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Clara Moschetta Is Serving Up “Worthy Conversations Around a Kitchen Table”

  • Writer: Victoria Pfeifer
    Victoria Pfeifer
  • 2 hours ago
  • 2 min read

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London’s about to get a little more honest, and a whole lot louder. Rising singer-songwriter Clara Moschetta isn’t just dropping music; she’s dropping truths. Her debut EP, Worthy Conversations Around a Kitchen Table, lands September 17, and trust us, it’s not background noise; it’s a full-on sit-down moment.

Clara’s got this rare ability to make you feel like you’re right there in the room with her, sipping tea while she tears open the kind of topics most people tiptoe around. Body image, regret, politics, identity, it’s all fair game. Every track feels like a late-night kitchen chat where someone finally says the thing no one else will. And the best part? She does it with that mix of sharp humor and raw vulnerability that sticks with you long after the song ends.

The lead single, TV Routine, is already making noise online, tapping into the messy reality of body dysmorphia and recovery. It’s not sugar-coated, but that’s exactly why it hits so hard. Clara’s been building momentum on TikTok, but she’s not stopping there. She’s got the “Father Never Tells Me” project, where strangers spill the words they wish they’d heard from their dads, and an Artist Conversations Series that keeps her audience talking just as much as listening. She’s literally turning music into community therapy.

And if you’ve caught Clara live, whether it’s her on the piano or with a full band, you already know. She doesn’t just perform, she disarms. Her shows leave you wrecked in the best way, feeling like you just got hugged and called out at the same time. That kind of impact is rare.

She’s celebrating the EP release with a show at SJQ in London on September 18, which is basically guaranteed to be church for anyone who shows up. Worthy Conversations Around a Kitchen Table proves that Clara Moschetta isn’t afraid to dig deep, and she’s making sure we all pull up a chair while she does it.

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