal life


Discography
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Studio albums


Tours
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Headlining

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Opening act


Filmography


See also


Notes


References


External links

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Billie Eilish
Eilish in 2023

Born Billie Eilish Pirate Baird O'Connell

December 18, 2001 (age 22)

Los Angeles, California, U.S.

• Singer
Occupations
• songwriter
• actor

Years active 2015–present

Works • Discography

• songs recorded

Parent • Maggie Baird (mother)

Relatives Finneas O'Connell (brother)

Brian Baird (uncle)

Awards Full list

Musical career

Genres • Pop

• alt-pop
• electropop
• pop rock

Instrument(s) • Vocals

• guitar

• piano

• ukulele

Labels • Darkroom

• Interscope

Website billieeilish.com

Billie Eilish's voice


Duration: 43 seconds.0:43

On the concept behind Bury a Friend


Recorded April 2019

Signature

Billie Eilish Pirate Baird O'Connell (/ˈaɪlɪʃ/ EYE-lish;[1] born December 18, 2001) is
an American singer and songwriter. She first gained public attention in 2015 with her
debut single "Ocean Eyes", written and produced by her brother Finneas O'Connell,
with whom she collaborates on music and live shows. In 2017, she released her
debut extended play (EP), Don't Smile at Me. Commercially successful, it reached
the top 15 of record charts in numerous countries, including the US, UK, Canada,
and Australia.
Eilish's first studio album, When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? (2019),
debuted atop the US Billboard 200 and UK Albums Chart. It was one of the year's
best-selling albums, buoyed by the success of its fifth single, "Bad Guy", Eilish's first
number-one on the US Billboard Hot 100. This made her the first artist born in the
21st century to release a chart-topping single. The next year, Eilish performed the
theme song "No Time to Die" for the James Bond film of the same name, which
topped the UK Singles Chart and won the Academy Award for Best Original Song in
2022. Her subsequent singles "Everything I Wanted", "My Future", "Therefore I Am",
and "Your Power" peaked in the top 10 in the US and UK. Her second studio
album, Happier Than Ever (2021), topped the charts in 25 countries. She wrote and
performed "What Was I Made For?" for the fantasy film Barbie (2023), which became
her second number-one single in the UK and earned her a second Academy Award.
In 2024, she released her third album, Hit Me Hard and Soft, to critical acclaim.
Eilish has received multiple accolades, including nine Grammy Awards,
two American Music Awards, two Guinness World Records, three MTV Video Music
Awards, three Brit Awards, two Golden Globe Awards, and two Academy Awards.
She is the second artist in Grammy history to win all four general field categories—
Record of the Year, Album of the Year, Song of the Year, as well as Best New
Artist—in the same year. Eilish is also the first person born in the 21st century to win
an Academy Award and the youngest ever two-time winner.[2][3] She was featured
on Time magazine's inaugural Time 100 Next list in 2019 and the Time 100 in
2021.[4] According to the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA)
and Billboard, Eilish is the 26th-highest-certified digital singles artist[5] and one of the
most successful artists of the 2010s.[6] She was honored as one of the BBC 100
Women in December 2022.[7]
Eilish has a history of political activism, focusing on climate change
awareness, women's reproductive rights, gender equality, and animal rights.
Early life

