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  1. Dagny Norvoll Sandvik (born 23 July 1990), known mononymously as Dagny, is a Norwegian singer and songwriter. Her music is pop-based, incorporating elements of indie, dance, synth, electro and disco.

  2. Dagny - Somebody (Official Music Video) - YouTube. 72.5K subscribers. Subscribed. 32K. 3M views 3 years ago. Listen to «Somebody» here: https://Dagny.lnk.to/Somebody Sign up to Dagny’s...

  3. Adventurous and creative spirit Dagny has amassed over 450 million streams, sold out tours, and critical acclaim by everyone from Billboard to The Guardian.

  4. www.youtube.com › user › dagnymusicDagny - YouTube

    Dagny is one of Norway's most exciting and in-demand pop artists. Over a billion plays via streaming services and well over 2M monthly listeners on Spotify c...

  5. Sep 7, 2023 · Dagny - Ray-Bans (Audio Video) Dagny. 71.8K subscribers. Subscribed. 888. 29K views 5 months ago. Listen to Ray-Bans: https://dagny.lnk.to/Ray-Bans Connect with Dagny: ...more.

  6. www.facebook.comdagnymusicDagny - Facebook

    Dagny. 24,637 likes · 863 talking about this. Songbird from the North.

  7. Norwegian singer-songwriter Dagny has released two studio albums, one EP (extended play), 32 singles (including eleven as featured artist). She released her debut single "Things We Never Say" in 2010 under her full name.

  8. music.youtube.com › channel › UCL4AOEUBMY8cefM9--LyEjgDagny - YouTube Music

    Dagny Norvoll Sandvik, known mononymously as Dagny, is a Norwegian singer and songwriter. Her music is pop-based, incorporating elements of indie, dance, synth, electro and disco.

  9. Jun 7, 2019 · Dagny Talks Providing Inspiration for Katy Perry’s ‘Never Really Over’ and Being ‘Part of Something Bigger Than Me’. Billboard chatted with Dagny about getting the call from the superstar's...

  10. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Dagny_(name)Dagny (name) - Wikipedia

    Dagny is a Scandinavian feminine given name of Norwegian origin. Alternate forms include Dagna, Dagne and the Latvian form Dagnija . It is derived from the combination of the Old Norse words dagr 'day' and ný 'new'.

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