Album / Title
By: Damhnait Doyle
Origin: Labrador City, Labrador, → St. John's, Newfoundland → Toronto, Ontario, 🇨🇦
Damhnait Doyle is a Newfoundland and Labrador-born singer, songwriter, performer, broadcaster, and creator whose career has moved across major-label pop rock, East Coast songwriting, roots music, collaborative group work, television, radio, and public cultural life. Born in Labrador City and raised in St. John’s, Doyle emerged in the mid-1990s as one of Atlantic Canada’s most distinctive young voices, building a career that has included solo albums, acclaimed work with Shaye and The Heartbroken, national touring, songwriting for other artists, film and television placements, awards recognition, and a later role as a CBC Music host.
Doyle’s debut album, Shadows Wake Me, was released in 1996 on Latitude Records and distributed in Canada by EMI Music Canada. Recorded and mixed at Orchard Studio with producer Ken Myhr, the album introduced her as a young songwriter with a striking voice and a strong sense of emotional detail. Songs such as “A List of Things,” “Nothing Like the Truth,” “Las Vegas,” “Signal Hill,” “Shoreline,” “Whatever You Need,” and “Jumping the Shadows” placed Doyle within the alternative pop and singer-songwriter landscape of the period while retaining a distinctly Atlantic Canadian identity. “A List of Things” became one of her early signature songs, helping bring national attention to a debut that led to major award recognition, including JUNO and East Coast Music Award nominations.
Her second album, Hyperdramatic, released by EMI Music Canada in 2000, marked a sharper, more polished pop rock turn. Produced and arranged by Dave Hodge, the album included “Maybe It’s You,” “So Well,” “Hyperdramatic,” “Tattooed,” “Learn To Crawl,” “Lie To You,” “Never Too Late,” “Elusive Drug,” “(Because I) Love Myself,” “Sleep Past You,” and “Maybe a Son.” The album’s credits show a wide network of Canadian musicians and studio contributors, including Steve Webster, Randy Cooke, Mike Borkosky, Nick Hynes, Tim Welch, Brian West, Basil Chaisson, Kurt Swinghammer, Dave Hodge, Erin Donovan, Paul Brundtland, Kevin Fox, and others. Hyperdramatic became one of Doyle’s defining releases, with “Tattooed” standing out as one of her best-known singles and later finding a long afterlife online through its video and fan circulation.
The 1999 promo single Tattooed, issued by EMI Music Canada, showed the commercial push behind the song with an edit, LP version, Mike Shipley CHR Mix, and Big Phat Bottom Mix. Written by Damhnait Doyle and Christopher Ward, produced by Dave Hodge, and engineered and mixed on most versions by Jeff McCulloch, the single captured the dramatic pop-rock sound that made Doyle’s early EMI period so memorable. The follow-up promo single Never Too Late, released in 2000, continued that momentum with a radio mix and album version, again produced by Dave Hodge and engineered and mixed by Jeff McCulloch.
In 2003 Doyle released Davnet, its title taken from the phonetic spelling of her first name. Produced with Gordie Sampson, the album moved her writing toward a more intimate, roots-informed sound while retaining the melodic strength and direct emotional focus that had marked her earlier work. Davnet became a major East Coast success, earning Doyle two 2004 East Coast Music Awards, including Female Artist of the Year and Pop/Rock Recording of the Year. The song “Afterglow” also placed as a finalist in the International Songwriting Competition.
Around this same period, Doyle’s career widened through Shaye, the Atlantic Canadian trio formed with Kim Stockwood and Tara MacLean. Shaye’s debut album, The Bridge, released in 2003, produced major adult-contemporary radio success with “Happy Baby” and “Beauty.” “Happy Baby” earned a SOCAN Award, a Canadian Radio Music Award, and a JUNO nomination, helping establish Shaye as one of the most visible East Coast-rooted pop groups of the decade.
Shaye followed with Lake of Fire in 2006, with the title track and “You’re Not Alone” extending the group’s adult-contemporary radio presence. The trio also appeared in a four-part reality/documentary television series, giving viewers a behind-the-scenes look at the promotional life of the group. With Shaye, Doyle represented Canada at Japan’s 2005 Expo and performed on Canada Day on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, while continuing to maintain her own identity as a solo artist and songwriter.
Doyle’s 2008 solo album Lights Down Low moved into a more intimate acoustic and roots-oriented setting. By this point her writing had matured into a style that could move between direct emotional confession, humour, resilience, and quiet understatement. She was also increasingly active as a collaborator, lending her voice to recordings by other artists and co-writing material that reached performers such as Brian Melo, Eva Avila, Rex Goudie, and Alexz Johnson, along with placements in television and film. Her vocal work has also appeared on recordings by artists including Kevin Parent and Bruce Cockburn.
