Karen Harding

Karen Harding
Born (1991-11-18) 18 November 1991
Origin Consett, County Durham, England
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Singer
  • songwriter
Instruments Vocals
Years active 2010–present
Labels

Karen Harding (born 18 November 1991) is an English singer and songwriter from Consett, County Durham. She released her debut single, "Say Something" in February 2015 which managed to chart within the Top 10.

Early life

Born to an English father and Filipino mother,[1] Harding grew up in Consett and attended Moorside Community Technology College.[2] She used to work at her parents' oriental food store, and in 2008, won a regional music competition called Music Means Life.[3] One of her first recordings was a cover of the anti-racism song "Strange Fruit" (made famous by Billie Holiday).[4] She is a supporter of Newcastle United.

Career

In 2010, she competed on the television programme Eurovision: Your Country Needs You, the national final deciding who would represent the United Kingdom in that year's Eurovision Song Contest.[5][6][7] She was eliminated in the penultimate round after singing Kylie Minogue's "What Do I Have to Do".[8] Harding was a contestant on the tenth series of the television singing competition The X Factor, but was eliminated at the boot camp stage during the controversial six-chair challenge.[9][10]

Following The X Factor, Harding was approached by producer MNEK, who had seen a video she uploaded onto the internet of her covering Disclosure's "Latch".[11] She was subsequently signed by Disclosure's record label, Method Records.[12] Her debut single, the MNEK-produced "Say Something", was released in January 2015 via Method and Capitol Records[13] and attracted notice from Fact magazine, MuuMuse, Noisey, and The Singles Jukebox.[14][15][16][17] "Say Something" entered and peaked at number seven on the UK Singles Chart, accompanied by frequent airplay on BBC Radio 1 and its sister station, 1Xtra.[18][19][20] It spent 26 weeks on the Official charts and achieved Gold status.

Harding has been working with producers and songwriters such as Tom Aspaul, CocknBullKid, Mark J. Feist, Rodney Jerkins, Jimmy Napes, and Richard Stannard.[12] She is featured on house duo Arches' single "New Love", which premiered in April 2015,[21] and on Blonde's single "Feel Good (It's Alright)", released in August.[22] Harding played at several festivals during mid 2015, including Birmingham Pride, Ibiza Rocks, Lovebox, Manchester Pride, and Parklife.[23]

Harding's influences include female solo artists such as Mariah Carey, Whitney Houston, Janet Jackson, and Lisa Stansfield, as well as dance and garage acts Artful Dodger, Craig David, and Madison Avenue.[1][10] She has also cited house music of the 1990s as an influence.[11]

In May 2016, Harding was selected to perform the national anthem at the 2016 FA Cup Final. However, she missed her cue, and only managed to join in with the crowd for the last few lines.[24]

Discography

Singles

Title Year Peak chart positions Certifications Album
UK
[25]
IRE
[26]
SCO
[27]
BEL
(Wa)

[28]
"Say Something" 2015 7731180 TBA
"Open My Eyes" 2016
"Like I Can"
(with Tough Love)
"Runaway"[30]
(with Tom Ferry)
2018
Title Year Peak chart positions Certifications Album
UK
[25][31]
IRE
[26]
"New Love"
(Arches featuring Karen Harding)
2015 Non-album singles
"Feel Good (It's Alright)"
(Blonde featuring Karen Harding)
76
"Sweet Lies"
(Wilkinson featuring Karen Harding)
2016 Hypnotic
"Good for Me"
(Giorgio Moroder featuring Karen Harding)
TBA
"Gun Shy"
(ImanoS featuring Pusha T & Karen Harding)
2017 xXx: Return of Xander Cage
(Music from the Motion Picture)
"Down"
(FooR featuring Karen Harding)
Non-album singles
"The Weekend"
(This Diamond Life featuring Karen Harding)
"More & More"
(Tom Zanetti featuring Karen Harding)
73

