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Lily Moore
The daughter of rock star royalty… Lily Moore. Photograph: Phoebe Rebecca Fox/Phoebe Fox
The daughter of rock star royalty… Lily Moore. Photograph: Phoebe Rebecca Fox/Phoebe Fox

One to watch: Lily Moore

This article is more than 4 years old

The singer’s neo-soul sounds and powerhouse vocals build the perfect foundation for self-deprecating ballads of love and loss

“I wish that you would fuck one of my friends in our bed,” drawls Lily Moore in Over You, her smoky voice cutting against a deceptively upbeat melody. It’s an ode to the frustration of breakups where, actually, you still quite like your ex. “I know it must sound cruel, but it’s what you’ve got to do for me to get over you,” she adds. Fair enough.

Moore is the daughter of rock star royalty – the late Thin Lizzy guitarist Gary Moore was her father – and music has always played a central role in her life. “My mum always said when I was younger, she’d get worried about me if I wasn’t singing,” she told online mag the Line of Best Fit. Inspired by the emergence of Adele and Amy Winehouse in the late 2000s, Moore began her own career busking around Brighton, before eventually winning a competition to play at The Great Escape festival in 2015. In the years that followed, she balanced school with songwriting, releasing her first single Not That Special in February 2018, followed by an EP of the same name. After supporting James Bay and George Ezra, this year she has headlined the 100 Club in London, and released the 11-track mixtape More Moore last month.

Moore’s neo-soul sound and powerhouse vocals have prompted comparisons with Amy Winehouse, but the self-deprecating humour she finds when turning her formative experiences of love and loss into gutsy ballads feel distinctly her own.

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