Last updated: 6 hours ago
Alt-pop for the people who feel too much in a world that doesn’t get it. ✨
Emma Elizabeth is an alt-pop artist from London whose music sits at the intersection of vulnerability and clarity. With a sound that’s catchy, heartfelt, and unafraid to sit in raw emotion, she writes songs that speak to what it’s like to feel misunderstood in a world that doesn’t always make sense.
Drawing inspiration from artists like LANY, FINNEAS, and Jacob Collier, Emma explores themes like autism, mental health, identity, loss, loneliness, and the quiet ache of trying to fit in. Her songs are honest reflections of the messy, beautiful experience of being human.
She began writing as a way to process feelings she couldn’t express any other way. Everything changed when she was diagnosed as autistic later in life—a moment that helped her make sense of her deep sensitivity, and her pull towards music. Since then, she’s leaned even more into telling the truth through song, both for herself and anyone else who’s ever felt like an outsider.
With each release, she’s taken on more of the production herself—most recently producing two tracks on her upcoming EP. For Emma, producing isn’t just about control; it’s about finally being able to recreate the sounds she’s always heard in her mind.
At the heart of everything she makes is the belief that feelings are worth listening to—and that music can be a space to hold what’s hard to say out loud.
Emma Elizabeth is an alt-pop artist from London whose music sits at the intersection of vulnerability and clarity. With a sound that’s catchy, heartfelt, and unafraid to sit in raw emotion, she writes songs that speak to what it’s like to feel misunderstood in a world that doesn’t always make sense.
Drawing inspiration from artists like LANY, FINNEAS, and Jacob Collier, Emma explores themes like autism, mental health, identity, loss, loneliness, and the quiet ache of trying to fit in. Her songs are honest reflections of the messy, beautiful experience of being human.
She began writing as a way to process feelings she couldn’t express any other way. Everything changed when she was diagnosed as autistic later in life—a moment that helped her make sense of her deep sensitivity, and her pull towards music. Since then, she’s leaned even more into telling the truth through song, both for herself and anyone else who’s ever felt like an outsider.
With each release, she’s taken on more of the production herself—most recently producing two tracks on her upcoming EP. For Emma, producing isn’t just about control; it’s about finally being able to recreate the sounds she’s always heard in her mind.
At the heart of everything she makes is the belief that feelings are worth listening to—and that music can be a space to hold what’s hard to say out loud.