Natasha Hamilton, has relaunched her career as a solo artist with her own label, Morpho Records, after years of personal and public struggles.
Natasha Hamilton, once the face of chart-topping girlband Atomic Kitten, is reclaiming her career and personal confidence after years of public scrutiny and private struggles. The singer, 43, is now a solo artist running her own label, Morpho Records, and says she has finally found control over her life and music.
Atomic Kitten formed in Liverpool in 1998, originally featuring Natasha alongside Liz McClarnon and Kerry Katona, with Jenny Frost later replacing Kerry. The band enjoyed pop domination with hits like Whole Again before splitting in May 2004 to focus on family and solo projects, Mirror reports.
For Natasha, the period following the band’s split was turbulent. After giving birth to her second son, Harry, in December 2004, she fell into postnatal depression. “It wasn’t the way I ever saw my career going. For it to end as bad as it did, it was so sad. And it just left such a horrible feeling in my body that I couldn’t really talk about it,” she said.
Motherhood has continued to shape her journey. Following the birth of her fifth child, daughter Kitty, in August 2023, Natasha faced early perimenopause and a diagnosis of Hashimoto’s disease, an autoimmune thyroid condition.
“I started taking HRT about 12 months ago. Before that I was falling apart,” she says. “I had no confidence. I was almost sabotaging all the hard work I’d been putting into releasing new music as an independent artist. I just lost all confidence in myself. I was indecisive and scared. And I’m like, ‘This is not me.’”
Natasha describes the early months after Kitty’s birth as physically punishing. “I’d put my feet on the floor and every bone in my feet, in my shins, everything was… I was in so much pain. Honestly, it was awful.”
Hormonal changes left her mentally exhausted as well. “It’s not because you’re not living the life you want to live, it’s because your brain’s mangled with hormones and I couldn’t remember anything,” she explains.
Hair loss added to the struggle. “I did mourn my hair. It was my confidence. Brushing in the morning, there were clumps, and my hairline started to recede.”
Despite these challenges, Natasha has used the experience to reinvent herself.
Her recent singles Edge Of Us, Burning Letters, and Numb explore personal growth and resilience, with Numb reflecting on years of criticism over her relationships and motherhood.
“You do get to a point where you just shut down,” she says. “You protect yourself by not feeling it. And that’s where Numb came from.”
Natasha has also found stability and support through her husband, Charles Gay, whom she married in Lake Como in 2021.
After a difficult IVF journey, the couple welcomed Kitty naturally. “We said to one another, ‘Wow, this is insane,’” she recalls.
The singer continues to balance motherhood with her work, mentoring emerging artists while managing her label.
Though she is open to potential Atomic Kitten reunions, she emphasises boundaries.
“I wish Kerry all the best. That girl has been out there. She’s a hustler. She looks after those kids so well. Fair play to the girl. There’s no big thing, but when it comes to work, that isn’t going to happen.”
For Natasha, confidence and self-acceptance have become her new focus.
“I haven’t felt sexy in ages. Like, what is sexy? But it’s slowly happening because I’m just finding that confidence in myself, and I’m not putting the pressure on myself to be this sexy pop person.
“I think being confident is sexy. I have a fulfilled career and personal life. I’ve got an incredible husband. The kids are great. They’re thriving, so I can’t really ask for more than that.”
Source link