
Charli XCX continues her run as one of pop’s most self-aware shape-shifters, and her next move arrives with an unexpected literary and cinematic anchor. Her upcoming album, Wuthering Heights, releases February 13, 2026, and serves as both a standalone project and a companion piece to Emerald Fennell’s film adaptation of the same name. In a moment where most artists would still be riding the cultural momentum of Brat, Charli steps into a darker, more textured space, one informed by raw emotion, cinematic atmosphere, and a renewed desire to push her own edges.
MUSIC
The project began during a period of flatness Charli openly described after wrapping Brat. The intensity of that cycle left her in a creative lull until Fennell invited her to contribute a single track for the film. Instead of approaching it as a one-off soundtrack job, she proposed a full 12-track album. The decision set a new tone: this would be a body of work shaped by a narrative world rather than trend cycles, guided by a persona she defined as “raw, wild, sexual, gothic, British.” It’s a register Charli rarely occupies so directly, yet it fits with the long arc of her experimental impulses.
Production for Wuthering Heights unfolded throughout her touring schedule in 2025, with Charli and longtime collaborator Finn Keane (formerly Easyfun) renting studios in various cities to keep the momentum alive. The sessions brought a sense of urgency and movement, contrasting with the more insular process behind Brat. Producer Justin Raisen also contributed, adding another layer to the album’s moodier palette. Throughout early interviews, Charli referenced a quote from John Cale, “elegant and brutal,” as a creative compass. That framing proved literal when Cale appeared as a collaborator, joining her on the early single “House,” which set the tone for the era.
Musically, the album pulls away from the glossy surfaces of hyperpop and club-focused production that defined much of Charli’s last decade. Instead, it leans into grain, atmosphere, and a sense of emotional turbulence borrowed from the film’s narrative. The newly released single “Chains of Love” offers the first real glimpse of this shift: sharp, minimal production wrapped in a restless emotional core. It’s a track that hints at a larger world, less concerned with immediacy, more with mood and tension.
The album arrives with two confirmed formats, including a collector’s edition vinyl already available for preorder, and a 12-track structure that signals a tight, narrative-aligned experience rather than an oversized streaming release. Alongside “House” and “Chains of Love,” more singles are expected leading up to February, with fans following the rollout closely for clues about the album’s emotional map.
What makes Wuthering Heights particularly compelling is its position between mediums. Charli isn’t just writing for a film, she’s building adjacent to it, using Fennell’s adaptation as a creative pressure point rather than a boundary. As the film prepares for release the same day as the album, the two works will inevitably echo each other, but Wuthering Heights stands as Charli’s own interpretation, shaped through her lens rather than a strict narrative retelling.
As she closes the chapter on the Brat era and steps into a more cinematic, gothic register, Charli enters 2026 with a rare combination of momentum and creative reinvention. Wuthering Heights reads like a hinge point, a project where she lets the narrative lead, invites experimentation, and pushes her pop instincts into sharper, more textured territory. With the film and album arriving simultaneously, this marks the beginning of a new Charli era, one that promises intensity, atmosphere, and a different kind of emotional clarity.

















