Entering 2023 as one of UK pop’s hottest prospects, BBC Radio 1 Sound Poll, MTV Push and
Amazon Music Artist to Watch shortlisted artist Dylan might only be at the beginning of her
journey as one of the UK’s most exciting new pop talents, but she’s had her sights set on big
things since her childhood.
“My dad had me and my brother on the kitchen table from a very early age with plywood guitars,
screaming to various different songs,” the London-based artist recalls. “I would stand there and
shout, ‘hello Wembley!’ – that’s how I started a gig with my band when I was 11 too.”
The 23-year-old – whose real name is Tash Woods – might be destined for pop glory, but the
influence of more alternative sounds colours her tongue-in-cheek characterisation of herself as
“a wannabe rock star in a pop star’s body”. “In my head, I’m so rock’n’roll, but I don’t look it,” she
laughs. “I’m super pop! Everyone will expect something slightly more mainstream but I’m
obsessed with guitars – with the only four chords I can play.”
Growing up – as hinted in those kitchen table jam sessions – Dylan was raised on a diet of
classic rock and big riffs. “My career is entirely my dad’s fault – he’s a very straight-down-the-
line insurance man but he brought me up on a lot of rock’n’roll like AC/DC, Guns N’ Roses, and
Rainbow,” she explains.
Despite her salutes to Wembley from a young age, Dylan hasn’t always been steering herself
towards the spotlight. She began writing songs as a child instead of learning the work of other
artists and soon found it to be the perfect outlet for expressing everything she was feeling. “I
was a pretty sad kid and songwriting was a way of escaping,” she says. “It took me away from
school and friends and bullying, and into my own space.” After her confidence in her performing
skills took a knock in her teens, she focused on the dream of being a songwriter.
At sixth form, she met a teacher who went on to introduce her to producer Will Hicks, who
invited her to her first writing session. Together they wrote ‘Drinking About You’, from her 2019
EP ‘Purple’ and he told her: “I think you could do this, but you’ve got to do the whole thing or
nothing.”
That push might have been what she needed to put her on the path to being one of the most
relatable and sharp songwriters coming up right now, and to owning her songs in front of the
world, but there was still the issue of her lack of confidence. The persona of Dylan – so named
because that’s what her dad planned to call her if she was a boy – allowed her to step into the
shoes of someone else and fake that self-assurance.
I was giving myself a huge mask to hide behind and that meant that I could be really confident
even though I wasn’t because that was Dylan,” she notes. “But what’s really insane, especially
about the music that I’ve been writing recently, is that the line between me and Dylan is just
gone. There’s no fakeness anymore.”
Since 2019, she’s been on a journey to find her own voice, moving through more electronic-
focused, synth-pop songs (‘Good Enough’) and mournful piano ballads (‘IKWYDLN’). After two
EPs (‘Purple’ and 2020’s ‘Red’) worth of finding her feet, 2021 brought three singles in
‘Nineteen’, ‘You’re Not Harry Styles’ and ‘No Romeo’ that started to shape the real Dylan sound
– big pop hooks driven by crunchy guitars, dissecting her life and loves into incisive, memorable
lyrics.
“I spent so much time wanting to be anyone else, but it’s just so exhausting,” she explains.
“When it comes to writing now, though, I know exactly what I want – I can walk into a session
and say, ‘This is my sound, this is what I want to do’. I don’t want anyone to ever say ‘Oh, this is
a nice song’ about my music. I want them to be like, ‘That song punched me in the face!’”
Dylan’s first mixtape – and debut release for Island Records – packs a hefty wallop; an eight-
track record that doesn’t give you any choice but to sit up, pay attention and sing every word
back in your head for days afterwards. Called ‘The Greatest Thing I’ll Never Learn’, it
encapsulates the rising star’s experiences with “learning to love and be loved”. “How does
anyone love and be loved?! It’s cringy,” she laughs. “But the songs are so un-cringy that it’s very
easy to take in without icking myself out. But I feel like I’m writing a soundtrack to my life. This is
my movie soundtrack.”
“I can be what you want, I can be what you need / Anytime that you like, be whatever you
please,” goes the bouncy ‘Girl Of Your Dreams’, a reaction to people the young musician liking
not wanting to date her. “It’s saying, ‘You will love me’ – it’s like with people that listen to my
music, I don’t give them much choice whether they’re going to like it or not,” she notes. ‘Treat
You Bad’ details a dalliance where Dylan broke things off only to hit him back up in the middle of
the night months later. “Can’t make up my mind / Only want you late at night,” she sings over
the fizzing riff. “Tell me why you let me treat you so bad.”
That soundtrack is one that is unfailingly frank and thrillingly unbothered by society’s
expectations of female artists. On each song, whether she’s serving up a dose of realism to a
partner (‘Nothing Lasts Forever’) or searching for answers about herself, as on the ballad ‘Home
Is Where The Heart Is’, Dylan is incredibly direct.
Her candidness is part of what has already scored her praise from the likes of The Times, Her
candidness is part of what has already scored her praise from the likes of BBC News, NME,
Rolling Stone UK, Notion, Vogue Italia, The Line Of Best Fit, Dork and BBC Introducing; a sold
out debut US headline at the iconic Mercury Lounge in New York, UK support slots with
Yungblud, Bastille, Ed Sheeran and an EU run with Tate McRae; inspiring an incredibly loyal
and passionate fan base to form around her.
At her gigs, the ever-growing crowds don’t just sing along politely here and there, but echo back
her every word. “If you’re a fan of my music, you know all of it,” she smiles. “I feel like I’m
creating a little fucked up family who are all just a little bit crazy and need to scream about
people that are screwing us over.”
With her upcoming headline show at the iconic Shepherd’s Bush Empire in London sold out and
a second date added due to demand, Dylan’s impeccable pop anthems look destined to
continue hooking people into her world. As they do so, she’s keeping her ambitions fittingly bold.
“I want to be respected as a songwriter – for me it really is just about the music,” she explains.
“And I want to headline Wembley – that’s everything I’ve had my sights on.”