LILY
ALLEN

Pop
sensation. Voice of her generation. Fashion designer. Political
activist. Mouthy blogshite. X-rated sexpert. Fall-down drunk.
WAG-tagoniser. Queen of MySpace. Exhibitionist. Primadonna.
Style icon. Celebrity girlfriend. Celebrity daughter. Celebrity
sister. Paparazzi prey. Party starter. Princess.
Lily Allen has been called all these things, and much, much
more - sometimes with justification, often without. She's posh,
she's common, she's sexy, she's demure, she's reticent, she's
outspoken, she's sensitive, she's shameless, she's loved-up,
she's distraught, often all in the same evening. Then she goes
to bed, gets up and has breakfast. Then she posts her breakfast
on the Internet. Then other people analyse her breakfast. And
wonder why she posted it on the Internet.
Contrary, contradictory, occasionally catty, always compelling,
Allen, at 23, is Britain's most consistently engaged and engaging
pop star, as well as one of our most successful.
She first commandeered the public stage in July 2006, a fully
formed phenomenon with a song that would help define that summer,
the hugely infectious "Smile", her first CD single
and her first UK number one. "Smile" served as an
excellent primer for the Allen oeuvre, a breezy, lilting, ska-inflected
slice of perfect pop distinguished by sugar-sweet vocals and
unflinchingly autobiographical lyrics. It was a song of female
empowerment sung by a smart-mouthed, wide-eyed, pretty post-teen
in a pink prom dress and box-fresh Nike trainers, fluoro make-up
and huge hoop earrings.
"
LDN" was, if anything, even more insidious and distinctive:
a faux-naive, text-spelt, profane paean to the city of her
birth in all its grimy glory.
By the time of the release of "Alright, Still", her
debut album, Allen's stardom was solidified and her public
persona cemented: cheeky, waspish, searingly honest, sparky,
spiky and satirical. Some of the stories about her were even
true.
Lily Allen was born in May 1985 in Hammersmith, west London,
the daughter of film producer Alison Owen and actor Keith Allen.
It was an unconventional childhood, but not one without its
compensations, and it made Allen wise beyond her years and
tremendously motivated to carve her own place in the world.
Raised alongside her sister and brother in Bloomsbury, Shepherd's
Bush, Primrose Hill and Islington, she attended 13 different
schools in total before abandoning her formal education at
15 and embarking on a teenage odyssey of innocence and experience:
clubbing in Ibiza, studying to be a florist, always hoping
to break into the entertainment industry.
She knocked on record company doors from the age of 16, and
her first deal came in 2002, with Warners, who pushed her in
an uncomfortably folky direction. It was two years later, working
with producers Future Cut, when Allen began to find her feet
as a songwriter. In 2005 she signed to Regal, an imprint of
Parlophone, and, frustrated by the slow pace of the music industry,
began to post demos on her MySpace page. Meanwhile, a series
of live appearances at the Notting Hill nightclub Yo-Yo in
the spring of 2006 whetted press and public appetites.
"
Smile" was her first composition, a song so appealing
it prompted the producer Mark Ronson to fly her to New York
at his own expense, where they collaborated on the delicate "The
Littlest Things". (Later, "Smile" would win
a BMI songwriting award. Not bad for a first attempt). Ronson
and another American producer, Greg Kurstin, were the crucial
collaborators on "Alright, Still", which eventually
sold 2.5 million records, broke into the Billboard top 20 in
America, earned Allen five BRIT nominations and a triumphant
spot on the Pyramid Stage at Glastonbury in 2007. If imitation
is the sincerest form of flattery then Allen must have been
very flattered indeed, for her imitators were legion: suddenly
the charts were full of Lily-alikes rhyming about relationships
gone wrong.
Meanwhile, Allen provided guest vocals on songs by Robbie Williams,
Dizzee Rascal and Basement Jaxx, among others, and made a specialty
of unexpected cover versions. As well as her hit interpretation
of the Kaiser Chiefs' "Oh My God" alongside Ronson,
she has covered The Kooks, The Pretenders and Blondie, and
offered a sardonic reworking of 50 Cent's "Window Shopper".
By no means has it all been plain sailing. The backlash, when
it came, was ferocious. Allen, along with a select group of
famous young women on both sides of the Atlantic, has been
frequently and somewhat hysterically pilloried in the tabloids
and on the gossip websites for her perceived misbehaviour.
She has had spats with fellow pop stars. Her relationship with
the paparazzi might be politely described as fraught. Her private
life has been made public. Meanwhile, a series of personal
traumas have occasionally threatened to overwhelm her.
"
I was prepared for it because people said, 'Are you ready for
the backlash?'" says Allen. "But it was still upsetting
and confusing. Sometimes it was just a barrage of hatred. Now
if I go out and have a drink I'm a disgrace and if I don't
I'm boring. That's the backlash. But there's nothing I can
do about it. You don't have a choice about whether you become
a celebrity or not. I think some people get confused about
that."
All this, most of it completely beyond her control, has led
to a sense - one felt by her as much as anyone - that people
might have forgotten why they liked Lily Allen in the first
place. This is a complaint that is easily cured, and the panacea
is called "It's Not Me, It's You."
Lily Allen's second album, written and recorded exclusively
by her and Greg Kurstin, began its life at a tiny rented house
in the Cotswolds in the autumn of 2007, where the pair had
gone to work. After a week and a half they had six songs and
a new sound had emerged: darker perhaps, definitely dancier,
clearly more mature.
"
The way we work," explains Allen, "is Greg and I
will sit round a piano together and he'll play different chords
and I'll stay "stop" or "start" when I
like them. Then I'll sing along over the top and come up with
the words.
"
We decided to try and make bigger sounding, more ethereal songs,
real songs. I wanted to work with one person from start to
finish to make it one body of work. I wanted it to feel like
it had some sort of integrity. I think the first song we did
was "I Could Say". That set the tone for the whole
album. I think I've grown up a bit as a person and I hope it
reflects that."
Lyrically, "It's Not Me, It's You" is both a continuation
of the preoccupations of "Alright, Still", as well
as a stiletto-heeled leap forward. The forensic, affecting,
often very funny examinations of relationships and sexual politics
are still there - and joyously so - but bigger themes are also
tackled: God is on this record, as is George Bush, and Allen's
family are here, too. (Though not on the same songs as God
and George Bush.) Plus all the triumphs and tribulations of
life as a young woman in late Noughties Britain.
"
I find it hard to write songs about nothing," says Allen. "I
try to write things that are both relevant to my life - which
is totally weird and surreal - and also universal. I think
the record probably is a bit darker but not because I have
a darker outlook on life. I actually feel happier right now
than I did when I released "Alright, Still". When
I was writing the first record I felt like I was really struggling.
I wanted to be doing something and I felt no one was interested.
Now I feel like people are very interested."
Those people will be interested to learn that "It's Not
Me, It's You" might be the only album they'll hear in
2009 that references racism ("Fuck You"); ageism
("22"); the dark side of celebrity and consumer culture
("The Fear"); drug dependency ("Everyone's At
It"); and 9/11 ("Him"); but also TV dinners
("Chinese"); premature ejaculation ("Not Fair");
the enduring rubbishness of men ("Never Gonna Happen"),
as well as the fragile beauty of early romance ("Who'd
Have Known").
"
It's Not Me, It's You" is unmistakably Her: bracing home
truths and pungent social commentary delivered in the voice
of an angel. It's a potent combination. It could only be Lily
Allen.
The album "It's Not Me, It's You" released February
9th
The single "The Fear" released January 26th.
Web: www.lilyallenmusic.com