Eilish with her mother, Maggie Baird, in November


2018
Billie Eilish Pirate Baird O'Connell was born in Los Angeles, California, on December
18, 2001.[8] She is the daughter of actress and teacher Maggie Baird[9][10] and actor
Patrick O'Connell,[11] both of whom are also musicians and work on Eilish's
tours.[12][13][14] Eilish is of Irish and Scottish descent.[15] She was conceived via in vitro
fertilization.[16] Her middle name, Eilish, was originally meant to be her first name,
while Pirate was to be her middle name.[17] She was raised in the Highland
Park neighborhood of Los Angeles.[18][19]
Eilish and her brother Finneas were homeschooled by Baird, a decision their parents
made to spend time with them and give them the freedom to pursue their
interests.[11][14] Baird taught Eilish and Finneas the basics of songwriting.[20] Eilish said
her brother and mother inspired her to get into music.[21] Their parents encouraged
the siblings to express themselves and explore whatever they wanted, including art,
dancing, and acting.[12][20] Eilish performed at talent shows and joined the Los Angeles
Children's Chorus at age eight.[22][20] At age six, she started playing the ukulele.[23] She
wrote her first "real" song at age 11 for her mother's songwriting class. The song is
about the zombie apocalypse, inspired by the television series The Walking Dead,
from which she took script lines and episode titles.[24][21] Eilish took some acting
auditions, which she disliked, but she enjoyed recording background dialogue for
crowd scenes and worked on the films Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Ramona and Beezus,
and the X-Men series.[20] Eilish also took dance classes until 2016, when a growth
plate injury ended her dance career and she focused on recording music. [25][26][22]
Career
2015–2017: Don't Smile at Me
Main article: Don't Smile at Me
In 2015, 13-year-old Eilish began working on songs with her brother Finneas, who
had been writing and producing for several years and had his own band.[26][22][13] The
first songs they recorded together were called "She's Broken" and "Fingers
Crossed", the former written by Finneas and the latter by Eilish. "We recorded them
and put them out on SoundCloud, just for fun," she recalled.[27]
On November 18, 2015, Eilish released the song "Ocean Eyes". The track was
written, mixed, and produced by Finneas, who had originally created it for his band
the Slightlys before deciding it would be a better fit for Eilish's vocals.[13][28][22][26] He gave
it to Eilish when Fred Diaz, her dance teacher at the Revolution Dance Center,
asked them to write a song for choreography. The siblings uploaded the song
to SoundCloud, where Diaz could access and download it.[26][22][29][30] The song received
several hundred thousand listens in two weeks, and Finneas's manager, Danny
Rukasin, reached out to him to discuss Eilish's potential. Rukasin felt she could
achieve significant success with Finneas's help.[35]
In January 2016, Finneas and his manager arranged a deal in which Apple
Music signed Eilish to A&R company Platoon, specializing in packaging emerging
artists before they get a major-label contract.[33][12][32] Eilish then got a publicist, who
connected her to the luxury fashion brand Chanel, and a stylist, both of whom helped
shape her image.[12] On March 24, 2016, a music video for "Ocean Eyes" directed by
Megan Thompson premiered on Eilish's official YouTube channel.[36] "Ocean Eyes"
and Eilish received praise and promotion from various media outlets and marketers,
including radio stations and music supervisors such as Beats 1, KCRW, BBC Radio
1, Zane Lowe, Jason Kramer, Annie Mac, and Chris Douridas.[40]
On June 23, 2016, Eilish and Finneas released "Six Feet Under" on SoundCloud as
her second single.[41] A homemade music video for the song was released on June
30, 2016.[42] It was directed by Eilish and edited by her mother, Maggie Baird. [42]
In August 2016, Justin Lubliner, who had noticed Eilish's talent in 2015 when he first
heard "Ocean Eyes", signed her to Darkroom and Interscope Records.[31][43] He
developed her rollout as an artist, taking inspiration from the model of hip hop artists
such as Travis Scott and Chance the Rapper, not relying on one big single and
focusing on creating a "persona and distinct aesthetic".[25] Darkroom and Interscope
Records re-released "Six Feet Under" and "Ocean Eyes" as singles for digital
download and streaming on November 17 and 18, 2016, respectively.[44][45] On
November 22, 2016, a dance performance music video for "Ocean Eyes" was
uploaded to Eilish's YouTube channel.[46]

Eilish performing in August 2017


On January 14, 2017, Eilish released an EP with four remixes by
Astronomyy, Blackbear, Goldhouse, and Cautious Clay for "Ocean Eyes",[47] and
another EP for "Six Feet Under" featuring remixes by Blu J, Gazzo, Jerry Folk, and
Aire Atlantica.[48] After the success of the "Ocean Eyes" remixes, Eilish released
"Bellyache" on February 24, 2017.[49] A video for the song was released on March 22,
2017, directed by Miles and AJ.[50] Eilish released "Bored" on March 30, 2017, as part
of the soundtrack to the Netflix series 13 Reasons Why.[51] A video for "Bored" was
released on June 26, 2017.[52] In March of the same year, Apple Music showcased
Eilish at the South by Southwest music festival.[33][37] On June 30, 2017, Eilish
released "Watch".[53] Eilish released another single, "Copycat", on July 14,
2017,[54] and announced the release of her debut EP, Don't Smile at Me.[55] Eilish later
released "Idontwannabeyouanymore" and "My Boy".[56][57] On August 11, 2017, Eilish
released Don't Smile at Me.[58] The EP was a sleeper hit, reaching number 14 on the
US Billboard 200.[59] Eilish embarked on the Don't Smile at Me Tour throughout
October 2017 in support of her EP.[60] Eilish released "Bitches Broken Hearts" through
SoundCloud on November 10, 2017.[61][62][63][64]
Eilish's team worked with Spotify, which promoted her on its most popular playlist,
"Today's Top Hits".[12] The Baffler described Eilish's sound as fitting into the
"streambait" genre consisting of largely "mid-tempo, melancholy pop" influenced
by Lana Del Rey, whose "singing style, bleakness, and... hip-hop influenced
production" shaped the aesthetic.[65][12] Eilish's commercial success expanded with her
Spotify promotion.[12] In September 2017, Apple Music named Eilish their Up
Next artist, which followed with a short documentary, a live session EP, and an
interview with Zane Lowe on Apple Music's radio station Beats 1.[66] That month, the
live EP, Up Next Session: Billie Eilish, was released. On December 15, 2017, Eilish
released her collaboration with American rapper Vince Staples, "&Burn", a remix of
her single "Watch". It was included on the expanded edition of Don't Smile at
Me.[67][68][69][70]
2018–2020: When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?
Main article: When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?
In February 2018, Eilish embarked on her second headlining concert tour,
the Where's My Mind Tour, which concluded in April 2018.[71] "Bitches Broken Hearts"
was re-released worldwide on March 30, 2018.[72] For Record Store Day 2018, Eilish
released "Party Favor" on a pink 7-inch vinyl, along with a cover of "Hotline Bling",
by Drake, as the B-side.[73] Eilish collaborated with American singer Khalid on the
single "Lovely", which was released on April 19, 2018, and added to the soundtrack
for the second season of 13 Reasons Why.[74] She released "You Should See Me in a
Crown" in July 2018,[75] The same month, Eilish performed at the Mo Pop Festival.[76]

