NIFE

Right now indie rock is about as fashionable as a Razorlight press photo. For example, Muse just pissed everyone off with their faint attempt at dubstepping their way out of a rock corner with their latest single. They’d gotten away with oversized grandeur up to this point, but the recent album teaser was the perfect example of how to disappear up your own black hole. As you know, we operate in the world of emerging music, so when you hold up successful indie rock bands of the recent past, such as the Arctic Monkeys, Kings Of Leon or Kasabian against the cutting edge artists, such as Purity Ring, Grimes, Savages or Angel Haze there’s a sense that the older giants have lost their exciting fizz. They just don’t sound like the future any more. Or if you check Razorlight‘s recent press photographs then they don’t ‘look’ like the future either. Today we recommend to you a band that can comfortably be placed upon the indie rock shelf, but they’re proving that this is a shelf with a lot of life still in it.

Nife are a three-piece band, originally from the ancient West Country city of Bath, with one of the trio apparently from Austria, but they’re now calling London home as they set up camp and attempt to buck the trend that’s currently raging against indie rock bands. Their camp seems to have been doing a pretty good job too, as a series of packed gigs have lead to them not only earning blog inches on the likes of Cougar Microbes and Alt Sounds, but they’ve also attracted the attention of producer Tim Oliver (Happy Mondays, New Order), who not only jumped into the studio with them for their debut album (apparently recorded in Peter Gabriel’s Real World Studios) but he has also become a mentor to the band. You can hear why when you witness the extraordinary talent that fronts them. Nicky surely has to go down as one of the most exciting females in music today, with not only one talent but two. Firstly she sings, and we mean really really sings, properly belting out vocals that shake the room, maintaining a clean tone whilst raising the volume up and up. Secondly she jams lead guitar in the kind of constant riffing that makes each song seem like one long solo.

Those of you who might remember what Noel did to the Oasis song, Columbia, or how Lenny Kravitz used to merrily fuck along the fret board, will hear lots of similar guitar-led power and talent with Nife. Their debut album, Chemicals, is due out on August 13th on Independent Records Ltd, and the nine songs play out like one long consistently bright jam. Remember that stonking riff in The Riverboat Song by Ocean Colour Scene? Imagine 45 minutes of that. That’s not to say that it doesn’t ebb and flow as the stream of music hits the bends in the album, with songs like Happy Birthday and Dregs applying the occasional brake to the otherwise racing set of hooks. This is a melodically accessible rock album in the old fashioned sense, taking you on a confident ride, with the kind of timeless, soaring guitar music that we used to get with albums such as Pearl Jam‘s addictive debut, Ten. Now that shouldn’t work in 2012, but believe us it does, this is an album with such a strong sense of classic that they could have found a more appropriate title if they’d called it Eleven.

The first single to arrive from the trio shares the same title, Chemicals, and is due out on July 30th. From the outset you realise this is a three-piece truly plugged into each other as the jagged guitar stabs and up-tempo off-beats land like raindrops on sand behind Nicky’s sky-high vocals. As she reaches that central mantra with the phrase “cut me loose” the purity in her voice adorns the kind of empowered stance that towers over the song. Just as in her lead guitaring, she knows precisely when to tweak a line, giving inflections that stop it from being delivered too straight. It’s utterly astonishing and the perfect introductory single. Elsewhere on the album she remains the dominatrix, always in charge, especially on tracks like Silence, which she uses to cut you in half by holding the song entirely alone at 2 mins and 45 secs in, before the hurricane riffs collapse back on top of you. Imagine Halle Berry as the character Storm in the X-Men making pop music. You. Do. Not. Fuck. Around. Listen to Nicky confidently call at you during Slow Motion Accident, “because I’m forever and you’re so temporary” and you’ll know exactly what we mean.

Having had the power of lo-fi, dubstep, pop and alternative music dominating the underground scenes in recent years this is the perfect act to re-introduce you to the guitar. It’s an instrument that’s been on an extended vacation for some time, perhaps mostly down to the Internet and Ableton which allow a new kind of bedroom production that simply wasn’t available ten years ago. We have nothing against this new proving ground, as it enables an individual to generate electronic music in a freedom that can only help talent to rise. We probably wouldn’t have had the likes of Grimes without it, but Nife give us a powerful reminder that instruments and talent can shine when the reigns are harnessed this exquisitely. We imagine their live sets are knock out too, as Nicky admits to regularly “going off on one“. They’re playing a series of shows across North London in August, so check your local listings if you’re around that area. We will certainly be in the crowd, ready for her to slap us around the face with her guitar. The real slap with this music is how it is still likeable in the face of the adversity shown to most current guitar bands. It not only shows how good their song-writing is, but it tells us that when you nail indie rock this perfectly you actually transcend current fashions. (MB)

NIFE – IF I WAS GOOD
http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/49573916

