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Reintroducing Nathalie Archangel

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 Chances are, you have never heard of Nathalie Archangel. In the late 1980s/early 1990s, the American singer-songwriter was putting out one gem (“So Quiet, So Still”) after another (“Mr. Perfect For Me”) and working with everyone from Howard Jones to future “American Idol” judge Randy Jackson. But, perhaps because she traded labels (going from Columbia to MCA) midstream, she never quite broke through the way, say, Cyndi Lauper did. (Could also be because, as she suggests on her website (nathaliearchangel.com), she “never quite fit into a mould.”). Indeed, check out this wonderful piece on her by The Isle of Deserted Pop Stars.Luckily, all these years later, she still possesses a voice that can make your heart soar one minute and break the next! And she’s putting those powerful pipes of hers to good use on “Next to Me,” an electropop reworking of her waltz from “Melanie LaPatin’s Ballroom Remixed” compilation by Ricardo Autobahn (available here). The song itself is as sweet and romantic as they come – all but a sequel to her mini-hit “Mr. Perfect For Me.” . And, as an added bonus, it serves as an appetizer to “Raven,” her first new album since “Owl” in 1991.

Loreen releases two new singles (In My Head & Requiem Solution)

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The first is a beautiful collaboration with Kleerup called Requiem Solution that saw its premiere during the Swedish Grammy Awards. Some have critiqued the track as exposing Andreas Kleerup as a one trick pony unable to move beyond the same tricks seen in With Every Heartbeat (with Robyn) and Longing for Lullabies (with Titiyo). Personally I love the song with its splendid string arrangements and soft electronic baseline but yes I must admit it doesn't quite include the glorious wrought crescendo reached in the previously mentioned hit singles. Still, a wonderful song! Next, Loreen not only released a video for her title track, Heal, she's put out perhaps the last single from the album In My Head one of my all time Loreen favs. Along with a slick radio edit, the release of In My Head features the Promise Land remix in radio and extended edit.



INTRODUCING: Kim Cesarion

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With a heady mix of Maxwell and Robin Thicke,  Kim is a new signing to Sony Sweden via Aristotracks and has been working with the brilliant Arnthor Birgisson (AskEmbla) who is behind such hits as Play, Say Ok, If That's Ok With You, Out From Under, I Got U, Impossible and Emilia De Poret's fab Pick Me Up. Definitely one to watch out for this year.

COLORKALEIDO - INTRODUCING

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I love love love love love love love ColorKaleido. The pop they produce is all the colours of the rainbow, the tastiest vanilla custard pie and the sunshine after a beautiful but bewildering storm. In the last few winter months I've wrapped myself up with songs from their EP and such is its warmth, they better than the scarves and wholley hats combined. I had to put the music down to one side and actually say something about them.

 


There is something about ColorKaleido shakes all that serious nervousness which differentiates them from a lot of breaking acts these days. All of which is fine. Gosh, I love all of that sulky neon synthpop that has woven itself around London at the moment. Christine & Kim seem to be doing something different. It's somewhat like Frida Sundemo meets Paloma Faith. But that description doesn't quite describe them justly. Along with the aforementioned Sundemo, the ColorKaleido EP shimmers so brightly it has become one of the all time releases of 2013 by a new act.

Laurel - Blue Blood

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Sounding a touch like Lana Del Ray, Laurel is now signed to Turnfirst Recordings and naturally with these release my heart in a flutter. Blue Blood is a charged thematic anthem that is somewhat of a sprinkle of a twist compared to her first single Next Time which came out a year ago. The trippy-pop beats next to the lush arrangement of course draws similar comparisons to Lana Del Ray but this should not be seen as a slight in any way. Laurel wrote and produced the entire track which is an immense achievement considering its rich, mighty and huge wall of sound. Indeed a cheeky quick scan of the Born To Die reveals an almighty leviathan-like entourage of heavyweight and brilliant producers associated with Lana's absolutely amazing debut album. Not quite so Laurel. It appears Laurel has struck musical gold with this self-produced polemic second single. I cannot wait to hear more from her.


ASK EMBLA - Northern Light (album review)

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Anyone who loves good weighty pop music will love the debut album from Ask Embla. Released in Norway where it went straight to no.1, Northern Light is easily one of the best releases of the year. Every song on Northern Light sounds like a greatest hit that you want to hold hands, embrace and watch the sun set & party till dawn. Starting proceedings is the Norwegian hit single Fathers Eyes which is in many ways magical re-telling of those classical pop hits Papa Don't Preach & Mama by Madonna & Spice Girls respectively. Throbbing synths underscored by a glorious baseline introduces the latest single I Fell In Love which is screaming to be released internationally. Two songs in and you can hear the production level on Northern Light is resplendent. One warning:  Poppers-o-clock alert! They get all donkalicious on I Fell In Love and have you scrambling for the nearest glowstick. Pure electro heaven. Put this song on, let the muscles expand, jump onto the podium, take center stage and dance.  Over in under three minutes I Fell In Love leaves you breathless and demanding more. Cry Baby is their reply. Its like the first ray of sunshine on the skin as you've arrived in LA after a freezing cold stay (probably in London). Its a cute love song that the world needs desperately requires these days. Cry Baby is a simple big smile of a song. There is no way of feeling despondent after hearing Cry Baby - it picks you up and sparkles.

