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This article is about the New Zealand singer-songwriter. For the civil rights activist, see Audre Lorde. For other uses, see Lorde (disambiguation). Not to be confused with Lordi.

Lorde
A young, light-skinned girl is wearing dark lipstick and wears her hair pulled back. She is dressed in a black shirt.Lorde at the 27th Annual ARIA Music Awards, December 2013.
Background information
Birth nameElla Maria Lani Yelich-O'Connor
Born (1996-11-07) 7 November 1996 (age 28)
Devonport, Auckland, New Zealand
GenresArt pop, indie pop, minimal, electronica, electropop
OccupationSinger-songwriter
InstrumentVocals
Years active2012–present
LabelsUMG, Lava, Republic
Websitelorde.co.nz
Musical artist

Ella Maria Lani Yelich-O'Connor (born 7 November 1996), known by her stage name Lorde (/ˈlɔːrd/), is a New Zealand singer-songwriter. Born and raised in Devonport, Auckland, she performed in various singing and drama classes as a child, and at the age of thirteen signed with Universal. Yelich-O'Connor adopted her stage name due to her fascination with "royals and aristocracy", but felt the name Lord was too masculine so added an 'e' to make it more feminine.

Her musical debut was an EP, entitled The Love Club, which was released in November 2012, and her first single, "Royals", debuted at number one on the New Zealand Top 40, and also reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 in 2013, making her the first New Zealand solo artist to have a number one song in the United States. Her debut album, Pure Heroine, was released in September 2013, receiving critical acclaim and commercial success worldwide.

Her work has earned her numerous awards and accolades. In October 2013, she jointly won the 2013 Silver Scroll award for "Royals," which celebrates outstanding songwriting achievements in original New Zealand pop music. For the 56th Annual Grammy Awards, Lorde received four nominations, including Song of the Year for "Royals", and Record of the Year and Best Pop Vocal Album for Pure Heroine.

Early life

"I started writing songs when I was 13 or 14, because I've always been a huge reader. My mum's a poet and we've always had so many books, and that's always been a big thing for me, arguably more so than music."

—Lorde speaking of her songwriting technique

Ella Yelich-O'Connor was born in Auckland, New Zealand on 7 November 1996 to Sonja Yelich, a prize-winning New Zealand poet, and Vic O'Connor, a civil engineer. She was raised in suburban Devonport, Auckland with an older sister and a younger brother and sister. At age 5, Lorde followed her friend into a drama group and discovered a love of singing and acting. Lorde has said she enjoyed how she had to "switch on a different side to myself and become a different me." Lorde's mother encouraged her to read books and is quoted as saying that at age 12 Lorde was reading Raymond Carver and Kurt Vonnegut and at 14 she was proofreading her master's thesis for her.

Lorde attended Belmont Intermediate School, where in 2009 she and friend Louis McDonald participated in, and won, the school's talent show. After seeing her performance at the talent show, McDonald's father sent out recordings of Lorde covering Duffy's hit song "Warwick Avenue" and Pixie Lott's "Mama Do" to various talent scouts. When Lorde was 13, A&R scout Scott Maclachlan signed her to Universal and she began working with their songwriters at 14. Lorde began writing songs with her guitar at "about thirteen or fourteen". Yelich-O'connor adopted her stage name due to her fascination with "royals and aristocracy", but felt the name Lord was too masculine so added an 'e' to make it more feminine.

Career

career my mom u fatass

Artistry

Voice and music

"Royals" Royals is an art pop and minimal styled song. The song has a similar rhythm to a snap song, with its instrumentation of "fingersnaps and toe-tapping bass."
"Team" "Team" is a mid-tempo song, and draws from the genres of pop, rock, electronic dance and electrohop.
Problems playing these files? See media help.

Lorde's voice is "unique and powerfully intriguing" according to music online publication PopMatters and has been described as being "way beyond her years" Lorde has stated her main focus is her voice as she does not play any instruments saying "I don't play any instruments, so my voice needs to have the focus. My vocal-scape is really important."

Lorde's musical style has been described by AllMusic as a "stylish mix of arty, confessional bedroom pop and club-ready electro-rock". Her work has also been compared to Grimes, Lana Del Rey, and Sky Ferreira. Musically, Lorde's debut album Pure Heroine followed in the same vein as the The Love Club EP, incorporating influences of ambient, art pop, dark wave, electronica, indietronica, minimal and synthpop. Lyrically, the album was primarily inspired by her youth and critiques mainstream culture.

