Quick Facts
In full:
Edward Christopher Sheeran
Born:
February 17, 1991, Halifax, West Yorkshire, England (age 34)

Ed Sheeran (born February 17, 1991, Halifax, West Yorkshire, England) is a British singer-songwriter known for his genre-crossing style infused with elements of folk, rock, rhythm and blues (R&B), pop, and hip-hop.

Early life

As a child, Sheeran was surrounded by art and music, with parents who worked in the arts and a brother who would go on to become a music composer. The family moved to Framlingham, Suffolk, and he showed an interest in music throughout his childhood, joining his church choir at age four and beginning to learn guitar when he was older.

Sheeran has said that he was inspired to become a performer when he was about 11 years old after watching Irish musician Damien Rice perform live. Sheeran began writing his own songs soon after. While still in high school, he self-released the EP The Orange Room (2005) and the albums Spinning Man (2005), Ed Sheeran (2006), and Want Some? (2007) to little attention before moving to London to pursue a music career. There Sheeran performed hundreds of shows at small clubs and gained exposure as the opening act for established performers from a variety of genres—including folk duo Nizlopi, indie rock band the Noisettes, and R&B artist Jay Sean—reflecting his broad influences.

First studio albums

Sheeran came to wide attention with a viral performance of the song “You Need Me, I Don’t Need You,” shared online on music entrepreneur Jamal Edwards’s U.K. hip-hop platform SB.TV in 2010. The song exemplified Sheeran’s blend of hip-hop beats and acoustic guitar, tied together with his signature loop pedal, with which he could record and play back musical sequences in real time, thus adding layers of music to augment his live performances. The song became a hit. Later that same year, he joined rapper Example on tour as a supporting act and came to notice in the United States on Jamie Foxx’s popular radio program The Foxxhole. The song “The A Team,” which would go on to become one of Sheeran’s breakthrough singles, was first released during this period, on the self-released EP Loose Change. Sheeran released the EP No. 5 Collaborations Project in 2011, and, remarkably for a self-released album, it reached number two on the U.K. iTunes chart. Sheeran soon after landed his first recording contract, with Asylum Records, an imprint of Atlantic Records.

Sheeran’s first studio album, + (Plus), was released in 2011. It reached number five on the Billboard 200 chart in the United States, and Sheeran received his first Grammy nomination for the single “The A Team,” which was nominated for song of the year.

In 2014 Sheeran released his second studio album, × (Multiply), his first to reach number one. Sheeran recorded with several high-profile collaborators, including Pharrell Williams, who brought out R&B influences on songs including “Sing” and “Runaway.” The single “Thinking Out Loud” became the first song to spend a full year on the U.K. Top 40 charts and won Grammy Awards in 2016 for song of the year and best pop solo performance. It was also the subject of a copyright infringement lawsuit brought in 2017 by the heirs of Ed Townsend, who co-wrote “Let’s Get It On” (1973) with Marvin Gaye. Townsend’s heirs alleged that Sheeran had copied elements of the older song for use in “Thinking Out Loud,” which Sheeran denied. During the 2023 trial, he and his defense noted that the similar chord progression in both songs was common and found in many other songs, including some that predated “Let’s Get It On.” The jury found in his favor, declaring that he was not liable for copyright infringement. A similar lawsuit, brought by a company that owned partial interest in the Gaye-Townsend song, was dismissed a short time later.

Critical acclaim

Meanwhile, critical acclaim poured in for Sheeran’s follow-up album, 2017’s ÷ (Divide). In 2018 it won a Grammy for best pop vocal album and the album’s chart-topping single, “Shape of You,” won for best pop solo performance.

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Sheeran’s No. 6 Collaborations Project in 2019 saw him working with a parade of the top artists of the day, including Cardi B, Chance the Rapper, Bruno Mars, and Chris Stapleton. In 2021 his next album, = (Equals), was released. Despite mixed reviews—critics pointed to the album’s saccharine lyrics and uninventive style—the album debuted at number one on the Billboard Top Album Sales chart, and its singles “Bad Habits” and “Shivers” both made it into the top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100. He became known for a distinctive presence at his live shows, where he would perform solo with only his guitar and loop pedal.

