At 23, Lola Blue is making indie-pop filled with memories of growing up, falling in love, getting hurt and trying to hold onto the fearless part of yourself that still wants to wear a fancy dress to a piano recital and absolutely smash it. Her debut EP 'Pinky Promise' pulls together stories from her late teens and early twenties with the same warmth and excitement she remembers feeling as a kid.
"Little me was fearless," she says, grinning. "I try to channel her every day."
That kid was raised on Bowie, The Smashing Pumpkins and Phoenix thanks to a dad with "amazing taste in music", singing along while he jammed with friends at home. "I don't remember a time when I wasn't curious about music," Lola says. "I remember when I was 7 begging my parents for singing lessons and piano. I was instantly passionate about it, and I loved performing at recitals in a little fancy dress."
Before the glossy indie-pop and Sofia Coppola-inspired visuals, there was a teenager in Massachusetts making songs in her bedroom on GarageBand with a ukulele and keyboard. "During my freshman year of university, I started working with my friend and producer William Corudory, and what we made together became the first three songs I released," she explains. "A couple of years later, I moved to Los Angeles and met Jackson Phillips (Day Wave), who I made my upcoming EP with."















