Y ou used to get one shot in the music business: the wrong marketing, the wrong song and you’d never be heard from again. This was not the case for Charlotte Aitchison, better known as Charli XCX, who posted tracks on Myspace so long ago she invited comparisons to Kate Nash. Still just 31, and living between London and LA, she has written countless hits for other people – Icona Pop’s shouty I Love It , the slinky Señorita , sung by Camila Cabello and Shawn Mendes – as well as carving out a niche in experimental pop.
Her songs can be brash and bombastic (you might know Boom Clap ) but her personal vibe is dry and knowing. Her last record, 2022’s Crash , was a concept album about becoming a mainstream pop star: when it went to No 1, and she scored a song ( Speed Drive ) on the Barbie soundtrack, it seemed that she’d made it for real. While most people under 30 know very well who she is, much of the world doesn’t, and this strange state of “famous but not quite” inspired one of the songs on her new album, Brat .
She behaves, in some ways, like a megastar. This interview nearly didn’t happen; date after date was proposed and cancelled. She was in London and so was I: I could do wherever, whenever, I said, desperately.
When we eventually speak – on Zoom – she is in the front seat of a car, on a wobbly phone, in a brown vest with her long hair draped over the seatbelt. She is on the way to try out her PARTYGIRL show at Radio 1’s Big Weekend. “I’m so .
