FEATURE:
A Twenty-First Century Beatlemania
IN THIS PHOTO: PinkPantheress photographed for Vogue in March 2026/PHOTO CREDIT: Tyler Mitchell
How British Women in Pop Are Dominating in the U.S.
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I am going to sort of tie…
IN THIS PHOTO: Sienna Spiro
two different stories together, because I do think that they link. One involves superstar Robyn, who told Capital Buzz that the long Pop album is “boring”: “Why not make two albums then? I think 40 minutes is [enough]”. I do sort of get some of that. It can be pretty hard listening to an album that suffers from too much self-indulgence or is overstuffed. Whilst there are some great Pop albums that are short and to the point, an artist I am about to mention is a master of that form, I do like that modern Pop artists are not constrained and can take time with albums. I don’t think that albums should be short. Artists should be allowed to tell their story and express themselves freely. It is great when we do get these short albums, though this has to mixed with Pop albums that are longer and expansive. Music is always evolving, so the days where singles have to be a certain lengths and albums running to ten tracks is gone. Robyn’s latest album, SEXISTENTIAL, is nine tracks and none last over four minutes. However, RAYE’s THIS MUSIC MAY CONTAIN HOPE. Runs at seventeen tracks and is like a double album. It has a few weaker moments, though it is this ambitious and grand Pop album that is soul-baring, stunning and this sense of freedom, defiance and a major talent hitting her peak. If artists are too constrained then I do feel that the Pop market would be weaker, though I do agree that some longer albums can be boring. Whilst we can argue as to whether the Pop album is becoming longer and it is a case of artists losing focus – maybe rallying against streaming and people clicking on tracks and not having that attention span -, there is no denying that women are leading. Not just in the world of Pop.
It has been a long time since an artist or scene swept America and created this incredible excitement. The New York Times published a recent article that argued that the new British Invasion is led by women. We may associate bands like The Beatles conquering America and whipping up this frenzy. Whilst we could never replicate that at all – as time have changed and no artist will ever match The Beatles’ talent, originality and capturing a moment and breaking ground -, it is interesting how British artists are gaining more real estate and attention in America. It has been a long time since British artists have seemed to capture imagination and excitement quite like this. Maybe those are not the right words. However, not since the 1990s and Britpop has there been this dominance. Even then, I am not sure how fully British bands were taken to heart. However, right now, there is something shaping up which The New York Times highlighted:
“But the most impactful 21st century British pop stars thus far have almost always been outliers, rising to the top without being part of a larger movement. With her second album, “Back to Black,” Amy Winehouse broke through to the American charts and won five Grammys in 2008, becoming one of the most successful British artists in the United States practically overnight. Adele is a commercial behemoth, and her albums “21,” “25” and “30” — along with their indelible singles, including “Hello” and “Someone Like You” — represent some of the best-selling and most-decorated records in American history. Likewise, Ed Sheeran has sold over 100 million records in the United States and is consistently listed as one of the highest-grossing touring artists here.
These artists all broke through, in part, off the back of their distinct Britishness: All three were rough around the edges and celebrated for it, capitalizing on an unfussy, unpretentious aesthetic typical of the United Kingdom in contrast to their glossy American counterparts. They were also, generally, the British curios in a sea of Americans, as opposed to representatives of any broader cultural wave”.
I do think a lot of the focus in the 2010s and first half of this decade was focused on American artists. The nation maybe embracing their own talent. The dominance of Taylor Swift. Artists like Billie Eilish defining Pop adulation there, though it is hard to overlook how Swift pretty much took over. Things are changing now. Not that she is going anywhere, though the U.S. is now showing a lot of love for some incredible British queens:
“Aside from Dua Lipa, the late 2010s and early 2020s saw few British pop breakouts. But a new cohort of stars — led by four multiracial women — seems intent on changing that. In the past few years, TikTok has elevated a handful of English musicians to newfound renown in the States; this new class of stars emphasizes and plays off its Britishness, with broad accents and Vivienne Westwood corsets. (Though they largely avoid traditional markers of Anglomania, or representations of the Union Jack, like their mostly white forebears.) And, for the most part, they work in a mode familiarized by Winehouse and Adele: that of the brassy British soul diva, sharing unfiltered feelings in a classicist package.
Leading the charge is Raye, the 28-year-old Londoner who broke through in 2022 with her angsty TikTok hit “Escapism.” Signing with Polydor, an imprint of Universal Music Group, at 18, Raye spent a decade in the major-label trenches, releasing a series of EPs, providing guest vocals for EDM producers like Jax Jones and Joel Corry, and serving as a hired-gun songwriter for Beyoncé and Charli XCX, among others. In 2021, she spoke out, saying that the label had been withholding her debut album; shortly after, they parted ways. “Escapism,” a weepy hybrid rap-soul song, was one of her first independent releases, and peaked at No. 1 on the U.K. charts”.
