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Lily Allen in Los Angeles

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Lily Allen
Orpheum Theatre — Los Angeles, CA
Lily Allen
Orpheum Theatre — Los Angeles, CA

Lily Allen emerged in the mid-2000s with a sharp wit and a gift for catchy pop songs that masked deeper frustration. Her debut album dropped in 2006 with tracks like LDN and Smile, early evidence that she could write hooks that stuck around whether you wanted them to or not. The Fear became her signature moment — a production-heavy track that somehow made anxiety sound danceable. She had a thing for pointed social commentary wrapped in pop packaging, whether calling out unfaithful partners on Not Fair or delivering her most anthemic moment with Fuck You. Allen stepped back from music for years, dealing with personal stuff, then came back in 2018 with No Shame, proving she hadn't lost the ability to write a solid pop song. Her catalog is sparse enough that her releases feel deliberate rather than prolific, which probably suits her better anyway.

Allen commands crowds with confidence despite her understated stage presence. People come for the hits and sing back every word. There's a knowing energy in the room, like everyone's in on the joke. She doesn't oversell anything.

Known for Smile, The Fear, Fuck You, Not Fair, LDN

Lily Allen has never been one to play it safe in Los Angeles, and her January 2026 stop at Chateau Marmont proved exactly why. The intimate venue suited her dry wit and sharp songwriting in ways larger rooms never could. She opened with "Sleepwalking," a track that finds her somewhere between introspection and detachment, then moved through a setlist that prioritized depth over obviousness. "Tennis" came next—a song that captures the back-and-forth exhaustion of a failing relationship—followed by the brooding "Just Enough" and "Madeline," which allowed her to stretch into more vulnerable territory. She closed the main set with "Pussy Palace," a track that's equal parts provocative and deadpan, the kind of song that only works when the artist fully commits to the bit. It was the kind of show that reminded you why Allen's catalog has endured: she refuses to make things easy.

Los Angeles remains a city obsessed with spectacle, but there's always been space for artists like Lily Allen who prefer wit to grandeur. The city's indie and alternative scenes have grown increasingly sophisticated, with smaller venues like Chateau Marmont providing stages for the kind of unfiltered performances that bigger clubs can't accommodate. Allen's brand of satirical pop-rock aligns with LA's long tradition of artists using humor as a weapon—from The Go-Go's to more contemporary acts skeptical of industry machinery.

Stay in Los Feliz, where you can walk tree-lined streets and catch views from Griffith Observatory. Dinner at Republique in the Arts District—refined French-inspired food in a restored factory space that feels more Paris than LA. Spend an afternoon at the Huntington Library in San Marino, a world-class art collection that justifies the drive. The city's recording studio history is everywhere; walk through Hollywood and you're literally surrounded by the spaces where hits were made. End the night at a jazz bar like The Fonda Theatre or catch live music on Sunset Boulevard.

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