Eilish at Pukkelpop Festival in 2019


On the day of release for her single "When the Party's Over",[77] Eilish was featured
in Vanity Fair's "73 Questions" rapid-fire questionnaire video series by Joe Sabia,
who revisited an interview from October 2017. The resulting video was a side-by-
side time capsule of both interviews showing her growth in popularity over one
year.[78] She signed a talent contract with Next Management for fashion and beauty
endorsements in October 2018.[79][80] She was placed on the 2018 Forbes 30 Under
30 list in November of that year,[81][82] and released the single "Come Out and Play" in
November 2018, which was written for a holiday-themed Apple Inc. commercial.[83] In
early January 2019, Don't Smile at Me reached 1 billion streams on Spotify, making
her the youngest artist to top 1 billion streams on a project.[12] That month, Eilish
released "Bury a Friend" as the third single from her debut album When We All Fall
Asleep, Where Do We Go?,[84][85] along with "When I Was Older", a single inspired by
the 2018 film Roma, which appeared on the compilation album Music Inspired by the
Film Roma.[86][87] In February, Eilish partnered with YouTube on a documentary
miniseries, "A Snippet Into Billie's Mind".[33][88] "Wish You Were Gay", her fourth single
from the album, was released on March 4, 2019.[89]
When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? was released on March 29,
2019.[90] Spotify launched a "multi-level campaign behind the album", creating a
multimedia playlist and "new product features" that Spotify said "allow for vertical
video content, custom assets, and editorial storylines, all with the goal of creating
more meaningful and engaging context for [Eilish's] fans."[33] In Los Angeles, Spotify
set up a "pop-up enhanced album experience", which included different artwork and
a "multi-sensory" experience of each track for fans.[33] The album debuted atop
the Billboard 200 as well as on the UK Albums Chart, making Eilish the first artist
born in the 2000s to have a number-one album in the U.S. and the youngest female
ever to have a number-one album in the United Kingdom.[19][91] Upon the album's
debut, Eilish broke the record for most simultaneously charting Hot 100 songs by a
female artist, with 14, after every song from the album, excluding "Goodbye", charted
on the Hot 100.[92] The fifth single from the album, "Bad Guy", was released in
conjunction with the album.[93] A remix of the song featuring Justin Bieber was
released in July 2019.[94][95] In August, Bad Guy peaked at number-one in the US,
ending Lil Nas X's record-breaking 19 weeks at number-one with "Old Town
Road".[96] She is the first artist born in the 2000s and the youngest artist
since Lorde (with "Royals") to have a number-one single.[97]

Eilish (left) in 2020 with her brother and


collaborator Finneas O'Connell
Eilish began her When We All Fall Asleep Tour at Coachella Festival in April
2019,[98] with the tour concluding on November 17, 2019, in Mexico City. In August
2019, she partnered with Apple Music for Music Lab: Remix Billie Eilish, part
of Apple Stores' Music Lab sessions during which fans deconstruct her song "You
Should See Me In A Crown" and learn how to create their own remix on Apple
devices and GarageBand.[99][100] On September 27, 2019, Eilish announced her Where
Do We Go? World Tour.[101] The tour began in Miami on March 9, 2020, and ran for
two more shows on March 10 in Orlando and March 12 in Raleigh before Eilish
ended the tour prematurely due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The tour was set to
conclude in Jakarta on September 7.[102]
On November 7, 2019, Jack White's Third Man Records announced that the label
would release an acoustic live album of Eilish's performance from the record label's
Blue Room, exclusively sold on vinyl at Third Man retail locations
in Nashville, Tennessee, and Detroit, Michigan.[103] On November 13, 2019, she
released her next single, "Everything I Wanted".[104] On November 20, 2019, Eilish
was nominated for six Grammy Awards, including Record of the Year and Song of
the Year for "Bad Guy" as well as Album of the Year and Best New Artist. At age 17,
she became the youngest artist to be nominated in all four General Field
categories.[105] In the same month, Eilish was crowned 2019's Billboard Woman of the
Year.[106]

