2003–2007: Career beginnings and Marry Me In 2003, Clark released an
EP with fellow Berklee students entitled
Ratsliveonnoevilstar. She also worked with Heavy Rotation Records, where "she revealed a much more private and intimate rendering of 'Count' for
Dorm Sessions Vol. 1" and studied with professor of guitar Lauren Passarelli. Shortly after leaving Berklee, she returned home to Texas, where she joined
the Polyphonic Spree just before they embarked on a European tour. and she was also briefly in a
noise rock band called the Skull Fuckers. Clark left the Polyphonic Spree and joined
Sufjan Stevens' touring band in 2006. During this period, she recorded and released an EP titled
Paris Is Burning (2006). In 2006, she began recording a studio album under the stage name St. Vincent. In an interview on
The Colbert Report, she said that she "took [her] moniker from a line in a
Nick Cave song" that referred to the hospital where
Dylan Thomas died: "And Dylan Thomas died drunk in /
St. Vincent's hospital" (from Cave's song "There She Goes, My Beautiful World", from the 2004 album
Abattoir Blues / The Lyre of Orpheus). The name is also a reference to her great-grandmother, whose middle name was St. Vincent. Clark released her debut album,
Marry Me, on July 10, 2007, on
Beggars Banquet Records. The album was named after a line from the television sitcom
Arrested Development. The album was well received by critics, who compared Clark to the likes of
Kate Bush and David Bowie and lauded the album for its arrangements, themes and style. In their review,
The A.V. Club said: "There's a point where too much happiness turns into madness, and St. Vincent's multi-instrumentalist Annie Clark knows this place well". After returning to New York from a lengthy tour, Clark began working on her second album. Her inspiration reportedly came from several films, including
Disney movies: "Well, the truth is that I had come back from a pretty long — you know, about a year-and-a-half of touring, and so my brain was sort of all circuit boards that were a little bit fried", Clark said. "So I started watching films as sort of a way to get back into being human. And then it started to just really inform the entire record." Clark, who did not have a studio at the time, began writing the album in her apartment on her computer using
GarageBand and
MIDI, because she had gotten noise complaints from neighbors. The songs were inspired largely by scenes from various children's films. Clark said she imagined soundtracks for certain scenes in films when writing the music and lyrics, It was also well received and gained more commercial attention than its predecessor.
Spin gave the album eight out of ten stars, noting its "[juxtaposition of] the cruel and the kind, and here, the baroque arrangements are even more complex and her voice even prettier, with both only underlining the dark currents running through her songs".
Entertainment Weekly said the album "plays up the contrasts, [with Clark] letting her church-choir voice linger on lyrics that hint darkly at themes of violence, sex, and general chaos", and branded it "a uniquely potent cocktail of sounds and moods".
Actor charted well for an independent release, peaking at No. 9 on
Billboards
Independent Albums chart, No. 5 on the Tastemaker Albums chart, and No. 90 on the
Billboard 200. Although it spawned no singles (except in the UK, where "
Actor Out of Work" was issued as a 7" vinyl single), music videos for "Marrow" and "Actor Out of Work" were released, and aired on several music channels. A promotional music video for "Laughing with a Mouth of Blood", featuring
Portlandia's
Fred Armisen and
Carrie Brownstein (then of ThunderAnt), was also filmed. Two soundtracks for
The Twilight Saga have featured Clark's songs. "Rosyln", in collaboration with
indie folk band
Bon Iver, appeared on the 2009 soundtrack of
New Moon; and "The Antidote" was written for and appeared on 2012's
Breaking Dawn – Part 2. In November 2010, Clark appeared with American rappers
Kid Cudi and
Cage on
Late Night with Jimmy Fallon. They performed "Maniac" from Cudi's
Man on the Moon II: The Legend of Mr. Rager, which prominently samples "The Strangers", the opening song on
Actor.
2011–2012: Strange Mercy and collaborations Clark spent much of her time in
Seattle writing her third album,
Strange Mercy, in October 2010. In an interview with
Julie Klausner for
Spin magazine, she recalled: "[Death Cab for Cutie drummer]
Jason McGerr had an office that was closing. He offered me the space for a month, for all of October. I was alone. I stayed at the Ace Hotel downtown, in one of the rooms with a shared bathroom. I would just get up in the morning and caffeinate, and run, and go to the studio for 12 hours, come back, eat dinner alone with a book, have a glass of wine, and go to bed. And do it all over again." On January 12, 2011, Clark announced via
Twitter that she was working on
Strange Mercy, a follow-up to
Actor. In early March 2011, producer
John Congleton, who also worked with Clark on
Actor, said that he and Clark were nearly a third of the way through recording it. On July 4, Clark stated via Twitter that if enough followers tweeted the
hashtag "#strangemercy", she would release a track from the album. On July 22, after the threshold was met, she released "Surgeon" for download and streaming on her official website. In August 2011, Clark was interviewed and featured on the cover of
Spin magazine. On August 24, 2011, a music video was released for the song "Cruel", and on September 5, the entire album was put up for streaming on
NPR Music. On August 25, 2011, she debuted
Strange Mercy in the Temple of Dendur room at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, introducing
Toko Yasuda (ex-
Enon),
Matt Johnson, and Daniel Mintseris as members of her live band. The album was released September 13, 2011.
