Sophie lloyd

2 min read

HIGH HOPES

Thanks to her debut LP, the British YouTube sensation has become a star in her own right.

“Everyone on the album is someone who I admired while growing up.”
NATHERSONN/PRESS

EARLIER THIS YEAR, Sophie Lloyd found herself in a bar with Michael Starr. The Steel Panther frontman – one of ten guest singers on Lloyd’s hard rock debut, Imposter Syndrome – was in London to shoot a music video with her. It all started sensibly enough. Then, with the arrival of select fans and Lloyd’s rocker friends, it all got a bit Coyote Ugly.

“We did shots with the water hose spraying the whole crowd,” she says, “the girls dancing on the bar with Michael, we had someone take body shots off Michael and everything. It all just suddenly went a bit out of control towards the last two hours. It was fun.”

It’s a huge change of scene for the guitarist, who developed her chops in her bedroom and made her name with a successful YouTube channel (now over 1 million subscribers), doing shred versions of standards from Enter Sandman to Stairway To Heaven. But there are two sides to Lloyd. The impressive stats, Joe Satriani-meets-Zakk Wylde licks and glamazon look say one thing; the subject matter of Imposter Syndrome says another. “I’m quite introverted,” she says. “I’m quite a quiet person, especially when I’m on my own, but when you’re in that music, you have to be the loud, confident person.”

Even with her classic inspirations (Led Zeppelin, Rory Gallagher, Alice Cooper…) Lloyd, 27, is a product of 21st century rock. Growing up in Henley-on-Thames, she had Steel Panther posters on her bedroom wall. Her dad’s Joe Bonamassa records were part of her musical diet. She sang along to Halestorm songs in her mother’s car on the way to school. It’s all fed into Imposter Syndrome, with Lzzy Hale singing the title track.

“I wanted to write an album for my 15-year-old self,” she explains, “growing up kind of lost, but just knowing I loved music

This article is from...

Related Articles

Related Articles