Eilish at the ALTer EGO concert in January 2020


On January 14, 2020, Eilish was announced as performer of the title track for the
25th installment in the James Bond film franchise, No Time to Die,[107] written and
produced with her brother. With this announcement, Eilish became the youngest
artist to write and perform a James Bond theme song.[108] It became the second Bond
theme song to top the British official charts and the first Bond theme performed by a
female artist to do so. It was also Eilish's first number-one single in the UK.[109] At
the 62nd Grammy Awards, she became the youngest person to win the four main
Grammy categories – Best New Artist, Record of the Year, Song of the Year,
and Album of the Year – in the same year.[110][111] During the COVID-19 pandemic,
Eilish and her brother performed for both iHeart Media's Living Room Concert for
America,[112] and Global Citizen's Together at Home concert series, singing a cover
of Bobby Hebb's "Sunny" for the latter.[113] Both virtual concerts were an effort to raise
awareness and funds towards fighting the disease.[112][113] On April 10, 2020, "Ilomilo"
was sent to Italian contemporary hit radio stations by Universal Music Group,
as When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?'s seventh and final single.[114] On
July 30, 2020, Eilish released "My Future", her first original release since "No Time to
Die", along with an animated video.[115] In 2020, she became the youngest person to
feature on the Forbes Celebrity 100 list, with earnings of $53 million.[116] In September
2020, Eilish released a collection of branded ukuleles with guitar
manufacturer Fender.[117]
In October 2020, Eilish announced a livestream concert titled Where Do We Go?
The Livestream set to air from Los Angeles on October 24, with proceeds from the
show's merchandise raising funds to support event crew members affected by the
COVID-19 pandemic.[118] In a Vanity Fair interview, Eilish said she was working on
"sixteen new songs and lov[ing] them all", revealing an upcoming musical
project.[119] Eilish won three Billboard Music Awards on October 24—Billboard Music
Award for Top Female Artist, Billboard Music Award for Top Billboard 200
Album (When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?), and Billboard Music Award
for Top New Artist—out of the 12 that she was nominated for. Also that month, she
announced a new single, "Therefore I Am", which was released along with its video
on November 12, 2020.[120] Eilish performed "Therefore I Am" and "My Future" at
the Jingle Ball in December 2020.[121]
2021–2023: Happier Than Ever and Guitar Songs
Main articles: Happier Than Ever and Guitar Songs

Eilish at the 2021 Met Gala


"Lo Vas a Olvidar", a single featuring Rosalía as a part
of HBO's Euphoria soundtrack, was released in January 2021, almost two years after
initially teasing the song.[122] The R. J. Cutler–directed documentary film Billie Eilish:
The World's a Little Blurry was released on Apple TV+ and in select movie theaters.
The film was praised by critics and fans for its in-depth look at Eilish's personal life
during her ascent to fame.[123] At the 63rd Annual Grammy Awards, Eilish took home
two awards: the Grammy Award for Best Song Written for Visual Media for her Bond
theme and the Grammy Award for Record of the Year for "Everything I Wanted". In
her acceptance speech for Record of the Year, Eilish said that Megan Thee
Stallion "deserved to win", but still thanked her fans and her brother for her award. [124]
2021 saw the publication of her personally selected comprehensive book of
photographs that shared "an intimate window into her life" on and off stage, By -
Billie Eilish.[125]
On April 27, 2021, Eilish announced on her Instagram account that her second
album, Happier Than Ever, would be released on July 30, and the tracklist was made
available on Apple Music. The album was released in various formats, including
collectible vinyl and cassette colors.[126][127] The album's release was preceded by five
singles: "My Future", "Therefore I Am", "Your Power",[128] "Lost Cause",[129] and
"NDA",[130] and was accompanied by the title track. On December 2, 2021, Eilish
announced an eco-friendly limited-edition vinyl version of Happier Than Ever made
from recycled vinyl scraps. The collector's item was available only at a number of
Gucci stores around the world and included Gucci-branded nail stickers designed by
the brand's creative director, Alessandro Michele.[131] To further promote the album,
Eilish worked with Disney+ on the concert film Happier Than Ever: A Love Letter to
Los Angeles, released in September 2021,[132][133] and embarked on the Happier Than
Ever, The World Tour in February 2022, concluding it in April 2023.[134]
In June 2021, Eilish was criticized online for videos in which she mouthed the anti-
Asian slur "chink" while lip-syncing the song "Fish" by Tyler, the Creator,[135][136] while
Matthew Tyler Vorce, her reported boyfriend at the time, received criticism for
alleged social media posts in which he used offensive language and slurs against
gay and Black people.[139] Eilish was also accused of queerbaiting after using the
caption "I love girls" to promote the music video for "Lost Cause".[140][141][142] On June 22,
she posted an apology to Instagram stories for her usage of "chink", saying that she
was "appalled and embarrassed" by the video and that she was "13 or 14" at the
time and did not know the slur was a derogatory term.[143][144] She also addressed a
separate video of what was viewed as her mocking an Asian accent, writing that she
was actually "speaking in a silly gibberish made up voice".[143][144] Reflecting on the
events in a July 2021 interview, Eilish said: "I said so many things then that I totally
don't agree with now, or think the opposite thing. The weirdest thing is how nothing
ever goes away once it's on the internet ... When you're a fucking teenager, you
don't really know yourself ... I didn't actually know how I really felt. So I just came up
with this facade that I stuck to."[145]