Since the release of “Escapism,” Raye’s career has been on a steady climb: She supported Taylor Swift on her blockbuster Eras tour in 2024, and performed at the Oscars in 2025, covering Adele’s Bond theme “Skyfall”; later that year, she released “Where Is My Husband!,” a glitzy funk track that went viral on social media and subsequently peaked in the Top 20 of the Hot 100”.
IN THIS PHOTO: Dua Lipa
It is clear that RAYE especially is this incredible export that is going to headline major festivals and will no doubt get a lot of future tour dates in the U.S. RAYE is currently touring in the U.S., and is going to be there next month too. She has two huge U.K. dates on 19th and 20th May at The O2. THIS MUSIC MAY CONTAIN HOPE. Has blown up around the world and America are throwing their weight and support behind RAYE. She is at the front of this new British invasion that includes artists like Charli xcx, Dua Lipa and PinkPantheress:
“Where Is My Husband!” was the first single from Raye’s second album, “This Music May Contain Hope.,” released last week. It is, for the most part, an album of uber-traditionalist soul and vocal jazz that dabbles, occasionally, in the run-on cadences of contemporary rap and clumsy TikTok slang. It also plays up the fact that Raye is not American: On the opening track, she sings that “some people say I remind them of Amy,” and multiple songs name check South London, where Raye grew up. She has clearly identified her Britishness as a selling point: Posters for her current tour dub her “The oh-so fabulous gal from South London.”
Raye’s music feels like it’s in conversation with that of the singer Olivia Dean, who shunned the music factories in Los Angeles for her second album, 2025’s “The Art of Loving,” instead asking her collaborators to decamp to a house in London that was refitted into a studio. But where Raye’s music is tightly stitched and intentionally showy, Dean’s is loose and conversational. She starts with the same soul diva archetype and removes much of the fuss, in line with younger tastes, while remaining staunchly throwback. “Man I Need,” a single from the album, has spent much of the year hovering in the Top 5 of the Hot 100; although that song draws from Motown and classic soul — and finds Dean adjusting her accent accordingly — other songs on the album, like “So Easy (to Fall in Love)” showcase the distinct contours of her London-native accent.
At this year’s Grammys, Dean beat another Londoner for the Grammys’ best new artist prize: Lola Young, the foul-mouthed belter whose 2024 track “Messy” has been an inescapable hit for nearly two years straight. On her 2025 album, “I’m Only Fucking Myself,” Young makes a meal out of her London-ness, incorporating sounds that have a strong place in the city’s musical heritage — Afrobeat, pub-rock, motorik post-punk. Young, who is tattooed and mulleted, presents herself as a product of her generation, but still expresses clear fealty to her forebears; she is even managed by Nick Shymansky, who oversaw the early years of Winehouse’s career.
Just think about the established and rising British talent we have. Incredible women like Lola Young, Olivia Deana and Sienna Spiro. Olivia Dean is possibly the biggest British Pop artists right now. Winning awards at the BRITs, GRAMMYs and being nominated at the Ivor Novello Awards, this year has undoubtedly belonged to her. In the same way Charli xcx dominated in 2024 with BRAT, Olivia Dean is defining 2026. It is not only the consistency and success of these Pop queens that is startling. ‘Pop’ is too narrow a definition. In terms of genres, we are looking at R&B, Jazz and a broad spectrum of sounds. Sienna Spiro has the potential to be one of the biggest artists in the world and a legendary name that we will talk about decades from now. I have seen her compared favourable to the late Amy Winehouse, whose final studio album, Back to Black, turns twenty in October. However, Spiro is very much her own artists and will no doubt influence a wave of female artists coming through years from now:
“In her decidedly TikTok-informed presentation, Young is similar to Sienna Spiro, a husky-voiced 20-year-old torch singer. Spiro’s string-drenched soul ballads owe a clear debt to Adele, but her presentation is glamorous and decidedly “vintage” in a very 2020s way, with finessed makeup and minimalist styling.
Then there’s PinkPantheress, the young producer and vocalist who went viral during the pandemic for her intuitive, bedroom-pop flips of classic British dance tracks. PinkPantheress is the outlier of this latest British Invasion: Unlike that of her compatriots, her songs feel musically progressive — and in conversation with other alt-pop artists of the moment like Salute and Fcukers. When it looks to the past, it specifically draws from big-beat 2000s British producers like Basement Jaxx and Groove Armada, rather than just a murky assemblage of vague signifiers.
