Charli XCX BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.
Charli XCX is closing out 2025 with a wave of activity that is both musically daring and personally revealing. On November 13, Charli unveiled plans for her new album Wuthering Heights, due February 13 on Atlantic. According to Rolling Stone, this 12-track record is the official soundtrack for Emerald Fennell’s adaptation of the Emily Brontë classic, which hits theaters on Valentine’s Day. The album’s centerpiece, Chains of Love, was released alongside the announcement and anchors the film’s trailer, embodying what Charli describes as a Velvet Underground-inspired balance of elegance and brutality. She’s also collaborating with VU’s own John Cale on the opening track House, marking a major crossover between avant-pop and rock legacy.
On her Substack, Charli said this project feels less about pop convention and more a celebration of her freedom as an artist. She’s made clear she doesn’t care if Wuthering Heights is seen as a “Charli XCX album” in the traditional sense—she just wants it to express where she is now, creatively and personally. After the seismic impact of her Brat era, Charli told FemaleFirst and also posted on social media about feeling drained and stuck for months, making it a relief to be making music again. Dork magazine notes that she’s also balancing a packed film slate, including soundtrack work for A24’s The Moment and roles in upcoming features with directors Daniel Goldhaber, Greg Araki, Cathy Yan, and Romain Gavras among others.
Vanity Fair recently featured Charli for a cover story, delving into her relationship with self-image, fame, and her label Atlantic. She was frank that her relationship with the label has gone from turbulent to stable; she now views Atlantic as “a bank,” happy to let her take creative lead. Charli says she reads everything posted about her online, acknowledging its psychological weight while staying fascinated by how the public shapes her narrative. She admitted she is “always thinking about plastic surgery” and is candid about her struggles with appearance, although she recently stopped getting Botox and feels ambivalent about more procedures.
Despite speculation, Charli has avoided directly addressing Taylor Swift’s not-so-subtle diss track Actually Romantic, rumored to reference her, and continues to keep public focus on her own artistry. In the past week, her new work and outspoken persona have dominated coverage across music press, social media, and fan parties—like the Club Classics: Charli XCX dance party held in Cleveland on November 11. Charli XCX is proving she’s as fiercely independent as she is in-demand, with her music, film ventures, and unfiltered interviews making major headlines as 2025 draws to a close.
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