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On the Jaw-Dropping West End Girl, Lily Allen Sets A New Bar For The Confessional Break-Up Album

On the Jaw-Dropping West End Girl, Lily Allen Sets A New Bar For The Confessional Break-Up Album
Lily Allen performing at Glastonbury in 2022As soon as Lily Allen announced her return to the pop world with her fifth album West End Girl last week, it was clear the press was going to have a field day.Lily has been a tabloid fixture since she first burst onto the pop scene more than 20 years ago, and at the height of her fame, was arguably as known for her headline-grabbing antics and personal drama as she was for her frank and confessional songwriting.West End Girl is not just her first release in seven years, but the first since her much-publicised split from her second husband, Stranger Things actor David Harbour. The pair tied the knot in Las Vegas in 2020, after which they relocated to New York with Lily’s two daughters from her first marriage, and were first reported to have split at the beginning of this year, after David was spotted on the exclusive dating app Raya (which is where he and the Smile singer also first met).In the lead-up to her new album’s release, Lily described the collection as a “mixture of fact and fiction”, telling British Vogue it was “inspired by what went on in the relationship”, with its creation seeing her go through a mix of “confusion, sorrow, grief, helplessness”.Lily also shared that the album was both written and recorded over an “intense 10-day period” in December 2024, the same month she announced she was taking a break from the spotlight to spend time in a residential facility to rest and focus on her mental health.A week after it was announced, West End Girl debuted on Friday, and as predicted, the album is truly jaw-dropping in its candour and frankness. Of course, no one but the two parties involved can really know how much artistic license was employed, but the album paints a picture of a woman whose life slowly starts to unravel when she somewhat hesitantly agrees to open her marriage to a man she’s uprooted her life and moved across an ocean for.Lily Allen's latest album West End Girl is quite possibly her most personal to dateThe sense of dread and paranoia only grows as the story unfolds and our heroine’s husband appears to “move the goalposts” and repeatedly violate the terms of the “arrangement” that he’d set in place, ultimately taking its toll on her until she finds herself struggling to carry on.Naturally, much has already been made of the song’s lyrics, and understandably so – this is Lily at her most unfiltered, lifting the lid on the ugliness of a break-up in a way that even Adele or Taylor Swift daren’t.“We had an arrangement, be discrete and don’t be blatant, there had to be payment, it had to be with strangers,” she sings on Madeline, an imagined conversation between herself and a woman she discovers her husband has been sleeping with.On Relapse, Lily opens up about her struggles to hold onto her sobriety at the height of her personal issues, while Tennis sees her opening up about feeling like she is losing the man she loves to someone else.“I can’t get my head round how you’ve been playing tennis, if it was just sex, I wouldn’t be jealous,” she claims.Then, there’s the much-discussed Pussy Palace, when she comes back to her marital bed to find “sheets pulled off the bed, strewn on the floor, long black hair, probably from the night before”.“Duane Reade bag with the handles tied, sex toys, butt plugs, lube inside, hundreds of Trojans, you’re so fucking broken,” Lily continues, in one of her new album’s most-cited lyrics, before questioning if she’s “looking at a sex addict”.Lily Allen as depicted in the striking artwork for her new album West End GirlStill, as revealing as these lyrics are, it would be remiss to reduce West End Girl to just its more sensationalised moments. For one thing, it’s much smarter than the straightforward “woman scorned” narrative that is inevitably going to be applied to an album with song titles like 4Chan Stan, Monogamummy and the aforementioned Pussy Palace.As the name West End Girl highlights, this is Lily’s first musical release since she embarked on her career in theatre, appearing in productions like Hedda, The Pillowman and her Olivier-nominated turn in 2:22 A Ghost Story. It’s a fitting name for the album, too, as West End Girl feels like a piece of theatre in itself.A collection that’s undoubtedly intended to be enjoyed as a piece of work from start, the album runs roughly chronologically allowing the narrative of the central break-up to play out in real-time, with Lily also taking on numerous different characters (in a spoken-word interlude at the end of the first track, she recreates a phone call in which an unheard party first floats out the idea of an open relationship, while on Madeline, she adopts the titular character’s American accent to assure our protagonist that “lies are not something that I want to get caught up in”).Early reviews have picked up on the fact that West End Girl bounces from genre to genre, encompassing everything from bossa nova to dancehall and flamenco to drum and bass, all sprinkled with the pure pop Lily best showcased on her second album It’s Not Me It’s You (which, incidentally, is a sentiment the Brit Award winner revisits on closing track Fruityloop).As well as showing off Lily’s skills as a songwriter, the frequent genre-hopping mirrors the unpredictability and chaos of the album’s central narrative, and a feeling of not knowing what’s next. Meanwhile, some of West End Girl’s more salacious moments are also among its sweetest-sounding – few could have predicted that a song called Pussy Palace would actually be a devastating ballad more akin to Lily cuts like Three or Littlest Things than the claws-out pop she’s often associated with (it’s worth pointing out, too, that Lily has probably never been on in better voice than she is on West End Girl, which is saying something as her vocals have always been one of the more unfairly-underrated parts of her art).So, while the sordid details, irreverent lyrics and tea-spilling might be what have many listeners initially hitting play on this new release from Lily, those who stick around will find there’s so much more to enjoy on West End Girl than the surface-level tabloid drama that a release like this will invariably conjure up. The fact is, Lily has set a new bar not just when it comes to her own work, the break-up album in general.MORE MUSIC NEWS:Self Esteem: ‘I Achieved Everything I Set Out To Do, And I Was Sadder Than Ever’Thank You To Sabrina Carpenter For Reminding Everyone That Pop Is Supposed To Be ProvocativeLady Gaga’s Mayhem Ball Is Quite Simply The Best Thing She’s Ever Done

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