Forget the myth that motherhood dims the neon lights. Alison Wonderland — the Australian-born DJ, producer, and global phenomenon — is here to prove that music doesn’t pause when the diapers arrive. She does it with the same pulse that shakes a dance floor at 3 a.m.: determined, hypnotic, and unapologetic.
In 2023, Alexandra Sholler (her off-stage name) welcomed her first child with partner, director Ti West. For many artists, that would be the cue to turn down the volume. For Alison, it was the signal to crank it higher. Instead of retreating into domestic life, she launched into a new creative chapter that’s breaking her own energy records.
This year, with her second pregnancy, you might expect her to stick to closed studios and remote releases. But no. Alison is touring the U.S. with pop-up raves, dropping her new single “iwannaliveinadream” in sweaty, electric, improvised venues. This third preview of her upcoming album Ghost World is pure Wonderland DNA: expansive electronic foundations, melodies that tattoo themselves in your mind, and that blend of melancholy and euphoria that makes a crowd float and dance at once. The full album arrives October 3, 2025, via Universal Music Australia.
In her PAPER Magazine interview, Alison pushes back against the still-lingering — and outdated — notion that motherhood locks you in a protective bubble, cutting you off from the cultural circuit. “If you tell me I can’t, I’m going to prove you wrong,” she says, with a clarity that needs no underlining. Judging by her schedule and drive, it’s more a warning than a wish.
It’s not just the music that’s shifting. Her visual aesthetic is evolving into a universe where ’80s fantasy, soft sci-fi, and dreamlike textures collide. Think a mash-up of 1987 VHS covers and a 2025 Berlin rave. “iwannaliveinadream” was born in a single day, driven by raw, immediate emotion, and its video concept reinforces that escapist world. Saturated colors, otherworldly atmospheres, and a gleaming melancholy have become hallmarks of her artistry.
What’s fascinating about Alison Wonderland is not just her music, but how she inhabits two seemingly opposite worlds: performing for thousands and mothering through 3 a.m. wake-ups that have nothing to do with strobe lights. That duality doesn’t dilute either side — it fuels both. When she talks about being on stage, she admits it’s where she feels most herself. In a pop landscape crowded with filters and marketing strategies, that kind of authenticity feels like a luxury.
At a time when the music industry often pushes artists into simplified narratives — you’re the pop diva, the underground DJ, the devoted mother — Alison refuses to choose. She can be all of it. And she is. Her next album promises to be the testament to that blend: high-voltage electronic production unafraid of vulnerability, lyrics steeped in raw feeling, and a visual package that takes us out of reality, if only for a few minutes.
The title Ghost World feels almost prophetic: a space where reality and fantasy coexist, where dance floors are sanctuaries, and where the ghosts of the past transform into beats that pulse hard. Maybe that’s why her presence now connects not only with her loyal fans but also with a new audience that sees in her a model of creative and personal independence.
Come October, when Ghost World finally lands, we won’t just be hearing an album — we’ll be witnessing the consolidation of an artist who has learned to dance — literally and metaphorically — between worlds. For Alison Wonderland, leaving reality behind doesn’t mean escaping life… it means living it in stereo.