British identity was always baked into PinkPantheress’s music, but her second mixtape “Fancy That,” released last year, embraced full-on English kitsch: In the imagery associated with the project, the musician is pictured wearing crown jewels and surrounded by scrapbook-y pictures of red telephone boxes and landmarks like Big Ben. One song, “Stateside,” is about an American man who’s never met a British girl; already a popular song on TikTok in the months following its release, the track’s remix featuring the Swedish singer Zara Larsson has surged in recent weeks thanks to the Olympian Alysa Liu, who adapted a dance featured in the video for one of her winning figure-skating routines in Milan”.
It is fascinating and hugely pleasing seeing these phenomenal women capturing the America market. It was always seen as this goa and high point: artists conquering America. Like that was the only way to get success and endure. I don’t think that is the case anymore. Plenty of enduring and successful artists have not had major success in the U.S. However, after so many years when British music was struggling to ignite and remain in the minds of U.S. audiences and create shockwaves, there is this new British Invasion movement led by women. I am not sure whether it directly applies to now. The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Animals, The Kinks, The Dave Clark Five, Herman's Hermits, and The Who among those characterising the artists who swept America largely during the 1960s and early-1970s. However, like that British Invasion, the styles ad fashion of the modern Pop queens is influential. Olivia Dean different to Lola Young, who has her own style compared to RAYE and Sienna Spiro. These women do not replicate, follow crowds or mimic. Same with interviews, their tour experience and social media relationship with fans. They are distinct and unique artists who I feel are more interesting and stronger than so many U.S. Pop artists (though I love the likes of Addison Rae, Madison Beer and their peers). It is not only award recognition and British artists winning at the GRAMMYs and touring the country. Their albums are selling well there. I do love how THIS MUSIC MAY CONTAIN HOPE. features Hans Zimmer, Al Green, the London Symphony Orchestra (conducted by Tom Richards), Flames Collective Choir, and her sisters Amma and Absolutely. PinkPantheress’s 2025 mixtape, Fancy That, reaching number two on the US Top Dance Albums (Billboard). Both albums vastly different. Two distinct women. Of course, Charli xcx and Dua Lipa have been successful in the U.S. for a while. Lipa’s 2024 album, Radical Optimism, reached number two on the US Billboard 200.
Going back to the top of this feature and Robyn’s comments around long Pop albums being boring. I don’t feel this is the case. RAYE has proven that. Allowing more room and time to allow her music to expand, make a statement and not be confined, I feel she would be a lesser artist is she was restricted. However, there are amazing British Pop queens who can deliver these shorter albums. It is a sad by-product of the TikTok generation that there is this desire for music to be shorter and bitesize. If artists like The Beatles, leading the first British Invasion from 1964, were geniuses when it came to timeless Pop music that was short and concentrated, that is – and does not need to be – the case anymore. Pop is evolving and always expanding, so there is more choice, diversity and depth. Artists like PinkPantheress is you want shorter songs and this concise and exceptional music. Acts like RAYE whose new album is longer. Icons such as Charli xcx taking Pop in new directions but not being conscious about writing these three-minute jams. It is great that The New York Times spotlighted and discussed this new British Invasion that is led by women. Pop making an impact in the country in a way arguably that is has not done for almost sixty years. When it comes to the success and variety on offer and how the public are reacting. Such exceptional music from these British queens. There is a new generation and wave making moves that will join them and add new layers and weight to this American dominance.
Pink Pantheress was recently featured by Vogue alongside the young musicians and actors to watch right now: “It feels like I’ve been catapulted into a new space,” says PinkPantheress. The 24-year-old British artist dropped her second mixtape, Fancy That, late last year, a freewheeling bricolage of dance-pop, UK garage, and electronica, lacquered with her sharp humour. For her efforts, she picked up producer of the year at the Brit Awards—the first woman ever to do so—joining a lineage that includes Brian Eno and George Martin of The Beatles. Now touring North America and onwards to Coachella, Pink—who was once quasi-anonymous—wears her British Y2K-ified tartans with pride. “I’m feeling experimental,” she says. “I like diving into a bunch of different genres and pulling from different things. I can feel [myself] returning back to my roots, with whatever may come next”. It is so thrilling that she, Olivia Dean, Lola Young, RAYE and other British queens of Pop are standing loud and proud. Maybe a new summer of love for 2026. A wave of affection and respect for women in Pop releasing some of the best and most inspiring music produced in years. These innovative, empowering, distinct, multifaceted and strong women in Pop flying the flag…
FOR British music.
