Cruz Beckham launches music career, having fun amid family drama
13 hours ago
What's more, they're not terrible. When Cruz Beckham and his band played their early gigs supporting Welsh indie group The Royston Club last year, they did so under a series of different names. He presumably didn't want their first steps to be in the full glare of the attention and judgement that comes with being a member of one of the world's most famous families. But as he hard launches his music career, the 21-year-old knows he can't escape his identity, so he might as well embrace it.
Cruz isn't shying away from his family connections. "Nice T-shirt," he remarked to an audience member who was wearing a top with "POSH" in big letters with a photo of his mum in her Spice Girls pomp. But that only goes so far. When someone in the crowd shouted "Play the Spice Girls!", he responded with a swift riposte: "Sorry, I don't take requests. " Nor did he make any mention of the elephant in the room - or any room the Beckhams set foot in - the recent family drama involving his estranged older brother Brooklyn. As with his mum, dad and other siblings, the strategy has been to keep calm and carry on, and Cruz is going about the business of music with an air of exuberance and fun.
"We really enjoyed it, but we when he first came on we didn't know who he was. Then I found out on TikTok afterwards when I was searching who the supports were. " He makes "feel-good music" and can "definitely" make a career from it, she believes.
Mum Toni Green, 54, adds: "You don't know whether the surname will help or hinder.
"A few things we read on TikTok and Instagram said, 'I was actually surprised, I thought he wouldn't be very good, but it's music's actually all right'. "
"Obviously we know the parents and what they're about," another fan, Dylan Hexley, 23, says.
"So we were interested to see what talent he's got and see if he can create his own path. "I didn't realise it would be so guitar heavy. Obviously his mum's a singer, and I thought he would just be a frontman. It seems he's got this little 60s twang, so I suppose he's trying to break away from that pop culture that his mum created in the 90s. "
Victoria Tamlyn, in her "mid-50s", was introduced to Cruz's music on YouTube.
But I'm a big Beckham fan anyway," she laughs. "He's finding his own way, isn't he? It's not like it's just because of his mum and dad. He's doing his own thing, which is lovely. And he's he seems quite good at it, so it's good to support him. " It's not surprising that David and Victoria's children should follow them into the limelight, and Cruz got a taste for performing at a young age. When he stole the show with the Spice Girls by showing off his breakdancing skills just before his third birthday, his mum declared him to be "the next Justin Timberlake". Cruz himself has a different role model. "I want to be John Lennon," he sings in one of his songs.
"That was one about my idol," he told the Birmingham crowd.
"And this is one he wrote," he said, launching into a cover of The Beatles' 1968 classic Revolution.
While not a cover of The Yardbirds' 1965 single of the same name, it aims for similar territory.
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Eight of his remaining 10 UK dates are sold out.
But his music ultimately falls short of the legends he's trying to replicate.
"It harks back - it feels a bit Liam Gallagher-esque.
"It's not bad, but I also think there's a reason why it's not necessarily blowing up in a massive way, because I don't necessarily think it's original," she says.
Cruz seems to have a clearer idea of his future path than his siblings, at least. Romeo, 23, tried to follow his father into football and modelling, while Brooklyn, 26, has had stabs at careers in photography and cooking.
"Cruz Beckham is very identifiable as the child of two huge stars, and people are really cynical.
So I think it's more of a hindrance in 2026, to be honest," she says. "He's going to have to prove himself a huge amount
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