Eilish during the Happier Than Ever, The World


Tour (2022)
Eilish started formulating ideas for her third studio album's songs with Finneas in
December 2021.[146] In a July 2022 interview with Zane Lowe for Apple Music, she
said she hoped to start writing the album in 2023.[147] In 2022, Eilish won the Academy
Award for Best Original Song for the song "No Time to Die" from the film of the same
name, becoming the first person born in the 21st century to win an Academy
Award.[2] That same year, she became the youngest headliner to date for two
festivals, specifically Glastonbury and Coachella.[148][149] The Pixar film Turning
Red was released that year, for which she and Finneas wrote three songs, "Nobody
Like U", "U Know What's Up" and "1 True Love", performed by Turning
Red's fictional boy band 4*Town.[150]
In June 2022, during her world tour's Manchester show, Eilish debuted the then-
unreleased ballad "TV". The song references the overturning of Roe v. Wade, a case
that made abortion a constitutional right in the US.[151] The next month, on July 21,
she surprise-released the two-track EP Guitar Songs, which includes "TV" alongside
"The 30th".[152] Eilish explained her decision to surprise-release the EP during the
interview with Lowe. She told him that while work on her third studio album was
coming soon, she refused to wait until that time to put "TV" and "The 30th" on a track
list. She wanted to spread their messages to her fans as soon as possible, noting the
immediacy of its lyrics: "These songs are really current for me, and they're songs
that I want to have said right now."[153] Another reason was Eilish had grown tired of
doing heavy, traditional promotion for upcoming music. She wanted to release songs
like she had early in her career, previewing them for fans in live concerts before
releasing them without much marketing.[154][155]
Eilish worked with Apple Music to exclusively host a film of one of the Happier Than
Ever tour concerts, specifically one of her shows at The O2 Arena in London. She
billed the film as a way for fans who missed out on tickets to experience the tour,
wanting more people to recognize her showmanship live.[156][157][158] Three concerts,
titled Happier Than Ever, The Hometown Encore, were held at the Kia
Forum in Inglewood, California, from December 13 to 16, 2022, as part of the
tour.[159][160]
In 2023, Eilish made her acting debut in the Amazon Prime Video satirical thriller
series Swarm.[161] She starred as Eva, the leader of a cult inspired by NXIVM, and
received positive reviews for her performance.[162]
Eilish wrote the song "What Was I Made For?" for the soundtrack of the 2023
film Barbie. According to statements posted on her social media, she was inspired to
write the song after seeing unfinished scenes of the movie during its production.[163] In
2024, the song won the Academy Award for Best Original Song and two Grammy
Awards for Song of the Year and Best Song Written for Visual Media. It became the
tenth song in history to win both an Academy Award for Best Original Song and a
Grammy Award for Song of the Year, and Eilish became the youngest person ever to
win two Academy Awards in any category.[164]
2024–present: Hit Me Hard and Soft
Main article: Hit Me Hard and Soft
On April 8, 2024, Eilish announced her third studio album, Hit Me Hard and Soft,
which was released on May 17, 2024.[165][166][167] She announced a tour to support the
album, Hit Me Hard and Soft: The Tour, on April 29, 2024, with concerts in North
America, Oceania and Europe between September 2024 and July 2025. [168] Also in
April, Eilish was announced to be the next 'featured artist' inside of Fortnite spin-off
game, Fortnite Festival, along with an unlockable outfit in the game.[169]
Artistry
Musical style, songwriting, and music videos

Eilish performing for MTV in 2019


"Ocean Eyes" (2015)
Duration: 31 seconds.0:31
A sample of Eilish's debut studio single "Ocean Eyes", which combines elements of pop, dream-pop, synth-
pop, indie-pop and R&B.[170][171][172][173][174]

Problems playing this file? See media help.

