Liv Bloore is set to share her debut single ‘The Darling Song’ on 21 November 2025. Liv writes indie folk and indie rock songs that mix chapel-choir harmony with the kind of late-night thoughts you only say when the lights are low. She was born just off Brick Lane, grew up in the middle of Suffolk fields, and now lives in London. If you have ever tried to hold both quiet and chaos at the same time, her music might feel familiar straight away.
Liv studied classical music at Cambridge and sang in a chapel choir. That background shapes the blend of vocal layers and steady piano she writes, but her sound reaches further. She learned toward artists such as Florence + The Machine, boygenius, Ethel Cain, and Paris Paloma, building songs that balance folk storytelling with atmosphere and volume.
‘The Darling Song’ leans into the rush of falling for someone from a distance. Liv opens with darling, I wouldn’t ask for much and sketches a future before it has a chance to exist. There is warmth in the promise of shelter and shared wine, and there is fear in the moment distance arrives. Later, when the feeling slips, she asks for everything you are, close enough for me to touch. The song sits in that fragile gap between hope and honesty.
A storm-damp crush with a pulse of its own
The track grows from piano and stacked harmonies into drums and guitar that blur at the edges. Liv began turning diary entries into songs during long stretches of rural quiet, and the lyrics hold that stillness even when the production expands. The music video was filmed at Dunwich beach on the Suffolk coast, which feels right for a song filled with doorways, shifting sky, and the sense that weather sometimes understands more than people do. ‘The Darling Song’ opens the first chapter of her upcoming debut EP.
Review
Liv Bloore makes ‘The Darling Song’ feel like something said a little too honestly and a little too late. Her voice keeps the centre, and the production leaves space for every breath. Harmonies glow at the edges, and the piano stays steady while the feeling tightens and loosens again.
Liv blends classical discipline with indie roughness in a way that feels lived-in rather than polished for show. It feels like the kind of debut that listeners replay while they think about someone they probably should have stopped thinking about.
You can pre-save ‘The Darling Song’ here and follow Liv Bloore over on Instagram.
