As she prepares to release her sixth studio album, a gutsy, gleaming collection of post-breakup anthems called The Glorification of Sadness, Paloma Faith could be on course for national treasure status.
She won a Brit Award for British Female Solo Artist in 2015 and topped the charts with her excellent 2017 album The Architect. Her signature power ballad Only Love Can Hurt Like This, which has recently enjoyed a revival on TikTok, is a vocal tour de force that regularly defeats karaoke singers.
The Hackney-born singer and actress (she starred in the Batman spin-off series Pennyworth) is a grafter with a great backstory. Before she signed her first record deal in 2008, she worked as a burlesque dancer, bartender, magician’s assistant, life model and at posh lingerie shop Agent Provocateur. Glamorous but approachable, she’s a bit like a modern mix of Barbara Windsor and Shirley Bassey.
But there’s one difference. “How many people that are left-wing like me ever get to become a national treasure?” she asks, then answers her own question. “None. National treasures like Babs and Shirley, they’re all Tories – adorable, but Tories.”
In fairness, Bassey would never belt out a song called Eat Shit and Die, a spiky highlight from Paloma Faith’s new album. Like much of the album, it’s a bold and honest response to the breakdown of Faith’s relationship with artist Leyman Lahcine, the father of her two children. They split in 2022 after around 10 years together.
Faith says Eat Shit and Die was cathartic to write. “I’d had enough of doing all the intelligent, mature breakup stuff – all the conversations we had in couples therapy and separation therapy,” she says. “So then I was like, ‘I’m gonna let my petulant inner child come out now.’”