Scottish pop and electro musician, singer and producer Sophie died at the age of 34 in a “terrible accident”, her label Transgender said in a statement on Saturday.
Born in Glasgow, Scotland, Sophie worked with artists such as Madonna and Charlie XCX and was nominated for Best Dance / Electro Album for her first album “All of Every Pearl Un-Inside” at the Grammy Awards in 2019. Was. Which received widespread critical acclaim.
“Our beautiful Sophie tragically passed away this morning after a terrible accident,” said the statement from the British music label Transgressive.
A “visionary” for Christine and The Queens
“True to his spirituality, he climbed up to see the full moon, accidentally slipped and fell,” the text continued on Twitter. Sophie Axon, known as musician, singer, producer and DJ, Sophie, released her first single, “Nothing More to Say”, in 2013.
The transgender artist, Sophie, spoke about her remuneration in 2018 in an interview with the American magazine Paper. “To me, being transgender is under control, so that your body can be planted more and more with your soul and soul, so that the two don’t clash together and don’t struggle to survive,” she said.
Sophie had collaborated with Madonna – on the song of which she wrote “Bitch I’m Madonna” – and on Charlie XCX records “Woman Woman” and the single “Afterparty”.
French singer Christine and The Queens paid tribute on Twitter, calling them “visionaries”. “She, as an artist and a woman, was rebelling against the narrow, society, being a complete triumph,” she said. “Groom the pioneers”.