Lorde's writing style and lyrical context on The Love Club EP has been described as aiming "to capture what it really is to be a teen", singing from a range of topics including the "all-consuming nature of friendship" to "finding yourself come hell or high water." Lorde described her sound as maturing when working on debut album. Pure Heroine lyrical themes have been said to "explore classic teen-pop themes – social anxiety, romantic yearning, debilitating ennui, booze-soaked ragers – with an eerie, zoomed-out detachment;" and be "certainly underpin" "an adolescent aggrievance and angst." Rolling Stone wrote "Lorde's languidly aphoristic lyrics balance rock-star swagger and torqued-up teenage angst" and that her lyrics "have a rattle-nerve pathos and power like nothing else going in 2013." Meanwhile, James Lachno from The Telegraph commented that Lorde sounds "twitchy" and "trendy electro".

Influences

Lorde's music draws from electropop, but she grew up listening to soul musicians Etta James and Otis Redding, as well as her parents' favorite records by the likes of Cat Stevens, Neil Young and Fleetwood Mac. She cites the unusual vocals of Grimes, the band Sleigh Bells and producer SBTRKT as prominent influences for Lorde. Lorde also stated that she was inspired by the initially hidden identities of Burial and The Weeknd, explaining, "I feel like mystery is more interesting", and called American musical artist Nicki Minaj an "important female in pop".

Lorde describes short story writers Raymond Carver, Wells Tower, Tobias Wolff and Claire Vaye Watkins as lyrical inspirations – particularly noting their sentence structures. Lorde stated her music is also inspired by authors, citing Tobias Wolff, Sylvia Plath, Walt Whitman and Leonard Cohen as influences on her writing.

During the writing of The Love Club (2013), Lorde was particularly influenced by Kanye West and she performed a cover version of West's song "Hold My Liquor" at her Auckland concert on 7 September 2013. Lorde has also cited Prince as an influence. Lorde's music has been described as containing masculine qualities due to Lorde listening and admiring a range of male artists. She cites James Blake as an influence on her music stating "I think he's awesome and has been a big influence on me recently" as well as citing rapper J. Cole and electronic producers as influences, which she praises for the use of using "their vocals in a really interesting way, whether it might be chopping up a vocal part or really lash or lairing a vocal".

Stage presence

Lorde has received praise for her stage presence, and live performances. Billboard magazine praised Lorde for having a "well-defined stage presence" and a "savvy" and "unflappable" attitude. Continuing to say her performances contain "confidence and demeanor well beyond her years." During performances Lorde stated she likes to wear clothes that make her "feel grand" and an element of "theatricality". Lorde's vocals have been praised when performing live with Lorde being called a truly "talented vocalist" who sounds "just like the record".

Popular reception

Time placed Lorde on their list of 'The 16 Most Influential Teens of 2013'. In 2013 Spotify announced that Lorde's song "Royals" was the most streamed song in New Zealand as well as being Spotify's most viral new artist worldwide. Australian websites TheMusic.com.Au and Faster Louder selected Lorde as their top favourite artist and Pure Heroine as their top album for 2013, respectively. Writing for the latter site, journalist Darren Levin explained:

... "Royals" connected because people liked it. It wasn’t rammed down their throat 10 times a day on commercial radio, and it certainly wasn’t the product of a Samsung board meeting designed to sell more smartphones. The best part is that it happened organically via social media ...

In August 2013, Lorde became the first solo female artist to top the Billboard Alternative Songs chart in the US since Tracy Bonham in 1996. The song also holds the record for the longest reign by a woman atop the Billboard Alternative Songs chart (at seven weeks), surpassing Alanis Morissette's "You Oughta Know". With "Royals", Lorde is the first New Zealand act to have achieved a Billboard Hot 100 number one as lead artist.

Personal life

Lorde is of Croatian and Irish ancestry, and is a self-identified feminist. As of July 2013, Lorde is a Year Twelve student at Takapuna Grammar School. Lorde is currently in a relationship with twenty four year old New Zealand born photographer James Lowe, whom she met before her music career.

Philanthropy

Lorde's song "The Love Club" from her debut EP (2013) was included on the compilation to raise funds for those affected by Typhoon Haiyan, the proceeds from the song were donated to the Philippines to the relief efforts of the Philippines Red Cross. In December 2013 Lorde raised money for her local community in Devonport.

Discography

Main article: Lorde discography See also: List of songs recorded by Lorde

Awards and nominations

Main article: List of awards and nominations received by Lorde

Tours

  • North American Tour (2014)

References

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External links

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