Personal life

Sheeran had reconnected with childhood friend Cherry Seaborn during a U.S. tour in 2015, and they were married three years later. In 2022, while Sheeran was recording his next album, (Subtract), Seaborn was diagnosed with cancer and had a tumor that was inoperable until after the birth of their second child. During this period, Sheeran was also struggling to cope with the sudden death from a heart attack of close friend Jamal Edwards, who had given him his break on SB.TV. The events had a profound impact on Sheeran, who entirely rewrote the songs on the album while working through his grief. Released in 2023, debuted at number one on the Billboard chart and became Sheeran’s fifth album to take the top spot.

Other albums

Sheeran released a second album in 2023, Autumn Variations, which dropped in October. It was released on his own label, Gingerbread Man Records, and reached number four on the album chart. Critics savaged its songwriting, however, especially after the soul-baring lyrics on . The Guardian called the album “flat and dull as a grey sky,” and NME described listening to its tracks as “akin to aimlessly swiping through Instagram, blurry snaps of followers’ leafy happenings whizzing past in a distracted daze.”

In April 2025 Sheeran released a dance-pop single “Azizam,” the title of which means “my dear” in Fārsī. Produced by Persian-Swedish songwriter Ilya Salmanzadeh, the song incorporates a ghatam (percussion instrument from India) and a santoor (Middle Eastern stringed instrument of the hammered dulcimer family) into its mix. Sheeran also announced his next album, Play, would be released in the fall of 2025.

Rachel Cole The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Quick Facts
Date:
1990 - 2000

Britpop, movement of British rock bands in the 1990s that drew consciously on the tradition of melodic, guitar-based British pop music established by the Beatles. Like nearly all musical youth trends, Britpop was about songs, guitars, jackets, and attitudes—though not necessarily in that order. It was perhaps not so much a movement as a simultaneous emergence of fairly like minds, given shape and direction by the determined boosting of the English music weekly the New Musical Express (NME)—which referred to Paul Weller of the Jam as “the Modfather of Britpop.” Indeed, many of those most associated with the term resisted the pigeonhole it offered.

Various peripheral bands were involved in Britpop—most enjoyably, Pulp, from Sheffield, which was fronted by the lanky veteran rocker Jarvis Cocker (b. September 19, 1963, Sheffield, England) and had its biggest hit with the single “Common People”—but it was essentially about Oasis and Blur. What the two bands had in common was a belief in the classic guitar-based pop song with a sing-along chorus—and a love of fashionable sportswear. Their attitudes were quite different, though. While both reached back to British pop’s golden age of the 1960s, each had a different take on the inheritance.

Oasis stood for authenticity. At heart the band was two brothers from Manchester, guitarist-songwriter Noel Gallagher (in full Noel Thomas David Gallagher; b. May 29, 1967, Manchester, England) and singer Liam Gallagher (byname of William John Paul Gallagher; b. September 21, 1972, Manchester). They were northern, working-class, and swimming in illegal drugs and the same kind of romantic aggressiveness as their hero John Lennon. Founded in 1992, Oasis released its first single, “Supersonic,” in 1994. Their biggest hit was the album (What’s the Story) Morning Glory? (1995) and its best-known track, “Wonderwall.” Oasis toured the United States; they fought; they entered into disastrous marriages, bought big houses, and took more drugs; and by the late 1990s they had faded into a rut of same-sounding songs.

Blur’s take on the pop past borrowed from its reservoir of irony and art school camp—the Rolling StonesMick Jagger’s makeup and Lennon’s whimsies. They were from Essex, the exurban flatlands that separate London from the North Sea. Formed in 1989 and driven by singer Damon Albarn (b. May 23, 1968, London, England) and bassist Alex James (b. November 21, 1968, Bourneouth, England), Blur had minor success as an “indie” band before finding its place with its third album, Parklife (1994), a collection of witty, seemingly light pop songs that held echoes of the Kinks, the Small Faces (see Rod Stewart), and Squeeze (see New Wave). Outgunned and outsold by Oasis in the great Britpop war of 1996, which was reported on by even Britain’s leading newspapers, Blur retreated into the angry art dislocation of their eponymous album (1997) before slowly reemerging via the new popism of 13 (1999).

Peter Silverton