Guest appearances

Title Year Artist Album
"All U Needs"[32] 2018 Example Bangers & Ballads

Songwriting credits

Title Year Artist(s) Album Credits Written with
"Shame" 2016 Alex Newell POWER EP Co-writer George Tizzard, Rick Parkhouse, Thomas Dutton
"Pyramids" 2018 Kokiri Pyramids Single Co-writer Tonino Speciale, David Asante
"Shame on You" 2018 Claire Richards My Wildest Dreams Co-writer Daniel Davidsen, Peter Wallevik, Mich Hansen, Chelcee Grimes

References

  1. 1 2 "Get To Know: Karen Harding". HUNGER TV.
  2. Barry Nelson. "Music provides life – and a recording contract for Karen". The Northern Echo.
  3. Barry Nelson. "Music provides life – and a recording contract for Karen". The Northern Echo.
  4. "Serving up a top 10: Former Sunderland takeaway worker Karen Harding reaches number seven in the charts". sunderlandecho.com.
  5. "BBC – Karen from Consett will sing on Your Country Needs You". BBC. Retrieved 10 August 2016.
  6. Katie Davies (6 March 2010). "Singer Karen Harding aiming for Eurovision". nechronicle.
  7. "Eurovision hopeful has previously beaten Joe McElderry in a singing contest". Daily Star. United Kingdom.
  8. "Josh flying the flag for United Kingdom in Oslo". Eurovision.tv.
  9. John Plunkett. "X Factor viewers complain over 'cruel' bootcamp twist". The Guardian.
  10. 1 2 "Karen Harding X Factor MNEK Debut Single 'Say Something' – Entertainment – Grazia Daily". Grazia Live.
  11. 1 2 Duke (27 January 2015). "Consett singer Karen Harding heading for the top 10 with Say Something". nechronicle.
  12. 1 2 "The 405 meets Karen Harding". The 405.
  13. "iTunes Music – Say Something – Single by Karen Harding". iTunes Store.
  14. Bradley Stern. ""Say Something" Video: Karen Harding Takes Over The Dance Floor". MuuMuse.
  15. "The Singles Jukebox". Thesinglesjukebox.com. Retrieved 10 August 2016.
  16. "PREMIERE: Karen Harding – "Say Something"". NOISEY.
  17. "Stream Wookie's remix of newcomer Karen Harding's 'Say Something'". Factmag.com. Retrieved 10 August 2016.
  18. "Uptown Funk scores 7th week at Number 1". officialcharts.com.
  19. "BBC – Radio 1Xtra – Playlist". Radio 1Xtra.
  20. "BBC – Radio 1 – Playlist". Radio 1.
  21. "Premiere: Arches "New Love" ft Karen Harding". Wonderland Magazine.
  22. "VIDEO: Blonde Feat Karen Harding 'Feel Good (It's Alright)' - Music". Dropout UK.
  23. "Karen Harding". loveboxfestival.com.
  24. "FA Cup final 2016: Singer Karen Harding misses cue to sing national anthem". BBC Sport. 21 May 2016. Retrieved 10 August 2016.
  25. 1 2 "Karen Harding > UK Charts". Officialcharts.com/. Official Charts Company.
  26. 1 2 Hung, Steffen. "Discography Karen Harding". Irish Charts Portal. Hung Medien (Steffen Hung).
  27. "Official Scottish Singles Chart Top 100 | Official Charts Company". Officialcharts.com. Retrieved 10 August 2016.
  28. "Karen Harding – Say Something". Ultratop.be. Retrieved 10 August 2016.
  29. "Certified Awards Search" (To access, enter the search parameter "Karen Harding" and select "Search by Keyword"). British Phonographic Industry. Retrieved 15 February 2018.
  30. "Runaway – Single by Karen Harding & Tom Ferry on Apple Music". iTunes Store (AU). Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  31. "Tom Zanetti" (select "Singles" tab). Official Charts Company. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  32. "Bangers & Ballads by Example". iTunes (UK). 17 August 2018.
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