SEE the much acclaimed soul singer Celeste perform in Boscombe.

She will support singer songwriter Michael Kiwanuka at his O2 Academy performance on Tuesday, March 3 from 7pm.

Celeste is still basking in the glow of her recent announcement as the winner of the 2020 BRITs Rising Star award, and was also hailed the winner of the prestigious BBC Sound of 2020 poll. Celeste's incendiary new single Stop This Flame is the British-Jamaican artist’s first taste of new music in what is set to be a very busy year, with the BRITs win landing her a prestigious performance at the upcoming ceremony on February 18, as part of the live television broadcast.

"In essence, Stop This Flame is a song about seeing it through to the end,”Celeste reveals. “Whether it’s about not letting go of love, not letting go of a dream or stridently coming through some form of adversity. The song has always evoked those feelings within me.”

Brighton-raised Celeste credits her maternal grandfather for introducing her to the legendary artists who would go on to influence her sound, a modern take on the timeless, heartache-tinged soul of smoky jazz bars and velvet-voiced storytellers. Her granddad would play cassette tapes of Aretha Franklin and Ella Fitzgerald on repeat in his old Jaguar, leaving a young Celeste transfixed and hungry to hear more, discovering a deep connection to the raw emotion of these classic songs. “In my songwriting I'm far more inspired by heartbreak,”she says now. “There's a darkness even though some songs are underlined with optimism. Those moments were far more thought-provoking for me.”

With teenage years spent in bedroom jam sessions practising covers of everything from Sly And The Family Stone, The Clash and The Specials to Alice Coltrane, Janice Joplin, Thelonious Monk and Ray Charles, eventually the entirely self-taught artist found her own voice, writing her first original compositions. Honing her sound over the following years the young artist has garnered critical acclaim for releases including her breakout Lately EP and singles including ‘Father’s Son’, a deftly heartbreaking rumination on her complicated relationship with her late father, ‘Coco Blood’, accompanied by a colour-drenched video by in-demand director Crackstevens aka Akinola Davies Jr (Blood Orange, Neneh Cherry), and ‘Strange’, which launched with a breathtaking COLORS session and saw heavy support from BBC Radio 1.

Live, Celeste has stopped audiences in their tracks with debut appearances at festivals from Glastonbury to Primavera, support slots with the likes of Michael Kiwanuka, Janelle Monae and Neneh Cherry, not to mention 3 sold out shows at London’s Omeara in November. The latter garnered a five star review from NME who hailed the emerging artist “a once-in-a-generation talent ... the finest British soul singer to emerge in years,” continuing, “If there’s any justice, super-stardom is just around the corner.” With accolades coming in left, right and centre, it seems they might be right.