
Thomas Dolby
Biography
Thomas Morgan Robertson is an English musician, producer, entrepreneur and educator. Born on October 14, 1958, in London, England, Dolby is a self-taught musician, and his early musical experiences were with choral singing, guitar and then piano. His adopted last name of Dolby was a reference to the audio noise-reduction process invented by Dolby Laboratories, inspired by his fascination with technology and taken on to differentiate him from popular musician Tom Robinson. In 1979, Dolby formed the Camera Club with Bruce Woolley and later performed with Lene Lovich, penning her hit New Toy. He also worked as a session musician with several artists, including Thompson Twins, Foreigner and Def Leppard, before embarking on his solo career. His debut album, The Golden Age of Wireless, was released in 1982 and was later reconfigured to include his follow-up hit single She Blinded Me With Science, a major success in the US and Canada whose music video was a staple of early MTV. He migrated to Los Angeles and released three more albums, featuring the hits Hyperactive!, Airhead and Close But No Cigar. Dolby performed as part of David Bowie's band at the Live Aid festival in 1985 and produced albums by Joni Mitchell and Prefab Sprout. In 1986, Dolby composed songs for the film Howard the Duck and the score for the film Gothic. In 1988, he married actress Kathleen Beller, with whom he has three children. In the 1990s, Dolby migrated to the San Francisco bay area, and in 1993 he co-founded Headspace, Inc., an interactive audio company who produced small sound files for websites and cell phone ringtones. From 2001 to 2012, Dolby supervised the music for the annual TED Conferences held in Monterey and Long Beach, California. In 2006, he reignited his solo career with the Sole Inhabitant Tour, and in 2010 he released three EPs of new music concurrent with a multiplayer online game, A Map of the Floating City, followed in 2011 by an album of the same name. In 2012, he filmed the documentary The Invisible Lighthouse, which won the DIY Film Festival Award for Best Picture. He became Homewood Professor of the Arts at John Hopkins University in 2014, and starting in 2017, he led the four-year degree program Music for New Media at the Peabody Institute.
Known For

TV
Saturday Night Live
Self (uncredited)
1975
TV
Where Are They Now?
Self
1999

TV
Cachitos de hierro y cromo
Self (archive footage)
2013

Film
Howard the Duck
Bartender in Rock Club
1986
TV
Rock N' Roll Stories
Himself
2013

Film
Koyaanisqatsi
Self (archive footage)
1983
TV
Riverside
Self
1982
TV
100 Greatest One Hit Wonders of the 80s
2009

TV
100 Greatest Songs of the '80s
Self
2006

Film
Rockula
Stanley
1990

Film
Roger Waters: The Wall - Live in Berlin
Self - Synthesizer, vocals
1990

Film
Ken Russell's ABC of British Music
Self (archive)
1988

Film
Thomas Dolby - Live Wireless
Himself - vocals, synthesizer
1983
Filmography
2013TVCachitos de hierro y cromoas Self (archive footage)2013TVRock N' Roll Storiesas Himself2009TV100 Greatest One Hit Wonders of the 80s2006TV100 Greatest Songs of the '80sas Self1999TVWhere Are They Now?as Self1990FilmRoger Waters: The Wall - Live in Berlinas Self - Synthesizer, vocals1990FilmRockulaas Stanley1988FilmKen Russell's ABC of British Musicas Self (archive)1986FilmHoward the Duckas Bartender in Rock Club1983FilmThomas Dolby - Live Wirelessas Himself - vocals, synthesizer1983FilmKoyaanisqatsias Self (archive footage)1982TVRiversideas Self1975TVSaturday Night Liveas Self (uncredited)