Lola Young review – buoyant, brilliant return from British pop’s great oversharer | Lola Young
The rollercoaster ride towards international pop stardom seldom runs smooth, but few rising stars have been flung through its loops and freefalls as publicly as south London singer-songwriter Lola Young. In 2024, gen Z anthem Messy became her breakthrough moment, but social media scrutiny surrounding her open struggles with addiction and a stage collapse in New York last year brought live performances to a halt. When the 25-year-old musician strolls on stage in a baggy black hoodie, she seems relieved to be here. Casual though the look may be, she is worshipped as a Y2K style guru, as evidenced by the young crowd: a blur of bleached mullets and denim jorts cry every word of her single Sad Sob Story!. “I’ve written a few things I say to myself in the mirror,” she explains in between her first two songs, pulling up her phone to share what she dubs this evening as her “Manchester mantra”: a pep talk that “sometimes you forget your own power”. It could have felt awkward, like a teen reading you …