Strange Mercy received widespread acclaim from
music critics. It achieved an overall rating of 8.1/10 at AnyDecentMusic? based on 36 reviews. It was St. Vincent's highest-charting album yet, peaking at No. 19 on the US
Billboard 200. Clark stated, "I don't think it's the best record I'll ever make, but I think it's a good record." She began touring the US and Europe in support of the record in the fall of 2011 and continued a worldwide tour throughout 2012. In 2011, Clark composed "Proven Badlands", an instrumental piece based on "The Sequel" from her sophomore release
Actor, for ensemble Music's album
Beautiful Mechanical. In 2012, Clark was featured on
Andrew Bird's album
Break It Yourself singing on "Lusitania". On June 14, 2012, "Who", the first single from her collaboration with
David Byrne, formerly of
Talking Heads, was released. The single came from their album
Love This Giant, which was released September 11, 2012. On September 18, 2012, Clark participated in the "30 Songs / 30 Days" campaign to support
Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide, a multiplatform project inspired by
Nicholas Kristof and
Sheryl WuDunn's bestselling book. Clark also provided guest vocals for the song "What's the Use of Won'drin'" on the album
Who Killed Amanda Palmer from
Amanda Palmer, of
the Dresden Dolls.
2013–2015: St. Vincent On May 28, 2013, David Byrne and St. Vincent released
Brass Tactics, which includes a previously unreleased
Love This Giant bonus track, two remixes, and two live tracks. In November 2013, Clark received the Smithsonian American Ingenuity Award for Performing Arts and signed to
Loma Vista Recordings. The new label released "
Birth in Reverse" the following month, the first single from Clark's fourth album,
St. Vincent, The second single, "
Digital Witness", was released in January 2014, and the album was released the next month to critical acclaim. A number of publications, including
The Guardian,
Entertainment Weekly,
NME,
Gigwise, and
MusicOMH, ranked it as the No. 1 album of 2014, while
Time put it at No. 2 and
Rolling Stone ranked it No. 4. Clark received her first
Grammy, as
St Vincent won "Best Alternative Music Album" in February 2015. On April 10, 2014, Clark joined
Nirvana on stage, performing lead vocals on "
Lithium" at the 29th
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony. She also provided vocals on the
Swans' album
To Be Kind. On August 12 and 13, 2014, Clark filled in for
Fred Armisen, who was away filming the fifth season of
Portlandia, as band leader for
the 8G Band on
Late Night with Seth Meyers. Clark toured the United States, Europe, Australia, and Asia throughout 2014, ending the year as the supporting act for
the Black Keys. She extended her
Digital Witness tour into the summer of 2015, and performed alongside the
Pixies and
Beck at
Boston Calling Music Festival in May 2015. A demo of "
Teenage Talk", a track she had previously recorded but that was not included on her eponymous album, premiered on the
HBO series
Girls on March 10, 2015. The song was released as a single on April 6. On May 17, 2015, Clark performed with the
Dallas Symphony Orchestra for the inaugural Soluna: International Music & Arts Festival.
2016–2019: Masseduction On April 12, 2016, it was announced that Clark would make her film directorial debut helming one of the segments of the women-directed anthology horror film
XX. In June 2017, St. Vincent released "
New York", the lead single from her fifth album. The
Fear the Future Tour was announced in June 2017, with dates between October 2017 and February 2018.
Masseduction, Clark's fifth studio album, was released in October 2017 through
Loma Vista Recordings. It was met with "universal acclaim" with an average score of 88 on
Metacritic. In the US,
Masseduction debuted at No. 10 on the
Billboard 200, becoming St. Vincent's first album to peak in the top ten of the chart, selling 29,000 units in its first week. signature guitar during her
Fear the Future Tour Clark was
Record Store Day's ambassador for 2017, making her its first female ambassador. In 2018, the singer embarked on the
I Am a Lot Like You! Tour, a second tour promoting the album, which took her to perform at
Coachella in April. One of her performances, "Slow Disco", inspired the release of a new rendition of the track titled "Fast Slow Disco" in June. She released
MassEducation, an acoustic rendition of her previous album. The album was given an 80 on Metacritic and praised by
Entertainment Weekly for her versatile lyrics and strong vocals. That same year, St. Vincent collaborated with the American rock band
Sleater-Kinney to produce their ninth studio album, ''
The Center Won't Hold'', which was released the following year. In 2019, St. Vincent performed at the
61st Annual Grammy Awards, where she joined
Dua Lipa for a medley of her own "Masseduction", the late
Aretha Franklin's "
Respect", and Lipa's
Calvin Harris collaboration "
One Kiss". The same night, "Masseduction" was awarded the Grammy for
Best Rock Song. That summer, St. Vincent was credited as a co-writer on "
Cruel Summer" with
Taylor Swift and
Jack Antonoff for Swift's seventh studio album
Lover (2019). In December, she released
Masseduction Rewired, a collection of remixes curated by Russian techno DJ
Nina Kraviz.