Doyle has also used music in public-service and documentary contexts. She travelled to Kandahar to perform for Canadian Forces personnel, including as part of a CBC Christmas television special and later as a guest of General Rick Hillier. She also took part in The Song for Africa, a project that used music and documentary storytelling to raise awareness among Canadian youth about the AIDS pandemic in Africa. Her experiences as a musician, traveller, observer, and working woman in the Canadian entertainment industry fed into her first book, Miscellaneous Female, a collection reflecting the humour, strain, and complexity of balancing a creative life across bands, solo work, media appearances, and travel.
In 2009 Doyle formed The Heartbroken with Stuart Cameron, Blake Manning, and Peter Fusco. The group brought together elements of roots rock, country, pop, and road-tested Canadian musicianship, releasing Tonight Tonight in 2010 and Storm Clouds in 2016. The Heartbroken gave Doyle another creative setting outside the solo-artist framework, placing her voice inside a band dynamic built on shared performance, harmonies, and a rougher Americana-influenced sound.
After a long gap between solo albums, Doyle returned in 2019 with Liquor Store Flowers, released through Warner Music Canada. Produced by John Dinsmore, with tracks 1, 2, and 8 produced by Damhnait Doyle with John Dinsmore, the album included “That’s What You Get,” “This Ain’t My Sin,” “Missed Call,” “Shoot To Miss,” “So Clean,” “Birthday Parties,” “Liquor Store Flowers,” “Better Life,” “21 Days,” “Time Bomb,” and “Had To Have Him.” The record drew on adult life, memory, regret, humour, recovery, and self-reckoning, presenting Doyle not as a returning nostalgia act but as a writer with new material, sharper perspective, and a deeper command of her own story.
Doyle’s public role continued to expand in the 2020s. She guest-hosted CBC’s Weekend Mornings in 2020, later becoming a full-time CBC Music radio host. She also co-hosted the 2020 JUNO Awards with Odario Williams and became closely associated with CBC Music’s national radio presence. Her work as a broadcaster brought together her experience as a songwriter, performer, interviewer, and longtime Canadian music figure.
Her industry standing has remained strong. Doyle has been recognized as a seven-time East Coast Music Award winner and two-time JUNO nominee, with a career spanning solo work, Shaye, The Heartbroken, songwriting for other artists, and screen-related projects. In 2024 she was announced as co-host of the 36th annual East Coast Music Awards with Rose Cousins, placing her not only as a performer from the region, but as one of its recognized cultural ambassadors.
In 2026 Doyle returned with new music, including Darlin’, a streaming single connected with producer and multi-instrumentalist Hill Kourkoutis. The release marked her first new solo material in several years and pointed toward another creative chapter rather than a finished legacy. Credits shared for the release list Doyle on lead and background vocals, Kourkoutis on multiple instruments and production, and Davide Di Renzo on drums and tambourine, with mastering by Kristian Montano at Montano Mastering in Toronto.
Damhnait Doyle has been part of the Museum of Canadian Music / CitizenFreak archive since its public launch on July 1, 2010. By then, she was already a 15-year veteran of the Canadian music scene, with major-label solo albums, national touring, award recognition, songwriting credits, and acclaimed group work with Shaye behind her. Her longtime management representative, Sheri Jones of Jones & Co., has also been connected with the Museum since that same launch period, reflecting a relationship that reaches back to the archive’s first public day and continues alongside Doyle’s ongoing work as a recording artist, songwriter, performer, and broadcaster.
-Robert Williston
Damhnait Doyle storms back with the roots-rock of “Darlin’,” her first solo single since 2019. A labor of love between Dav and producer Hill Kourkoutis, they co-wrote the song with longtime friend Kim Stockwood. “Darlin’” finds the Toronto-based songwriter railing against the darkness, as she picks herself up during a difficult time. “It’s a love letter to myself. The younger me, the woman I am now, and the person I will become,” Doyle says. “It’s a reminder that no matter what happens, I’ve got my own back.” Punchy verses give way to a searing chorus driven by howling guitar, and in the midst of the chaos, as it seems the sky may be about to fall, Doyle resists surrender with a soaring reassurance: “When you feel like you’re losing ground,” she sings, “I won’t let you down.” lyrics Fault line forming like a punch in the faceMedia
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Musicians
Damhnait Doyle: lead vocals, background vocals
Hill Kourkoutis: acoustic guitar, electric guitar, bass, lap steel, organ
Davide Di Renzo: drums, tambourine
Production
Produced by Hill Kourkoutis
Engineered by Hill Kourkoutis
Drums engineered by Davide Di Renzo
Mixed by Hill Kourkoutis
Mastered by Kristian Montano at Montano Mastering, Toronto, Ontario
Notes
Released May 13, 2026
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