No one in music has a story quite like Courtney Hadwin.
Back when she was just 13, the shy teenager from Hesleden, County Durham, stepped onto the America’s Got Talent stage and unleashed a voice that stunned millions.

Her explosive cover of Otis Redding’s “Hard To Handle” went viral around the world, earning comparisons to Janis Joplin and praise from Simon Cowell, who called her a “bundle of excitement,” while Howie Mandel hit his golden buzzer and later described her as “Janis Joplin reincarnated.”
But before all that fame and applause, Courtney faced a much darker side of her early rise — one filled with bullying, self-doubt, and pressure.

“They Said I Sang Like a Boy”
Courtney’s first TV appearance wasn’t in America — it was on The Voice Kids UK in 2017. For a young girl, it should’ve been a dream come true. Instead, it brought her pain.
“People at school laughed at me,” Courtney recalled. “They’re not used to people singing like me. I got called names. They said I sang like a boy.”

What should have been an exciting start to her music career turned into a source of torment. According to The Sun, she was targeted by “envious school bullies” who couldn’t stand to see someone from their small town chasing a big dream. Online, critics mocked her raspy voice, calling her a “shouter” instead of a singer.
The cruelty worried her parents deeply. “It made me scared of the spotlight,” her mother once told The Daily Mail. “But it’s not my life, it’s hers. If she’s brave enough to ignore it, how can I not?” Her father added: “All big singers get haters. Look at Ed Sheeran — even he had to delete his Twitter account because he couldn’t cope with it.”
Finding Courage and a New Beginning
Courtney didn’t let the bullying silence her. Just a year later, at 14, she crossed the Atlantic to audition for America’s Got Talent and everything changed. Her audition racked up over 100 million views on YouTube, making her an instant internet sensation.
“I’m shocked that I’ve gotten this far,” she told The Mirror at the time. “The Voice Kids didn’t prepare me for how big AGT is — it’s huge.”
Her unique style — part rock, part soul, all heart — won her fans worldwide. Even though she didn’t win the AGT final, her performances made her one of the most talked-about acts of the season, with Cowell rumored to be considering her for a record deal.

“Little Miss Jagged” — The Artist She Was Always Meant to Be
Now, at 21 years old, Courtney Hadwin has come full circle. Her debut album, ‘Little Miss Jagged’, marks a new chapter in her story — one of self-acceptance, growth, and freedom.
After years of being pushed to fit into a pop mold, Courtney decided to stay true to herself. She began writing songs inspired by her real-life experiences — the loneliness, the growing pains, and the joy of rediscovering her voice on her own terms.

The album blends pop-punk, funk, old-school R&B, and Motown, all tied together by the raw, soul-stirring vocals that first made her famous. Its lead single, “Electric,” captures her rebirth with lyrics that feel like a mission statement:
“Let the power of the music take me away.”
Fans now numbering 3.7 million across TikTok, Instagram and Facebook are cheering her on once again, this time not as a viral teenager but as a confident young woman defining her own sound.
From Pain to Power
Looking back, Courtney’s story feels almost poetic — the girl once bullied for not “singing like everyone else” has grown into an artist celebrated for that very difference.
Her journey, from a small village in England to stages across America and now to her first full-length record, is a reminder that staying true to yourself can sometimes be the loudest and most beautiful way to fight back.

Courtney Hadwin once said, “I try not to let it get to me. I just hope they’re watching me now.”
And now, with ‘Little Miss Jagged’ finally out in the world, they surely are.