Lily Allen: No Shame review – divorce, deceit and the Daily Mail in gloriously raw return
The singer’s broken marriage is laid bare in an album that offers spikiness, regret and vulnerability via uniformly first-rate popIt’s hard not to heave a weary sigh as Lily Allen’s fourth album gets under way. From the title down, No Shame has been trumpeted as a ballsy return to form following 2014’s Sheezus – and yet the opening track, Come on Then, sounds remarkably like something off that album. A relative of Wind Your Neck In or URL Badman without the lat...
Guardian Music — The singer’s broken marriage is laid bare in an album that offers spikiness, regret and vulnerability via uniformly first-rate popIt’s hard not to heave a w... more info