Eilish has a soprano vocal range.[175] Avery Stone of Noisey described her vocals as
"ethereal",[176] and Maura Johnston of Rolling Stone characterized them as
"whispery".[177] Doreen St. Félix of The New Yorker opined that she has a "husky,
slurring voice that she can thin out to reedy".[178] Music critic Robert Christgau wrote
that while Eilish is musically and commercially pop, her brand also "reminds us how
amorphous [pop] has become", describing her soprano as "too diminutive for vocal
calisthenics", adding that her "playful version of teen-goth angst" and "electro-
saturated debut album" captivated a diverse audience.[179] Her music incorporates
pop,[180] dark pop,[181] electropop,[181] emo pop,[182] experimental pop,[183] goth-pop,[184] indie
pop,[181][185] teen pop,[186] alt-pop,[181][187][188] and pop rock.[189] Musicologist Jessica Holmes
argued that much of Eilish's music concerns her depression.[190]
Eilish and her brother, Finneas, collaborate on songwriting.[191][192] Finneas writes for
Eilish's albums, produces her music, and also performs in live shows. [193][191] Eilish and
Finneas "like to completely make up things and become characters" and "have
songs that are really fictional".[192] Eilish said a number of the songs also derive from
her and Finneas' experiences.[192] They try to write "really interesting and
conversational" lyrics: "We try to say stuff that doesn't have to be that deep [...] but
you say something way deeper in a certain way that makes sense, but you haven't
really thought about."[192] Finneas has stated that when he writes for his sister, he
aims to "write [songs] that I think she'll relate to and enjoy singing and empathise
with the lyrics and make her own".[194] When he writes with Eilish, he tries "to help her
tell whatever story she's trying to tell, bounce ideas off of her, listen to her ideas",
and use a language that fits her voice telling the story.[194]
Eilish had wanted to direct her own music videos since age 14 but was initially not
given the opportunity due to lack of experience.[195] In 2019, she made her directorial
debut with the video for her song "Xanny".[196]
Influences
Eilish grew up listening to the Beatles, Justin Bieber, Green Day,[197] the
1975,[198] Arctic Monkeys, Linkin Park[199] and Lana Del Rey.[200] She has said that
stumbling upon Aurora's "Runaway" on YouTube inspired her to pursue a music
career.[201] Hip hop is her favorite genre and biggest inspiration.[202]
She has recounted that Matty Healy was an early inspiration for her: "His show is the
second show I ever went to in my life. He changed so much about who I am, how I
write music."[198][203] She has also cited Tyler, the Creator, Childish Gambino, and Avril
Lavigne as major musical and style influences.[204][205] Other influences
include Adele,[206] Earl Sweatshirt, James Blake, Amy Winehouse, the Spice
Girls, Lorde, Marina and the Diamonds, Britney Spears, Taylor Swift, Nicki
Minaj, XXXTentacion, and Twenty One Pilots.[215] She has also shown appreciation
for Paramore after inviting Hayley Williams to join her set during Williams's
first Coachella set to perform an acoustic version of "Misery Business" and sing
"Happier Than Ever".[216] Eilish also named Rihanna as an inspiration for her style
choices after she called fashion her "defense mechanism" during an acceptance
speech.[217] She has also credited Damon Albarn for changing the way she views art
and music creation.[218]
Eilish has been compared in the media to Lavigne, Lorde and Del Rey,[219][220][221] the
last of whom she says she does not want to be compared to, saying, "That woman
has made her brand so perfect for her whole career and she shouldn't have to hear
that."[222] Eilish said that Ariana Grande's 2019 album Thank U, Next inspired her to
continue making music.[223]
Public image and recognitions
Main article: List of awards and nominations received by Billie Eilish

