Lennon Stella Biography
Lennon Stella started her career by appearing in the role of Maddie Conrad on the TV series, Nashville.
She has been one of the main cast of the TV series since her debut in October 2012. Moreover, she has opened an Instagram account alongside her sister, Maisy, posting music cover videos which are very popular. Among all her cover songs, The Lumineers’ Ho Hey cover, reached in the top 40 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart in 2013.
At the moment, she is living a happy and prosperous life with a fantastic career. She has a reserved personality, so she has kept her romantic life low profile and out of public attention. Also, she seems to be enjoying her life mostly hanging out with her close friends. Her cool personality is something we see in her Instagram.
Lennon Stella age
Lennon Stella started her career by appearing in the role of Maddie Conrad on the TV series, Nashville. She has been one of the main cast of the TV series since her debut in October 2012. She was born on 13th August 199, in Ontario, Canada. She is 20 years old as of 2019.
Lennon Stella parents
She was born into a musical family, The family lives in Brentwood, Tennessee. Her parents are Marylynne and Brad Stella, her sister is called Maisy Stella whom the perform together. The 20 years old developed interest in the business from a very early age. She owned herself first guitar when she was 5years old and was taught by her father, an experienced guitarist.
Lennon Stella net worth
She earns a basic salary of $107thousand per month, from her YouTube channel named Lennon and Maisy. As of 2018, she has an estimated net worth of $1 million.
Lennon Stella Tattoo
Lennon Stella ImageLennon Stella feelings
“Feelings”: The beat of this song is the most memorable thing about it, and it starts off right away. This song is a little less emotional than the first two songs, with Stella putting on a stronger face than she did in the vulnerable opening tracks. “I don’t wanna talk about your feelings,” Stella sings in the chorus, calling out a guy for coming back a little too late.
Lennon Stella bad lyrics
“Bad”: This is the first song we heard from this project, and it’s a certified bop. The story that the lyrics tell is actually incredibly sad, but you wouldn’t think that by just listening to the melody. It was a perfect debut single as this song is a pretty good summary of the music on the EP: sad, well-written lyrics, peppy melodies, and emotive vocals.
Lennon Stella la di da
“La Di Da”: The first lines of the song, “Some things don’t sit right / This close to midnight / There’s someone else in this light,” are a definite shift in tone and sound from the rest of the EP.
But when the chorus hits, that memorable heavy beat that Stella utilizes throughout the project comes back as the hook, “Hold my ears, say la da di da” kicks in. This is definitely one of the most interesting tracks production and lyric-wise, with a clever, almost childish spin on the idea of not wanting to hear what someone has to say.
Lennon Stella fortress
“Fortress”: Love, me closes on a more upbeat note. “Fortress” is the only song on the EP that could be classified as an empowerment anthem, but it echoes some of the same lyrical themes of “Feelings.” This song touches on a lot of the vulnerability that Stella signs about throughout the EP, but puts a positive spin on that hurt, showing how it’s built her up to be stronger than she was before.
TourLennon stellar events on March 2019
Toronto, ON, Canada
Danforth Music Hall
Wed, Mar 20
6:00 PM
Toronto, ON, Canada
Danforth Music Hall
Fri, Mar 22
7:01 PM
Boston, MA
Royale
Sun, Mar 24
7:00 PM
Washington, DC
U Street Music Hall
Mon, Mar 25
7:30 PM
Philadelphia, PA
Theatre of The Living Arts
Tue, Mar 26
7:00 PM
New York, NY
Irving Plaza
Thu, Mar 28
7:00 PM
Chicago
2:00 PM
Metro
Fri, Mar 29
Milwaukee, WI
The Rave / Eagles Club
Sat, Mar 30
7:00 PM
Minneapolis, MN
Fine Line Music Cafe
Mon, Apr 1
8:00 PM
Denver, CO
Ogden Theatre
Lennon Stella Talks Inspirations, First Time on Stage & Performs “La Di Da”
Lennon Stella has been singing since she was very young. Her parents are musicians and she remembers constantly singing with her sister growing up. Listening to Stevie Nicks, The Japanese House, Tame Impala and 1975, has inspired a lot of her music.
She’s no stranger to being on stage but recalls her first time performing her own songs as an artist was definitely a memorable experience.
“Hearing people saying lyrics back to me is the most surreal thing ever.” It’s going to be a busy year! Catch Lennon Stella on tour with the Chainsmokers and 5 Seconds of Summer, as she works on writing new music! Can’t wait to see what the future holds!
Lennon Stella Songs
Like Everybody Else
Breakaway
La Di Da
Ho Hey
A Life That’s Good
Controller
Skinny Love
The Times They Are A Changin
Tenenbaum
Harvest Moon
Beyond the Sun
Beautiful Dream
A Life That’s Good
ic of Nashville: Season 2, Volume 1 · 2013
Heart on Fire
Polaroid
Lennon Stella breakaway
“Breakaway”: Stella described the moment she wrote this song as a moment she was “scared shitless” by life. At the time, her parents were separating and she was moving out on her own, she explained in an Instagram post, and this song is about how she was feeling in that moment.
The chorus begins with “Everything is falling apart,” a feeling that is not unknown to most people. Stella mastered the catchy ballad with this song.
Lennon Stella love me
Love, Me “stylized in sentence case” is the debut extended play (EP) by Canadian singer-songwriter Lennon Stella, of sister duo Lennon & Maisy. The EP was released on November 16. 2018, by Columbia Records.
