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Lily Allen sings her sorrows in a new album after a 7-year absence
From her breakout hit Smile in 2006 to her new album West End Girl, released on October 24th, 2025, Lily Allen has never stopped turning her life experiences into songs. With her unapologetic lyrics, the 40-year-old British singer chronicles both her triumphs and setbacks, establishing herself as the pop diarist of an entire generation. Profile story.
By Alexis Thibault.

West End Girl, Lily Allen’s new breakup album
Lily Allen’s musical evolution mirrors the contrasts of her time. Back in 2006, the sugar-coated pop of Alright, Still cheekily captured the carefree spirit of London’s youth. Twelve years later, No Shame took a turn toward disillusioned introspection. Now, the British artist is back in the spotlight with West End Girl, her fifth studio album, released on October 24th, 2025.
This album is an ode to the London of her childhood and the West End theatre scene, where she recently made a name for herself as an actress. In 2021, she delivered a standout performance in 2:22 A Ghost Story, Danny Robins’ supernatural thriller staged at the Noël Coward Theatre and praised by critics.
This new raw, autobiographical opus lays bare the cracks and flare-ups of a marriage hanging on a thread with actor David Harbour, star of Stranger Things. Over fourteen tracks recorded in just sixteen days, Lily Allen delivers a string of biting, ironic confessions that delve into infidelity, motherhood and resilience. Despite a few tracks that feel slightly formulaic, her razor-sharp wit is a very welcome. The singer reaffirms her role as the wry narrator of a generation obsessed with transparency… At least, in theory.
The winding path of an indie sleaze icon
Lily Allen, a star of the indie sleaze era, has always used music as a space for criticism. Her sarcastic confessions often serve as commentary on the media system, social classes, and gender dynamics. More than once, she has publicly slammed the fake news circulating on Wikipedia and spoken about how motherhood had stalled her career as a pop star according to her.
The British singer grew up in the tangled orbit of show business. As the daughter of actor-musician Keith Allen and producer Alison Owen, she spent her childhood drifting between a dozen private schools and the occasional teenage runaway. Her chaotic schooling pushed her to build a self-taught world, far from traditional paths. In 2005, she began uploading homemade demos to MySpace, at a time when online music was still finding its way and rules were yet to be written.
That instinctive move turned her into a symbol of the digital generation. A singer who wrote and performed her own material, in a Britain still caught between the remnants of Britpop and the rise of social media. Her sharp wit placed her alongside chroniclers of the everyday, like Ray Davies and Morrissey, but with the voice of a woman of her time – biting, funny and irresistibly soft.
From Smile to disappointment
It was with Smile, her first major hit released in 2006, that Lily Allen cemented her signature style. Beneath the song’s apparent lightness lies an undercurrent of elegant cruelty… The story of the revenge of a young woman who has been cheated on, told with a feral grin. A year later, a campaign by the French telecom company SFR introduced the track to French audiences. The vibrant ad turned the singer into a natural icon with a girl-next-door image, which was then co-opted by marketing.
Yet, behind the pop sheen, Lily Allen’s love life remained turbulent and heavily scrutinised. Her romantic setbacks fed both her lyrics and the tabloids, including breakups, heartbreak, addiction. At the time, she embodied a paradox – free, yet constantly judged for that very freedom.
In 2018, she publicly spoke for the first time about the harassment she says she suffered from her a collaborator. Her revelation shed light on the structural violence still weighing on women in the music industry. This risky act of speaking out only reinforced her reputation as an unfiltered and honest artist. The record West End Girl is, in many ways, the most striking continuation of the position she has taken for years.
West End Girl (2025) by Lily Allen, available now.