Eilish performing in November 2019 at Corona Capital


Eilish is the recipient of numerous awards, including nine Grammy Awards,
two American Music Awards,[224] two MTV Europe Music Awards,[225] three MTV Video
Music Awards,[226] two Academy Awards, two Guinness World Records,[227][228] three Brit
Awards,[229][230] and three Billboard Music Awards.[231]
She has appeared in several lists such as Rolling Stone's 2023 revision of the 200
Greatest Singers of All Time and Time's 2019 "Time 100 Next" list.[232][233] She is the
youngest person, second person ever, and first female artist to win the four main
Grammy categories—Best New Artist, Record of the Year, Song of the Year,
and Album of the Year—in the same year.[234] In 2022, Eilish won the Academy Award
for Best Original Song for "No Time to Die" from the James Bond film of the same
name, becoming the first person born in the 21st century ever to win an Academy
Award in any category, and she remains the only. With her win in the same
category in 2024 for "What Was I Made For?" from Barbie (2023), she became the
youngest person ever to win two Academy Awards in any category and the song
became the tenth song in history to win both an Academy Award for Best Original
Song and a Grammy Award for Song of the Year, the first song this century to
achieve this milestone.[164]
Style
Much of the media attention surrounding Eilish has revolved around her fashion
style, which consists primarily of baggy, oversized clothing.[235][236][38] In 2017, she said
she likes dressing out of her comfort zone to feel like she grabs the attention of
everyone around her.[237] She tries to be "really different from a lot of people" and
dresses opposite to what others wear.[192] Aiming to "look memorable", Eilish said that
she "proved to people that [she's] more important than they think" and likes being
"kind of intimidating, so people will listen up."[192][238][239] In 2019, she said: "Over time it's
kind of become a thing, 'Billie Eilish, the creepy, weird, scary girl.' And I don't like
that. It's lame. I just don't want to stay one thing."[240]
In May 2019, Eilish appeared in a Calvin Klein advertisement, where she mentioned
that she dresses in baggy clothes to prevent people from judging her body.[241][242] In a
March 2020 live show in Miami, as part of the Where Do We Go? Tour, she
premiered Not My Responsibility, a short film which addresses her experiences of
body shaming.[243] Not My Responsibility was uploaded to Eilish's YouTube channel in
May 2020.[244]
Eilish was on the cover of the June 2021 issue of British Vogue. The photoshoot
by Craig McDean featured her dressed in lingerie, specifically focused
on corsets.[245][246] Eilish made her first appearance at the Met Gala in 2021, which had
the theme "In America: A Lexicon of Fashion", wearing an Oscar de la Renta gown
under the condition that the fashion house would permanently end its use of real
fur.[247] Though the dress was inspired by the original Barbie doll, fashion critics
observed its likeness to Golden Age star Marilyn Monroe, who wore a tulle de la
Renta gown in the early 1950s.[248]
Products and endorsements
In April 2019, Eilish released clothing in collaboration with Takashi
Murakami,[249][250] inspired by her music video for "You Should See Me in a Crown",
also directed and animated by Murakami, as well as a limited edition vinyl figure of
herself from the video.[251] Eilish also collaborated with Adobe Creative Cloud the
same month for a series of advertisements[252] as well as a social media art contest,
where users would submit artwork with the hashtag "#BILLIExADOBE".[253][254]
Eilish appeared in the debut of Calvin Klein's #MyCalvins ad campaign in May
2019,[255][256] as well as the Ad Council's "Seize the Awkward" campaign, a series
of public service announcements targeting mental health awareness.[257][258] She
fronted MCM Worldwide's fall 2019 advertising campaign in July 2019,[259] and later
that month collaborated with Los Angeles-based clothing brand Freak City on a
clothing line.[260][261][262] Also in July 2019, she performed at a dinner hosted
by Chanel on Shelter Island to celebrate the brand's pop-up yacht club.[263][264]
In August 2019, Eilish partnered with Apple to allow Apple Store customers to
experiment with her song "You Should See Me in a Crown" in Music Lab sessions in
its stores.[265] Eilish's collaboration with the clothing company Siberia Hills[266][267] was
met with controversy after it was revealed that the company had used plagiarized
designs of fan art of the character Nozomi Tojo from Love Live!, drawn by artist
Makoto Kurokawa, for Eilish's clothing line.[268] The brand later clarified that Eilish had
no knowledge of the plagiarism.[269][270]
In November 2021, she debuted "Eilish", her perfume brand, which
is vegan and cruelty-free.[271][272]
Advocacy
Eilish has a history of political activism, publicly expressing her views on a multitude
of political issues.[273] She has been vocal with regard to environmental causes,
