Gorilaspain Fashion and Art Magazine – Culture Independent Magazine

Malcolm Todd Turns Vulnerability Into Pop’s Most Magnetic New Myth

At just 22, Malcolm Todd’s rise from cramped London basements to global stages reflects a generation searching for honesty in pop. His new single Breathe blends silky R&B with irony and tenderness, proving his appeal lies not in perfection, but in vulnerability and emotional clarity.

Malcolm Todd does not walk into a room: he seems to materialize in it with the same blend of tension, irony, and tenderness that defines his music. The first time he played in London was in the basement of The Lower Third, with the crowd pressed shoulder to shoulder and sweat hanging in the air as if the night itself were breathing in time with the show. When he came back, he sold out the Kentish Town Forum. Between those two moments, there is something more than growth: there is a generational narrative unfolding in real time.

At just 22, Todd embodies a different idea of the pop poster boy. There is no impenetrable pose, no calculated distance. His appeal lies in the opposite: an honesty that is almost uncomfortable. His songs hold ambition and doubt in equal measure, the fantasy of pop life alongside the lingering feeling of not having it all figured out. That radical vulnerability is precisely what makes him magnetic.

Today Malcolm Todd returns with Breathe, his first release of 2026. The track—a silky R&B cut that he co-produces himself—looks toward the sophisticated groove of N.E.R.D’s golden era and Justin Timberlake in his imperial phase. There is rhythmic elegance, a light sensuality, but also that ironic wink that always runs through his work. Todd never takes himself too seriously, even when everything around him seems to suggest otherwise.

The video, directed by his longtime collaborator Aidan Cullen, pushes that idea into charming absurdity: a group of girls turns fan fantasy into reality by kidnapping him in his own bedroom. It is playful, surreal, and fully aware of the pop mythology it is building. Todd understands that the cult surrounding an artist is, in part, a collective game.

But his story began long before packed venues and millions of streams. Todd captures in his music the awkward, radiant magic of those first steps into your twenties: the decisions that seem enormous and the feelings we still do not know how to name. Before the headlines, he was recording Demos Before Prom while playing at high school parties, learning how to turn adolescent discomfort into irresistible melodies.

Since then, the rise has been dizzying. His self-titled debut album has already surpassed 600 million global streams, a figure that sounds almost abstract when you remember that only a few years ago he was playing tiny rooms. He toured the world with Omar Apollo, fulfilled his teenage dream of performing at Camp Flog Gnaw, and took his Wholesome Rockstar Tour across the UK, Europe, the United States, and Australia, where his audience’s devotion feels less like fandom and more like community.

Two years after its release, the album is still growing like a living organism. The single Chest Pain (I Love) gave him his first entry on the Billboard Hot 100 and has racked up more than 350 million streams. This year it even found a second life when Don Toliver sampled it on his hit E85. Meanwhile, songs like Sweet Boy, Earrings, and Roommates continue to orbit within Spotify’s Top 200, as if refusing to disappear.

Perhaps that is Malcolm Todd’s key: his music does not burn out after the first listen. It stays with you, like a memory you still do not quite know why it matters.

With Breathe, Todd opens the door to a new chapter. If he has proven anything so far, it is that the journey—awkward, honest, unpredictable—has only just begun.

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