Stella collaborated with six musicians during the production of Love, Me, including American producer Greg Kurstin and New Zealand producer Joel Little. Four tracks were issued as singles from the EP: “Bad”, “Breakaway”, “La Di Da”, and “Feelings”. Love, Me follows Stella’s appearance on the song “Polaroid” with English producer Jonas Blue and One Direction vocalist Liam Payne
Lennon Stella on Her New Song and How “Nashville” Prepared Her for the Real World of Music
Lennon Stella’s story, on the surface, feels like one we’ve heard before. A viral internet moment leads a kid onto a massively popular television show. But now she’s using everything she learned from playing a rising musician to jumpstart her music career IRL.
In May 2012, then 12-year-old Lennon and her 8-year-old sister Maisy Stella uploaded a video of themselves singing Robyn’s “Call Your Girlfriend” in perfect harmony, accompanied only by empty plastic tubs of butter they used as percussion. Around the same time, she was cast in ABC’s Nashville, a soapy country music-themed drama on which she and Maisy played sisters Maddie and Daphne Conrad, daughters of fictional country legend Rayna Jaymes (played by Connie Britton). After four seasons on ABC and two more on CMT, the series aired its final episode on July 2018.
While the Nashville chapter of Lennon’s career may have come to a close, another is beginning with her now focusing on where she started: music. She has emerged from the series (and the city of Nashville, where she still resides) as a budding pop singer-songwriter, not unlike her character on the show — grounded and willing to be vulnerable, with all the longings and fears of an 18-almost-19-year-old.
It helps that Lennon has a natural knack for translating those longings and fears into lyrics that cut you wide open. On August 7, she released her first official song and music video as a solo artist at RECORDS LLC./Columbia Records, for “Like Everybody Else — Acoustic.” The song is a piano ballad about coming to terms with hard truths about yourself. The video is three minutes of Lennon at the piano, singing about the uncertainty of what’s to come.
It’s the kind of song you write when you go from being a kid to being an adult, or when you leave something comfortable — a job, a school, even a TV show — to go off on a new adventure, taking on a whole new realm of insecurities. “Been drilled in my head forever, ‘be better,'” she sings. “Don’t even go near a mirror, it’ll kill you. Trust me you don’t wanna see yourself.”
“Like Everybody Else” is her first official release for a reason — she tells Teen Vogue that the song isn’t too far removed from the folk-infused music she was making on Nashville (so as not to alienate that audience), while still allowing herself room to reach more into pop territory.
But the song also functions as a good mission statement for her new work, and a narrative about the dark places she has passed through before getting to where she’s at today. The song’s refrain echoes what goes through the brain of anyone who has ever second-guessed their talents or wondered where they fit in, which is to say, everyone: “What made me think I was special?” she asks. “I’m not special, turns out I’m just like everybody else.”
The song comes from the many moments of FOMO and anxiety from comparing herself to other Lennon says she’s experienced thanks to social media. “For any young teenage girl, it just gets so hard to feel unique,” she tells Teen Vogue. “There are so many options in front of your face all the time. Being young and trying to find your way and having a world full of people doing exactly what you want to do… there’s so much in your face all the time.”
Not-so-coincidentally, Maddie’s story on Nashville parallels Lennon’s real-life one — she says the writers did pull from her own life, especially when Maddie gets a solo career of her own and pursues pop over her mother’s traditional country. But playing Maddie also allowed her to experience beforehand the world Lennon was about to enter, with storylines about social media controversies, distracting boyfriends, music industry power dynamics, sexual harassment, and just finding your way as an adult in the industry you want to be in.
“There were a lot of things (Maddie) did that I just got out of my system through her,” she says. “The show did such a great job of really staying to the truth of the actual music industry and how it works and what happens. I totally feel like it prepared me.”
The show, known for its incredible original music, also allowed her to flex her songwriting muscles. Lennon says she worked on eight or so songs that ended up being on the show, including “Without Warning,” which Daphne sings in season 6, and the memorable “Saved,” from season 5.
That Nashville environment, both the city and the show, is famed for its collaborative songwriting community, and Lennon, who grew up in Canada before moving to the city in 2009, doesn’t take that environment for granted. “I’m trying to hold off on moving to LA for as long as I can. The people are pretty intense for me,” she says. “Nashville is just super humble and sweet and everyone’s very welcoming. It’s like good people. I think it’s good to be here when discovering (the industry) and walking into it all.”
While Lennon has found music as a way to channel her emotions and feelings, she has also turned her Instagram into another place where she opens up about her life. She uses the social network to share new music and exciting milestones, as well as moments of anxiety and loneliness — a candidness that has helped connect her to fans. “Truly my favorite compliment or message I get is when people are like, I feel like we’d be best friends or I feel like we are best friends,” she says. “I think people feel like they know me, and that makes me the happiest. I love that feeling.”
Lennon is at work on an EP, which won’t entirely be filled with slow ballads like “Like Everybody Else.” Instead, she calls it an “indie-pop” record, citing inspirations such as Dua Lipa and 1975. Her post-Nashville time has so far been “weird,” but it’s also offered her a chance to stretch and grow and do whatever she wants.
“All of a sudden I can change my hair color. I can paint my nails whatever color I want, whenever I want,” she says. “When you’re on a show there’s so much you can’t do. You don’t have that freedom because you have to be both you and the character.”
And though it’s odd the show has finished, she says it’s “such a special thing” to have her childhood documented. “It’s going to be so embarrassing looking back when I’m like ‘Oh that spray tan was way too dark.’ Or ‘why did I do that to my hair?’” she jokes. “But it makes me so happy that we have that, and it’s such a rare thing that it’s really special.”
Lennon Stella Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/p/BuXMxN2nNsk/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link
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