As the very few first bars of Winter begin, one becomes a little suspicious. This is the flawless fourth amazing song on the trot and its a banger of an anthem. How dare they! Ina's glorious vocals wrap around the epic production. A sea of tremendous synths climb and throb over the middle eight that crush into the repeated refrain at the end ensuring the climax of the song is is pure jouissance. The pace of the album slows down with the arrival of Writing On The Wall but the ballad doesn't disrupt the flow in any way. Instead it soars as a glowing torch love song where Ina refuses to over perform the vocal. Instead she commands the emotional message of the song without the need for trilling which many popstars may have had the urge to do. The same applies to the following song; Crashing Down. Back to back the two songs feel part of the same broken love story with the synth-led Wires emerging as the conclusion to the love battle.
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What follows Wires is an epic string anthem of polemic proportions. It is bewildering. Ask Embla present Einn. I challenge you to find rival pop album would have the audacity to include what feels like a Norsk marching song once performed by the lost warriors, lovers & heroes as they travelled into the light and passed into the bold and glorious greatness. If you've ever wondered what the valkyries listened to on their mp3 players as they bring the fallen to the god Odin wonder no more. The inclusion of Einn on Northern Light makes this, for me, a very special release indeed. As textures of Celtic strands of sounds are interwoven into shades of ancient Norwegian mythology, Einn emerges as a soaring uplifting torch ballad providing warmth from the embers after the burning pain of loosing a loved one.  I was emotionally shaken after my first listen. A powerful moment of remembrance enshrined in one song. Beautiful.

After a series of four ballads, the dancetastic title track arrives. The production at the start seduces the listener to presume that Northern Light is another ballad as it begins with a simple piano rift and sumptuous vocal by Ina. However this functions as a sweet prologue as a gentle electro-urban beat eventually introduces itself forming a song that the likes of Leona Lewis and Mariah Carey would dream to include on their recent releases. Ask Embla have written hits for The Saturdays & September initially sounds like a song from one of their albums.  If you put some of Robyn’s finest moments during her BMG days into a frying pan and added touches of what we love from Britney & Christina Aguilera you’d get The Haunting. Beautifully pop but underscored with chunky slabs of urban synths that are zipped up neatly with monumental bouncey Janet Jackson-type chorus.

Grave is a gloriously rich and twisted love battle with Arnthor brilliantly appearing on vocals promising to dance on his spurned lovers grave. If you could imagine the same lovers of Cher & Sonny’s I Got You Babe discovered their partners’ treachery and cheating. Hitherto they’d take to song, rip-up the promises made in aforementioned song and ensure that their hatred would live long after their mortal bodies served their purposes. Wonderfully devious!  Refusing to leave the album on such a sour note, Ina and Arnthor strip down the production on Children and proffer up a sublimely uplifting song of hope. The smart lyrics ensure that you can’t but smile as the album comes to an end. Ask Embla have simply made an album that contains outrageously immense hooks, wonderful lyrics and resplendent production. Their pop is instinctually good. I want to hug this album and never let go. Ever. 
***


CLEA! Its been ten years!

CLEA - IDENTITY CRISIS

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 Clea were a fantastic girlband. End of. They weren't merely the girls that didn't make Girls Aloud. They were a great pop act..The albums they produced were absolutely testament to that fact. I still get chills when I listen to Stuck In The Middle, Identity Crisis, Download It and Mind Games. So, what follows is a celebration of perhaps an rather unsung collection of albums & the girls themselves. Their debut album Identity Crisis is pretty much nine or ten years since its release and it still feels as fresh and effervescent today than it did when it came out. Then we'll go into the Trinity era, which as the title suggests, saw a loss of a member who flew off to Canada & huge image change for the girls.

Stuck In The Middle 

The serious underscoring of the strings in Stuck In The Middle punctuated the fact that Identity Crisis was going to be a very different girlband album to anything put out by their Popstar sister-group Girls Aloud. Stuck In The Middle includes waves of strings that makes the first song on the album feel more like its a theme for mini-movie thriller directed by Alejandro Amenábar.  A rather interesting remix came from Cutfather & Joe which included a feature by ODB. Like much of Identity Crisis, Easther Bennet featured on additional backing vocals for Stuck In The Middle. The video saw the girls seeming to ghostly haunt a rather posh mansion in the middle of nowhere. The song would be re-recorded and re-released alongside I Surrender a few years later but I'm rather attached to this version.

