FEATURE:
Spotlight: Revisited
SOFIA ISELLA
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SOMEONE who I…
spotlighted in 2024, I wanted to reproach SOFIA ISELLA (she styles her name in all capitals, so that is what I shall do throughout), as she did a lot last year. An incredible Mexican-American singer, songwriter, and violinist defined by her unique sound, blending Pop with deeper themes, gaining traction for her music and opening for major acts like Taylor Swift. Last year, ISELLA put out the I’m camera. E.P. and some brilliant singles, so there has been some movement and evolution regarding her sound since I spotlighted her. ISELLA has some tour dates booked for this year, including some U.S. dates with Florence + The Machine. This amazing artist will be in the U.K. in May, so that will be exciting. One thing you do get with SOFIA ISELLA is amazing value. In terms of the spread of photos on her social media, there is so much to choose from. She is so prolific and releases loads of music, there are regular and great interviews, and a wide range of social media accounts. This is an artist who ticks all the boxes, so I will revisit her and bring in some 2025 interviews. I am going to lead with an intervbiew with The Independent from last August. Ahead of her U.K. headline tour, Hannah Ewens spoke with SOFIA ISELLA. “The alternative musician spent last year riding high after supporting Taylor Swift on the Eras Tour. But the 20-year-old poet is no pop princess”. It is a fascinating conversation:
“I got called demonic by someone online for the first time the other day,” says the alt musician Sofia Isella, who is not annoyed but in a blissful reverie. “There were other compliments within her message: I have ‘the most ominous aura she’s ever seen in her life’.”
I wouldn’t say these things about the 20-year-old LA native goth at all but I might say she’s mysterious. Across the cafe table from me, she’s completely obscured by a big hood and steampunk glasses. I’m trying to interview her but every question I ask is countered with a softly spoken question. ‘Do you remember what you learned in math class?’ ‘What is your least favourite modern word?’ ‘But what do you think about that?’ As she calmly knits herself a fingerless glove – while wearing it – all I can think is that I’m not surprised that this curious person is a curiosity to 1.7 million people on Instagram. She likes to learn about other people, she says, although this sometimes comes across as passionate debate. “I’m going easy on you…” she adds.
In person, Isella is gentle and thoughtful, but that spikier side exists in her music: acerbic whispered poetry set to Nine Inch Nails-style beats. On the distinctive piano-led track “The Doll People”, she is a dark Regina Spektor, explaining in ironic ASMR tones why women are best enjoyed beautiful and mute: “Art does not interpret itself / There are men with a day to save / We are paintings with legs”.
Isella thinks it might have been her elegant rant “Everybody Supports Women”, about how women inevitably get torn down from every angle, that got the attention of Taylor Swift, who chose her to play at Wembley Stadium on her Eras Tour. Or at least, it was that song that was mentioned in a handwritten letter Swift gave to the singer. “It’s easier to play Wembley than it is to play a bar with two people,” Isella says, shaking off any idea that she might’ve needed some extra nerves to scale up her intimate live sets so dramatically.
Her most recent (very unsettling) EP I’m camera – all confrontational images against industrial soundscapes – feels like a musical museum of taxidermied oddities. “Crowd Caffeine” is a creepy track about how we sanitise the human experience with overuse of technology and has Grimes (another notable Sofia Isella fan and follower) listed as a songwriter. She technically didn’t have a hand in writing it but Isella was heavily inspired by something the electronic musician posted online in 2024: “The machines want to be like humans / humans r trying be like machines / I’m sure we can work smthn out”.
While she’s mostly interested in writing about the experience of women, one song, “Man Made”, is for her male counterparts. “It’s an empathetic approach to them shooting themselves in the foot with masculinity demands,” she explains. When she was 15, she asked lots of her friends the question, “What is the biggest pressure that society puts on you?” The girls said beauty standards. “The men – kind men – all said they felt pressured by other men to talk s*** about women, to be mean to them, to not be a ‘simp’ or whatever that word is… to not love women.” This surprised her, but then human beings are constantly surprising her.
Around the time we speak, she’s preparing to return to the UK to play Reading and Leeds Festival – which took place this weekend – and a short headlining tour. “I’ve always known that this is definitely the world that I sacrifice myself to,” she says of pop music, as though it’s the most normal thing in the world. “Because every world is a sacrifice. You gain something but everything you say yes to, you are sacrificing something else.” Take a Taylor Swift, for example. “Somebody at those big levels, we see their highlight reel, but they’re always sacrificing something.” At present, Isella can walk out into her crowds and hold hands with fans, have meaningful conversations with them even. “I’m small enough now that people still see me somewhat as human.” But it may not be long before she’s seen as less human, more icon, more machine”.
