Grimes, whose real name is Claire Boucher, grew up in Vancouver, British Columbia. She attended a school that specialized in creative arts, but didn't focus on music until she started attending McGill University in Montreal.
A friend coerced Boucher into singing backing vocals for his band, and she found it incredibly easy to hit all the right notes. She had a friend show her how to use Garageband and started recording music herself.
In 2010, Boucher released her debut, a cassette-only album called "Geidi Primes." She released her second album, "Halfaxa," later that year and subsequently went on tour with Swedish singer Lykke Li. Eventually, she dropped out of McGill to focus on music.
In 2012, Boucher signed to British indie label 4AD and released "Visions," which would become a breakout success. The best-known song on the album, "Oblivion," was named the best song of the year by Pitchfork.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdBoucher signed with Jay Z's management company, Roc Nation, in 2013.
Boucher released her fourth studio album, "Art Angels," in the fall of 2015. The single of the album, "Flesh Without Blood," features a character she created named Rococo Basilisk, who is "doomed to be eternally tortured by an artificial intelligence, but she's also kind of like Marie Antoinette."
Beyond singing, Boucher is a producer as well, and she's been vocal about how the music industry and media treats female artists. "The thing that I hate about the music industry is all of a sudden it’s like, ‘Grimes is a female musician’ and ‘Grimes has a girly voice,'" she told The Fader. "It’s like, yeah, but I’m a producer and I spend all day looking at f------ graphs and EQs and doing really technical work."
Boucher is also an avid gamer, and has taken to video game streaming platform Twitch to stream herself playing fantasy role-playing game "Bloodborne."
Boucher attended the 2018 Met Gala with Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, who she's said to have been "quietly dating" for the few weeks.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdBoucher and Musk met on Twitter. Musk was planning to make a joke about artificial intelligence, and discovered Boucher had beaten him to the punch — Musk wanted to make the same "Rococo Basilisk" joke that she had already made in her "Flesh Without Blood" video.
Most recently, Boucher contributed her talents to a song on Janelle Monae's new album "Dirty Computer.". After initially teasing an album of her own in 2018, Boucher posted on Instagram that she wouldn't be releasing new music "any time soon" and alluded to a rift between her and her record label, 4AD.