NIFE – SILENCE

NIFE – CHEMICALS

CIRCLE

We don’t suggest for one moment that The Recommender is 100% successful in trying to deliver music that you’ve never heard of. That would be somewhat trite and over-confident of us, but we do try and stick to the early stuff, only focusing on artist’s debut singles, EPs and albums, as there’s not much point recommending material that people are already aware of. We want to work with emerging music and emerging artists, to help lift them into the gaze of a new audience. We were recently sent an email about an Australian band that we’d never heard of before and the email stated that they were setting up to release their “debut studio album“, so with that key word “debut” clearly listed we pressed on with our usual investigations. Sadly we discovered that this band had in fact released several albums, so it turns out that the key part in the PR statement was actually perhaps the word “studio“. It begs the question: when is a debut not a debut? When it’s not been recorded in a studio? That just seems silly, but with this band there is an explanation…

To clarify the situation we enquired further. We were informed that Circle are a four-piece band from Sydney who have been together since 2005. To begin with they were called Opanoni And The Raindrops, one of the more terrible monikers that we’ve come across in recent times, and as this outfit they self-released two albums, Stamps & Coins and EGBDF. After a (somewhat relieving) name change, to Circle – which is greatly improved, although admittedly far worse for search engine optimisation – they set about self-releasing three full lengths: Just Keep Swimming, Molasses Sandwiches and Xmas Omas. They pin every one of these albums down as simple “bedroom recordings“, choosing not to respect any of them as their debut albums proper. Its all a little dismissive, but in fairness its their music to dismiss. They’ve now recorded their new album, The Middle, inside a proper studio and are set to release it officially on August 1st via Monday Records. They’re calling it their “official debut album“, but we can’t help but feel that it’s perhaps because they’re more proud of it than the others, or like the others weren’t quite good enough, or they flopped commercially, so this is now their starting point.

We would understand if the other works were just EPs or live albums, but they’re not, so the truth is it just seems as though they’ve put out albums that they’re not very happy with. If you can’t afford a studio, or you feel a studio allows you to create the masterpiece you were always capable of, then what were the other albums, practice runs? To counter this point, who are we to decide what is their debut album? Surely, its what ever they confirm it to be, right? So long as they don’t turn around in two or three years time and declare the release of their next ‘debut’ album, if upon reflection this one doesn’t work out. So we’re standing by their explanation for now, and if nothing else they’ve earned our recommendation, because, well, this new album is pretty damn good after all. If you like your long players to contain plenty of singles and lots of wonderfully-light, well-crafted pop songs then you’ll delight at this ten-track piece of work. Debut or no debut, it’s pretty tight and very successful in its delivery.

Having Mike Stavrou on hand for the production may have indeed helped elevate them, with his experience on albums from artists such as Kate Bush, The Pretenders, Elton John, Siouxsie & The Banshees and David Bowie – not a bad roster! His engineering has produced an immaculate sound, with the combined vocals of Radi Safi and Bec Shave proving particularly sharp. Safi’s voice has a plain, flat sound, reminiscent of something akin to The Lightning Seeds’ Ian Broudie, or The Pet Shop Boys’ Neil Tennant, whereas Shave’s vocals are much lighter, giving the songs a welcome layered effect. Without the introduction of her voice the otherwise middle-of-the-road pitch that the album aims for would perhaps suffer under it’s own wetness. Like other bands, such as The Thrills (of Big Sur fame), or any other twee pop protagonists, it’s too easily dismissed as lacking any serious edges, but the truth is more that they’re playing with a positive energy, suffused with the emotion ‘happiness’, which is just as valid as the other emotions, love, pain, sadness, etc. After all, it makes sense that people would also want to write and get all creative when they’re happy.

Track titles, such as Oh My Heart, Gorgeous and I Believe, will understandably suffer the Middle-Of-The-Road tag more than most, but inside this soft set of songs is a big heart and a selection of melodies that most other bands would die for. Although with the latter you just want to punch them in the face for being so bloody positive, particularly as Safi sings, “you’re gorgeous” repeatedly, whilst Shave coos in the background. Elsewhere, tunes such as 2020 Vision, Ready To Dance and the lead single, Fashion Me A Drum, rattle things up a gear, choosing to introduce more jerked drums and slicker basslines, with the latter two introducing some fizzing electronics. It seems that they are at their best when they in fact wander off the road’s centre. All together it delivers an album with the kind of variety and depth that can so often be lost in bands writing pop this light. Sometimes it finds energy with a gas-guzzling momentum, whereas with others its found aimlessly drifting around. As much as they’ve dismissed their older albums as false starts, this debut shows us a band who are clearly learning from previous experiences. We can’t wait for debut number eight and nine. (MB)

CIRCLE – FASHION ME A DRUM

CIRCLE – 2020 VISION