IN THIS PHOTO: SOFIA ISELLA performs at the House of Blues in Orlando on 2nd November, 2025/PHOTO CREDIT: Nicolita Bradley
Though I am not fan of when artists put titles all in lower case or upper case and do that sort of mix, you cannot deny the quality and genius of SOFIA ISELLA. Look at her social media accounts and where she played last year. Such incredible live photos, you can feel the electricity and love from the crowd. So captivating and this physical experience, she is one of the greatest performers in modern music. A sensational live act that everyone needs to see. I will heads to a November interview from Los Angeles Times, as we get some background on this incredible artist. If you have not heard her before, you really need to connect with this superstar-in-waiting. Someone who will be as big as artists like Taylor Swift:
“Isella grew up in Los Angeles in a family with enough entertainment-biz acclaim to make being an artist feel like a viable career. Yet they still let her be feral and freewheeling in developing her craft. Her father, the Chilean-Danish American cinematographer Claudio Miranda, won an Oscar for 2012’s “Life of Pi” and shot “Top Gun: Maverick” and the recent racing hit “F1” (Her mom is the author Kelli Bean-Miranda). Looking back on her bucolic childhood in L.A., Isella recalled it as being filled with music and boundless encouragement, worlds away from her social media-addled peers.
“I’d been homeschooled my whole life,” Isella said. “My mom would leave little trails of poetry books for me to find, and my dad would set up GarageBand and leave me for hours with all the instruments and nothing but free time. I didn’t even have a phone until I was 16. When I first was on TikTok, I saw everyone had the same personality, because they had been watching each other for so long. Being around kids my age was so strange, because I’d grown up around adults — like, ‘Oh, these kids are so sweet and kind and adorable, but they think I’m one of them.’”
After her family temporarily moved to Australia during the pandemic and Isella began self-releasing music, it became clear that her talents set her very far apart. Drawing on her early background in classical music and a fascination with scabrous rock and electronic music, she found a sound that melded the Velvet Underground and Nico’s elegant miserablism, Chelsea Wolfe and Lingua Ignota’s doom-laden art metal and the close-miked , creepy goth-pop of Billie Eilish’s first LP.
Her early music showed a withering humor and skepticism of the culture around her (“All of Human Knowledge Made Us Dumb,” “Everybody Supports Women”), but singles came at a rapid clip and translated surprisingly well on the social media platforms she loathed (she has 1.3 million followers on TikTok). It all got her onto stages with Melanie Martinez and Glass Animals and, eventually, Swift. (A Florence + the Machine arena tour opening slot is up next.)
Her newest material (and her subversively eerie, Francesca Woodman-evoking music videos like “Muse”) feel perfectly timed to the apocalyptic mood in L.A. and the U.S. now, where an inexorable slide to ruin feels biblical. “Out in the Garden,” from September, hits some of the Southern gothic moods of Ethel Cain, but with a sense of acidic pity that’s all her own. “That there’s a small part of me that’s envious / That you fullheartedly believe someone is always there,” she sings. “That will always love you, and there’s a plan for you out there.”
Even at her bleakest, there’s a curdled humor underneath (her current tour is subtitled “You’ll Understand More, Dick”). But if this little sliver of young fame has taught Isella anything, it’s that even when everyone wants a piece of you, no one is actually coming to save any of us.
“There’s nothing with weight, nothing that’s meaningful, to blind faith,” Isella said. “On this next record, I’m about to go really angry because religion really pisses me off, it inflames me. But it’s the most beautiful placebo to imagine that there’s a father that loves you no matter what you do. I’m a really lucky person in that I’ve always been safe and protected, but if you’ve had a rough life, that is insanely powerful to imagine that and believe that”.
PHOTO CREDIT: Nicolita Bradley
Even though this interview is mostly photos and that takes up more space than the words, there are some interesting takeaways and responses from SOFIA ISELLA in this FADER interview. Spotlighting this “20-year-old inspired by Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton, and who has already opened for Taylor Swift”, I do think that this year is going to be another massive one. I am going to end with a review of I’m camera., as it was one of the best E.P.s of last year. I do think, if there is a debut album soon, it will be one of the most anticipated of that year:
“Describe the best show you’ve played this year so far.
Montréal was such an incredible crowd that for the first time, I felt like it was hard to keep up with their energy . They really pushed me . I love that .
What’s your favorite song to play live right now and why?
Above the Neck . Because I take my pants off . That song is out now .