including climate change awareness.[274][275][276] Among other pursuits, Eilish signed an
open letter to world leaders urging them to take action against climate-induced
poverty,[277] embarked on an ad campaign encouraging young people to use
technology for environmental advocacy, and hosted a six-day climate seminar in
London titled Overheated to discuss topics such as sustainable fashion and youth
activism.[278][279] Her 2019 single "All the Good Girls Go to Hell" and its subsequent
video center around climate change and use heaven-and-hell imagery to criticize
ignorance of rising sea levels,[280][281] and she permitted the nonprofit CoralWatch to
use "Ocean Eyes" as part of an online awareness campaign about Australia's Great
Barrier Reef.[282] Eilish was raised as a vegetarian, and became vegan in 2014. She is
a regular advocate on social media for animal rights and veganism, and has
criticized the dairy,[283] wool,[284] and mink fur industries.[285] In 2023, Eilish stated she
refuses to travel by private jet.[286]
Eilish has spoken in multiple occasions about women's rights.[287][288] A supporter
of body positivity, she wrote and produced the 2020 short film Not My
Responsibility as a response to body shaming toward her and the double standards
placed upon women's appearances.[289][290][291] "Your Power", one of her 2021 singles,
criticizes the sexual exploitation of young women, primarily by men who hold power
over them.[292][293] Eilish associates herself with the US abortion rights movement; she
expressed rage when Texas implemented its anti-abortion laws in 2021.[294][295] During
the 2022 Glastonbury festival, she performed "Your Power" to condemn the
overturning of Roe v. Wade. She spoke of the decision: "Today is a really, really dark
day for women in the U.S. I'm just going to say that as I cannot bear to think about it
any longer in this moment."[296] She included a reference to Roe v.
Wade's overturning in her 2022 track "TV", much of which she wrote after a draft of
the court decision was leaked online in May.[297][298]
In March 2020, Eilish encouraged fans online to register to vote for the 2020 US
presidential election.[299] In August 2020, she performed at the 2020 Democratic
National Convention and announced her endorsement of Joe Biden's presidential
campaign.[300]
In 2023, Eilish worked with others to start and fund REVERB's Music
Decarbonization Project, and as part of a decarbonization project used solar
powered stage lights.[301][302]
At the 2024 Academy Awards Eilish wore an Artists4Ceasefire pin which calls for a
ceasefire in the 2023 Israel-Hamas war.[303]
Personal life
Eilish lived with her parents in the Highland Park neighborhood of Los Angeles until
2019, when she moved out.[304] She said in 2021 that she still spends many nights in
her childhood bedroom to be close to her parents.[304] She said she received a
diagnosis of Tourette syndrome when she was 11;[305] and that she
has synesthesia[306] and has experienced depression.[307] Eilish has also shared that
she experienced sexual abuse as a child.[308][309][310][311]
Eilish previously dated rapper Brandon Adams, who goes by the stage name
7:AMP.[312] She dated singer Jesse Rutherford from October 2022 to May
2023.[313][314] She has said that she is attracted to both men and women.[315][316]
Billie Eilish is an agnostic.[317]
Discography
Main articles: Billie Eilish discography and List of songs recorded by Billie Eilish
Studio albums
• When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? (2019)
• Happier Than Ever (2021)
• Hit Me Hard and Soft (2024)
Tours
Headlining
• Don't Smile at Me Tour (2017)[318]
• Where's My Mind Tour (2018)[319]
• 1 by 1 Tour (2018–2019)[320]
• When We All Fall Asleep Tour (2019)[321][322]
• Where Do We Go? World Tour (2020)[323]
• Happier Than Ever, The World Tour (2022–2023)[324]
• Hit Me Hard and Soft: The Tour (2024–2025)[168]
Opening act
• Florence and the Machine – High as Hope Tour (2018–2019)[325]
Filmography
Film

Year Title Role Notes Ref.

Short film; also writer and [326]


Not My Responsibility
producer
2020

[327]
Coachella: 20 Years in the Desert Documentary

[328]
Billie Eilish: The World's a Little Blurry Herself Documentary

2021
Happier Than Ever: A Love Letter to Los [329]
Concert film
Angeles

[330]
2022 When Billie Met Lisa Voice; short film
Television

Year Title Role Notes Ref.

[331]
2019 Saturday Night Live Episode: "Woody Harrelson/Billie Eilish"

[332]
2020 Justin Bieber: Seasons Episode: "The Finale"
Herself
[333]
2021 Saturday Night Live Episode: "Billie Eilish"

[334]
2022 Sesame Street Episode: "Elmo's Number Adventure"

[161]
Swarm Eva Episode: "Running Scared"
2023
[335]
Saturday Night Live Herself Episode: "Kate McKinnon/Billie Eilish"

See also
• List of artists who reached number one in the United States
• List of American Grammy Award winners and nominees
• List of most-followed Instagram accounts
• List of most-streamed artists on Spotify
• List of vegans
Notes
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