Lele (Speaks)
She sings, too.
Lele looks like she should be in the cast of Skins, or doing bubblegum pop whilst twirling her blonde hair around her finger, or wearing a spiked bracelet on one arm and a wristband on the other strumming a hot-pink Fender Stratocaster. Instead, she has chosen to occupy an ill-trodden path between her mutual loves of Rancid and the Wu-Tang Clan. Suffice to say, it's not an easy ride.
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“When I first started up the Myspace page and started to get asked to gigs, the promoters didn’t even know who I was, acting all high and mighty and rubbish. I used to get mad at them, telling them to just gimme the mic, put my beats on – I’m doing it. You haven’t paid me, I don’t have to be here, but here I am – this is me.” Such behaviour seems remarkably at odds with her waif-like frame and languid, South-London accent. Her grit perhaps finds its roots in the banal yet hyper-ambitious MTV culture she is part-immersed in: “I’m really into American music: Fifty and Slim. Strangely people always cuss me about it, but I also really like the Southern stuff – Chamillionaire and Paul Wall. Obviously Blink 182…” Lele's identification with US gangsta rap can be traced to her self-confessed aversion to the ‘white trash’ that used to populate the Rose Hill Estate in her hometown of Mitchum – a place where no nightlife exists apart from Tiger Tigers and All Bar Ones. “Bars for the nine-to-five weekend warriors - I’m more of a go out whenever person, really. Maybe Wednesdays. ”
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I ask about her publicised comparisons to Lily Allen and if it annoys her – her track Juice certainly has the ska-ry bounce that made Allen’s LDN such a commercial hit. “Everyone compares me to Lily Allen. It’s the laziest comparison. It just confuses me really. I reckon the closest similarity is that we’re both female. I wrote and recorded Juice when I was 17, before Lily had even emerged.” Lele pokes fun at the current wave of condescension towards the emo community in her video Uhh-Ooh, by simulating a bathtub suicide attempt and tearing her hair out over what turns out to be a shopping list. “Everyone has a bit of emo in them. For me, it’s cool to be that open with yourself, that experimental.”
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The more you talk to her, the more Lele (SPEAKS) seems an apt moniker – like she knows exactly what you might think of her, and that she knows that she’s going to do her own thing anyway. “I’m so excited about my new material: lyrically, flow-wise I’ve gotten a lot better. It’s just been so long since I’ve had new stuff out – the last time I was in the studio was a year ago. I write all the time. I’ve got stacks of lyrics – so thank god [SuperVision] came around‘cos it was getting to the stage where I couldn’t afford studio time anymore!”
More from Lele here.



