The Lie

The Lie is one of my all time favourite pop songs by a girlgroup. Huge statement I know but its epic. It continues the dark textures and themes wonderfully introduced by Stuck In The Middle except that The Lie amps up the emotional rawness by underlining the affair with strings recorded at Abbey Road. It evokes those brilliant moments on the Sugababes first album One Touch which made us love the original line-up & why they're back together. While The Lie was amazing it was sadly not release as a single. But it was not unnoticed. A German record label decided to re-work Clea's The Lie and get Monrose to record it only re-naming it Shame.

Butterflies and Rainbows


After the two dark power-house ballads, Butterflies and Rainbows is a beautiful yet eclectic fluffy number with pretty harmonies and a dreamy fairytail production which works a treat.

First Love

The vocals on First Love are to die for. Again, the song starts with lush strings we hear throughout the album but its on this rnb-tinged track that the harmonies by Clea are simply sumptuous. First Love could've easily been a stand-out calmer moment on a TLC or Eternal album.

Identity Crisis


Sounding like a calmer Pure Shores and Ray Of Light, the title track is about the strength of friendship. It is a warm feel-good, uplifting, and ambient song that sees all of Clea's vocals truly shine together on a mature song telling a story of relationships, adulthood and change. With a cheeky edit or two, this could've also been a fourth single from the album.

One More Try

A pleasant summery type song that allows those infectious harmonies of Clea flourish. One More Try was perhaps, for me, the one song that seemed somewhat of a b-side and utterly overshadowed by the likes of the singles, title track and The Lie. In other words, try as I might I am always drawn to the songs that proceed and follow it.

Sprung

Sprung was a perfect slice of bouncy pop that could've easily been an All Saints single. It is also the first song on the album that feels a little bit more upbeat as Identity Crisis on the whole is a chilled out pop album. There are no Ibiza bubblegumDonkalicious anthems on their debut. They kept the dancefloor anthems for their second. To my knowledge, perhaps the only pop song about the smell of eggs and a wild booty call, Sprung is a wonderful and quirky little ditty. Years later, yet another German popstar girlgroup covered Clea only this time it was Queensberry. Their version of Sprung is pretty awful. Somewhat proving how great Clea's harmonies were, the Queensberry version is a car crash by the time they reach the chorus. Avoid. Stick to Clea's.

Crush

Not so far removed from those great breezy Britney ballads of yesterday-year Crush was the type of song you could see run during the end-credits to the never-made Dawsons Creek feature film. Twee beyond belief, Crush effortlessly counter-balances the dark and dramatic tone of the singles. Driven by acoustic guitars the young Aimee Kearsley sounds absolutely blissful harmonising with Emma.

A Guy Like You

This perhaps is the first and only song on Identity Crisis that sees Clea sounding a little bit like Girls Aloud. The track itself is a beautiful lovechild of Sugababes Overload and the aforementioned Girls Aloud and their epic break-out The Sound of The Underground. Perhaps realizing how similar the song is to those other British girlband behemoths the track comes in at a very short 2:52 making it feel over before its really begun.

Download It

Their first single that still sounds as good today than it did on its release ten years ago. Chloe totally shines with her vocals but is truly supporting by her bandmates who lift her adlibs and flourishes by nailing their beautiful harmonies. The production is brave and flawless. Beginning with a thrilling string arrangement, rarely do pop songs these days sound so epic, lush and potent. Download It really should've done a lot better in the charts as the no.21 position does not reflect how good the song is.






Mind Games

Though a b-side to Download It, Mind Games was just as epic if not more. Soaring and penetrative, the band not only sound great together but illustrate that perhaps, just perhaps, their sound was a little ahead of its time for Mind Games could easily be defined as a older sister to Leona's Bleeding Love. Perfect.

Pretty Little Bad Girl 

Absolutely totally out of place to anything on Identity Crisis and sounding nothing like the towering emotional compositions that come before it, Pretty Little Bad Girl is a strange way to finish the album. One of the most commercial tracks on Identity Crisis, PLBG sounds earily like a cross between Kelly Clarksons Since You've Been Gone and something by the Thunderbugs and their album which makes sense as their lead-singer co-wrote it.

Tidbits+unreleased tracks

Reminisce 

Everything that was written and recorded for Identity Crisis ended up being released on the twelve-track album or appeared as a b-side. Reminisce was the only song that didn't make the final cut but you can find it on Stuck On The Middle. Written by Clea, the rnb love ballad takes its cues from TLC.

