Before Dylan Holloway, there was Lots Holloway.
Artistic home-made recordings, cracked-open honesty and songs that found people exactly when they needed them most. Blending folk, pop, rock and soul warmth with cinematic emotion, Lots Holloway became known for deeply personal songwriting and a voice that carried both fragility and strength, connecting with listeners around the world through music that felt intimate, raw and unmistakably human.
Over the years, the project built a loyal audience online and on stage, leading to performances across the UK and laying the foundations for what would later become Dylan And The Moon. But behind the music, Dylan was quietly navigating questions around identity, belonging and authenticity, a journey that would eventually lead him to transition and begin releasing music under a new name.
Rather than deleting the past, Dylan chose to keep the Lots Holloway music online as an archive of where he’s been, and a reminder that evolution does not erase who you once were. Those songs still matter. So do the people who connected to them.
Today, many of those original recordings have found new life through Dylan’s current work, with archival vocals and footage now woven into powerful male and female duets across time.