Born on December 12, 1961 in Kincasslagh, County Donegal, Ireland, Daniel O'Donnell grew up in a Catholic family, but was only six when his father died of a heart attack. Initially destined for a career in banking, he eventually turned to music, and after accompanying his sister Margo, he went solo with his first single, a cover of Johnny McCauley's "My Donegal Shore", for which he invested a colossal sum for him at the time: £1,200. He then joined two bands, Country Fever and The Grassroots, before meeting the man who was to become his manager for most of his career: Sean Reilly. He opened his recording career in 1984 with the album The Boy From Donegal, but neither he nor his three successors Two Sides of Daniel O'Donnell (1985), I Need You (1986) and Don't Forget to Remember (1987) managed to break into the charts and bring him the fame he was looking for. This came with the album From the Heart in 1988, which reached number 56 in the UK charts. The next two albums, Thoughts of Home (1989) and The Last Waltz (1990), consolidated his place in the British music scene, reaching chart positions 43 and 46 respectively. The next two albums, 1992's Follow Your Dream and 1994's Especially for You , took him a step further into the Top 20 (at #17 and #14 respectively). Daniel O'Donnell continued to expand his discography with impressive regularity. With an album released almost every year, he forged his legend with the public and became an authentic figure in Irish music, with several Top 5 albums, including Faith and Inspiration (#4 in 2000), Daniel in Blue Jeans (#3 in 2003), The Hank Williams Songbook (#5 in 2015), Daniel (#3 in 2020) and 60 (#4 in 2021). In 2022, he releases the album I Wish You Well, which reaches #16 in the UK charts, followed by How Lucky I Must Be in 2023 and Now and Then in 2025.
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