Latest Release

- 24 APR 2025
- 1 Song
- What Was That - Single · 2025
- Te Whare Tīwekaweka · 2025
- chronically online - internet songs · 2025
- Girl, so confusing featuring lorde - Single · 2024
- Take Me to the River - Single · 2024
- Te Ao Mārama - EP · 2021
- Te Ao Mārama - EP · 2021
- Te Ao Mārama - EP · 2021
- Te Ao Mārama - EP · 2021
- Te Ao Mārama - EP · 2021
Essential Albums
- Lorde’s introspective debut, 2013’s Pure Heroine, turned her into a global star—a turn of events she all but predicted: “How can I fuck with the fun again when I’m known?” she sang on “Tennis Court”, seemingly aware that her primary inspiration up to that point—namely, boredom in suburbia—would be rendered inaccessible by her imminent fame. Four years later, she answered that question with her second album, Melodrama. While Pure Heroine concerned itself with the minutiae of teenage life in Auckland, Melodrama is broader in its reach, detailing heartbreak and hedonism following her first serious breakup. Lorde’s musical themes underwent a big change on Melodrama—as did her music-making process. Pure Heroine had been written and produced by a two-person team consisting of Lorde and Joel Little. For Melodrama, she’d recruit such top-tier producers as Kuk Harrell, Malay and S1. Most significantly, all but one of Melodrama’s 11 tracks were co-written with Jack Antonoff, best known as Taylor Swift’s right-hand man since 2013. But even with all those new names by her side, Lorde remains as idiosyncratic as ever on Melodrama. The lead single, “Green Light”, begins as a piano ballad before revving into a house track—only to finally explode into a euphoric chanted chorus accompanied by drums, handclaps, bass and strings. It’s a chaotic and unexpected finale, capturing the agony and ecstasy of being newly single. Elsewhere on the album, “Supercut” is similarly bittersweet, retracing the happiest moments of a failed relationship with help from a driving house piano and overlaid vocals. “Liability”, meanwhile, strips things back, harnessing a simple descending chord sequence and lyrics about being “too much” to devastating effect. And “Writer In the Dark” is a spare ballad about alchemising heartbreak into art, with a cracked soprano vocal recalling mid-career Kate Bush. As a sophomore effort, Melodrama is as unexpected as it is triumphant—the first indication that this is an artist uninterested in retracing her own steps. After all, Lorde works in mysterious ways.
Albums
- 2021
- 2022
- 2022
- 2021
Artist Playlists
- She always seems one step ahead of her age (and era).
- The NZ star's handpicked playlist is the perfect accessory for a chill day at the beach.
Appears On
More To Hear
- One of the most impressive pop debuts this millennium.
- Hanuman Welch looks back on five years of Lorde’s megahit Melodrama.
- Lorde hosts a special episode to kick off summer in the Southern Hemisphere.
- Lorde talks 'Solar Power' and a playlist of personal selections.
- "On the Luna" is Added.
More To See
- 13:42
- 12:19
About Lorde
Where previous generations of teenagers frequently had to endure marketing managers’ ideas of what entertainment should look like, millennial teens were blessed with one of pop culture’s greatest young laureates: New Zealand’s Ella Marija Lani Yelich-O'Connor (a.k.a. Lorde). After being spotted at a talent show and signing to Universal at age 12, she would experiment with a series of writing partners before meeting Joel Little, a fellow Auckland native and former pop-punk frontman. Together, they wrote “Royals”, a song that not only defined Lorde’s perspective—with its unimpressed, teenage dismissal of material obsessions—but also propelled her skeletal electro-pop debut, 2013’s Pure Heroine, to a Grammy nomination. She captured the late-night trains home, clandestine kisses, and heavy symbolism of one’s first love remembering to buy them their favourite juice—little of which, she seemed to know, lasts. But Lorde’s feel for suburban adolescent disconnect catalysed into precocious power moves—such as curating the soundtrack for the third Hunger Games movie—and an astute lens on the wider world on 2017’s Melodrama. Richer in sound and experience, the album found strength in different kinds of isolation—the temporary plight of the newly heartbroken and the lifelong fate of the writer. However, Lorde would steer that fate in a new direction with 2021’s breezy, Laurel Canyon-hued Solar Power. On the album, she basks in psych-folk, sunshine pop, and tongue-in-cheek euphoria while offering a peek into her reality. “My life is very low-key and very domestic. It's like the life of a hippie housewife,” she told Apple Music. That confession may be a jarring contrast to Lorde’s dark-pop reputation, but it only adds to her mystique.
- FROM
- Auckland, New Zealand
- BORN
- 7 November 1996
- GENRE
- Alternative