This CD cover image released by RCA shows "Girl Who Got Away", by Dido. —AP Photo
This CD cover image released by RCA shows "Girl Who Got Away", by Dido. —AP Photo

LOS ANGELES: Acoustic pop singer Dido shot to fame a decade ago as the soft crooner on US rapper Eminem's hit song, “Stan”.

After what she calls “disappearing” for while, she is back this week with her first album in five years - with a more electronic sound. The London-based singer, 41, has sold more than 29 million albums since her debut album “No Angel” in 1999.

She will release “Girl Who Got Away” in the United States on Tuesday.

“It's a little comment on the fact that I disappeared a bit. That's what everyone else was pointing out to me that 'it's a perfect title for you',” Dido told Reuters.

“The song is about so many things for me. It's about that restlessness and having a dream of another life that you can't quite get to,” she added.

“Girl Who Got Away” features an updated sound from the singer with heavier bassline beats, folk and electronic influences, which Dido attributed to her brother and producer, Rollo Armstrong.

“A great producer is someone that can facilitate the artist and make them the best that they can be,” the singer said. “That's where Rollo is so good. He pushes me to the point where I can't do any better. And then he'll take over and make it even better.”

Dido found mainstream success in 2000 after rapper Eminem featured a sample of her track “Thank You” on his hit song “Stan”.

The exposure helped the singer's 2003 “Life For Rent” album to land at No. 4 on the Billboard 200 album chart that year, fueled by singles “White Flag” and “Life For Rent”, and earned her a Grammy nomination.

Her 2008 album “Safe Trip Home” was less successful albeit critically acclaimed. Her song for the soundtrack of Danny Boyle's 2010 film “127 Hours” earned her an Academy Award nomination.

In 2011, the singer become a mother for the first time with husband Rohan Gavin to son Stanley - not named after the Eminem song, Dido was quick to clarify.

She drew on her pregnancy when she returned to the studio for the new album.

“I loved feeling him kicking around while I was singing and certain songs he'd really kick to. It just felt like I had a little friend in there with me,” the singer said.

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