2020–2023: ''Daddy's Home'' In 2020, St. Vincent was credited as a guitarist on "Texas Man" and as a co-writer on "Young Man" with
the Chicks, Antonoff, and
Justin Tranter for the Chicks' eighth studio album
Gaslighter. In August 2020, St. Vincent collaborated with Japanese musician
Yoshiki to release a classical arrangement of "New York". In October 2020, St. Vincent's online instruction class on Creativity and Songwriting was added to the
MasterClass series. In late 2020, St. Vincent was featured on the track "Chalk Tablet Towers" from the
first season of the
Song Machine project by
Gorillaz. On December 15, 2020, St. Vincent announced she would be releasing her sixth studio album in 2021. On February 25, 2021, street posters revealed the ''
Daddy's Home'' album would be released on May 14, 2021. The album's first single "
Pay Your Way in Pain" was released March 4, 2021, along with a music video. The album's second single "The Melting of the Sun" was released April 1, 2021, alongside a lyric video. Two days later St. Vincent was the musical guest
on Saturday Night Live, performing both "Pay Your Way in Pain" and "The Melting of the Sun". St. Vincent starred in the 2020 psychological thriller film
The Nowhere Inn, featuring a script written by her and
Carrie Brownstein, about a fictional attempt to make a documentary on St. Vincent's musical career. Additionally, she wrote the film's soundtrack, releasing on digital streaming services on September 17, 2021, and later on limited vinyl on April 23, 2022, as part of
Record Store Day. She contributed a cover of the
Metallica song "
Sad but True" to the charity tribute album
The Metallica Blacklist, released in September 2021. On April 3, 2022, ''Daddy's Home'' won the award for
Best Alternative Music Album at the
64th Annual Grammy Awards. On June 3, 2022, St. Vincent released her cover of
Lipps Inc.'s "
Funkytown" appearing on the
soundtrack for
Illumination's film
Minions: The Rise of Gru. On February 13, 2023, St. Vincent joined Yoshiki on stage at
Royal Albert Hall to perform an orchestral version of "New York". In September 2023, St. Vincent performed in the music documentary film
Yoshiki: Under the Sky.
2024–present: All Born Screaming and Live with Orchestra On February 29, 2024, St. Vincent released "Broken Man", the lead single from her seventh studio album
All Born Screaming which was released on April 26, 2024. A second single, "Flea", was released on March 28, same day the All Born Screaming Tour was officially announced. Upon release, the album received critical acclaim, aggregating a
weighted average score of 89 on
Metacritic. A profile in
The New York Times after the album's release noted: "Seven albums and 17 years into an acclaimed solo career, Clark has eked out a singular space in music, occasionally intersecting with the mainstream but for the most part staying uncompromisingly countercultural", labeling tracks from the new release "some of the heaviest, darkest and weirdest St. Vincent music to date. 'That’s what I want from music right now, personally,' Clark said, safe in the shade of the California sun. 'I would like a pummeling. I want something to feel dangerous'". On November 15, 2024, St. Vincent released a Spanish-language version of
All Born Screaming entitled
Todos Nacen Gritando. In an interview prior to
Todos Nacen Gritandos release, Clark said that translating and recording the album was "a beautiful exercise and an attempt to offer a little thanks to Spanish-language fans who have met me in my native tongue for seven records". On February 2, 2025, St. Vincent attended the
67th Annual Grammy Awards where she won in three separate categories for
Best Rock Song,
Best Alternative Music Performance, and
Best Alternative Music Album. The latter category marked her third win in the category, extending her record there as the female soloist with the most wins. On September 3, 2025, St. Vincent performed on the
BBC Proms alongside
Jules Buckley and his orchestra, marking the final date of her All Born Screaming Tour, at the
Royal Albert Hall. Inspired by the experience, in 2026 the artist announced Live with Orchestra, a concert series where she's joined by Buckley and his orchestra on several North American cities.. The Royal Albert Hall concert was released as
Live in London!, her first live album, on March 20, 2026. == Musical style and influences ==