What’s a motto that you think everyone should live by?
Be bored . Boredom has given me creativity and it’s a fight to be bored in this world .
What’s the worst advice you’ve ever received?
Don’t be political . I was told early on to not divide my audience .
What’s the best thing you’ve bought yourself recently and why?
Books . I was in the bookstore and I overheard someone behind me saying very loudly “Is that Sofia ? Isella ? Could be . Maybe not .” I’m not sure if they wanted me to confirm . I’m currently reading The Martian .
I will finish off with this review from Hive Magazine and a simply stunning E.P. Though the tone of the E.P. is darker and moodier than you’d get from most Pop artists in the mainstream, SOFIA ISELLA is not trying to follow them. She is as compelling as the best Pop artists, though I think she offers something deeper and more interesting. Perhaps more in common with Billie Eilish or Florence + The Machine. However, it is hard to directly compare her to another artist. ISELLA is unique. I am excited to see what this year holds in store:
“Moody and atmospheric are words that get thrown around a lot to describe indie music that spares a second to think about itself — SOFIA ISELLA’s second EP, I’m camera. is an example of a record that really fits that bill, and it does so beautifully. Opening track ‘Muse’ is a meditation on the violence of being possessed by inspiration. Backed by an ominous plucked guitar, building into a choral descent into madness, Isella discusses the horror of being a female artist in a deft and stylish authorial voice. She discusses how her work feels like an imitation of her personhood — “a shadow mimicking [her] slightly wrong.” The muse is transmuted from an inert force to a “gun,” holding her hostage but simultaneously making her “scared to die.” Isella captures the intensity and enormity of this dilemma, and manages to pull gold out of what I’d argue is tired material: the stress of stardom, the glare of the spotlight, the challenges of being creative in front of other people.
‘Josephine’ is a low-pitched, rumbling nightmare that climbs, crests, and fans out into a. Isella’s voice is delightfully intense, soaring to gorgeous falsetto and falling to a growl. She puts a clever twist on the “I’m a star and you, someone who doubted me, are not” revenge song by illustrating the darkness hiding in the cracks of that comparative, competitive mentality. As always, Isella takes well trodden ground and treads it in a new way.
‘Dog’s Dinner’ is one of my favourite types of songs: it’s about having bad sex that makes you feel awful. It’s a song about receiving overly enthusiastic cunnilingus from someone you’re slowly coming to be disgusted by. It’s a bitter, cruel little track, and I enjoyed every seething, sardonic second of it. If I’m recommending one track from I’m camera., it’s this one.
While most of Isella’s music wraps a blunt message in poetic, avant garde style, ‘Crowd Caffeine’ has the subtlety of a sledgehammer. It’s a track about phones, technological dependency, and dopamine addiction. It doesn’t quite thread the needle on combining this subject matter in a way that doesn’t sound like evangelism. My reservations aside, the squeal of the guitar before the final bridge made my hair stand on end — like the rest of the EP, it’s sonically sumptuous, something to sink your teeth into. It’s just a bit naff when you compare it to everything it’s surrounded by.
‘Man Made’ is Isella’s most impressive vocal showcase; she sounds better on this song than anything else she’s ever released, and my God, Isella can sing. There’s a cowboy jangling spurs-ism to ‘Man Made’ that works beautifully. It’s an anti-masculine, anti-gender anthem that fits into Isella’s artistic oeuvre, and cements her place (at least in my mind) as the indie music scene’s feminist poet laureate.
‘Orchestrated, Wet, Verboten’ begins with ambient sound that blends into a more striking guitar line than anything else on I’m camera., There’s actual energy here; ‘OWV’ grabs an uncomfortable set of feelings and pulls them until they unravel. It’s about wanting to be wanted in a way that destroys you and the person wanting you. “I want you to take my breath and merge your own” is one of the most achingly horrible bits of verse I’ve heard in a while, and it captures exactly what makes Isella a stand-out musician.
I’m camera. is a brilliant EP. It’s clever and angry and bitter and ironic, and considering how meteoric Isella’s rise has been so far, I hope it's another boost upward. While I have my issues with some of the writing, I think it’s a great record on the whole, and I’d highly recommend it”.
Coming back to an artist I was excited to spotlight in 2024, last year was such a huge one for SOFIA ISELLA, I had to come back. She is being tipped by people for success this year. Still a rising artist, she has this incredible live experience that you can feel in her music. Brilliant photos, wonderful music and these stunning live performances, SOFIA ISELLA is in her own league. Look around music and there are…
FEW are as good as her.
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