At 16, Ella Yelich-O’Connor uploaded her Love Club EP to SoundCloud for free and racked up 60,000 downloads before her label caught up. As Lorde, she dismantled the maximalist EDM pop of the early 2010s with the stark, minimal sound of Royals and Pure Heroine, earning a US number one and the admiration of figures across the music world.
This episode follows her evolution from a gifted, literature-steeped teenager in suburban Auckland through the emotional participation of Melodrama, the polarizing acoustic pivot of Solar Power, and her 2025 return with Virgin. It closes on her decision, after her Universal contract expired, to work as a truly independent artist for the first time.
- How reading Raymond Carver and studying dirty realism shaped her hyper-specific songwriting
- The role of her chromesthesia in building stripped-down, spacious soundscapes
- Her 2017 cancellation of a scheduled Israel concert and the later, more direct activism of 2025
- The Te Ao Marama EP sung entirely in Te Reo Maori, with proceeds to New Zealand charities
- Her openness about gender identity and her move toward full artistic independence
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