***




CLEA TRINITY

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Clea’s second album was not only a drastic change in sound and style from their first album Identity Crisis but also saw the loss of Chloe who decided to move to Canada to launch her solo career. The remaining members Lynsey, Emma and Aimee regrouped after a small break and with their label Simon and Denise they released the highly poptastic album Trinity. Content-wise Trinity was a total contrast to their first dark, deep and often softly melancholic debut. This version of Clea perhaps was more comparative to Spice Girls and Atomic Kitten at their most fun and hyperbolic. Containing nine new songs and five previously available on their Identity Crisis album only re-recorded by the three, Trinity additionally contained the bombastic cover of We Don’t Have To Take Our Clothes Off. This review will focus on the Trinity songs rather than the new versions of the Identity Crisis songs suffice to say they are re-recorded and sound pretty amazing especially the ad-libs towards the end in the new Butterflies & Rainbows.

Eanie Meanie

Co-written by the girls, Eanie Meanie sees the girls recall very early Atomic Kitten when they first exploded on the scene. They also try and do some frilly fluffy rapping that is as cute as a button.

Lucky Like That (video)

Lucky Like That was Clea’s fourth single and last in the UK. Premiering on the sorely missed Capital Disney radio station it was released in time to push Trinity. Written by bunch of fabulous Swedish songwriters and produced by Eurodance maestro Eric Le Tennen who was responsible for that other fabulous girlgroup NG3 of As Nasty As We Wannabe and Swedish winners of the second winners of Popstars Supernatural. Lucky Like That came with some amazing remixes from the likes of Uniting Nations, Mark Jason, D’Mau and Kumuchi all of which are all available on Itunes now.

We Don’t Have To Take Our Clothes Off (video)

A fun vigorous cover of Jermaine Stewarts 1980s ode to safe sex and cherry wine, it went to no.35 on the UK charts back in September 2005 despite being pretty much ignored by the media. To put their chart position in some perspective, two years later Lil Chris released his version of the Stewart classic via the major label RCA and went to no.63. Listed as Da Playaz vs. Clea, their cover was a brilliant tribute to Jermaines brilliant original and was a great way of signalling a change of look and sound for the band.

Reasons

Reasons sounds like the type of love ballad you’d hear on the radio during the Christmas time. In fact, it sounds somewhat similar to Goodbye by the Spice Girls and contains those honey-like harmonies previously heard on Identity Crisis.

Playing The Wrong Game

You could almost imagine Playing The Wrong Game appear on the soundtrack to Miami Vice or Dallas. Tinged with synth kicks and snares, it blows a thousand kisses to Janet Jaskson and Paula Abdul.



Keep It Cool

I love Keep It Cool. For me it sounds like Sugababes Push The Button mashed-up and re-remixed with Blondie’s Rapture making Keep It Cool emerge as a cocktail of bubblegum ace superpop.  Could’ve been a brilliant double a-side with I Surrender.

Freestyle

By the time you reach Freestyle its suddenly clear that Clea were perhaps one of the first British bands to be inspired by K-pop. With echoes of Janet Jackson, Freestyle could be easily be a huge hit by Girls’ Generation, 2ne1 and f(x). Its no surprise to find out that Trinity found a following in Asia where it received a special release with a bonus Cd with delicious remixes and well worth tracking down for the completely different and delicious album art-work alone (also check out the girls singing in Shanghai in Mandarin here!).

Physical

Sadly not the cover of the Olivia Newton-John - though that would be amazing -  with its tight production and slick hooks Physical could’ve easily been on the third Spice Girls album.




I Surrender

I Surrender is essentially amazing. I remember when I first heard it I said it sounds like Kylie’s On A Night A like This had done the naughty with her club track Butterfly and had produced a beautiful dancetastic lovechild that proudly struts its stuff next the very best of Atomic Kitten, Spinning Around and Britney’s Breathe On Me. Looking back a few years on, I Surrender was evidently before its time emerging as a preview to the wild EDM craze that has currently taken hold in the US and UK charts. With I Surrender you almost want to rip off the shirt, dye your hair pink had head off to Ibiza or Barcelona. With its thumping baseline, anthemic chorus and trippy lyrics you can almost smell the poppers. Although it was eventually released as a single in Sweden and some parts of Europe, in hindsight, maybe I Surrender should’ve been the lead single over and above the cover such is its ‘bigness’. Written by the legend Darren Tate, dancefloor diva Kate Ryan covered I Surrender on her studio album Free and picked it as a single where it entered no.12 in the Dutch charts. Two years later, Upside released all the mixes commissioned for the Clea release in Sweden when I Surrender got the EP Itunes treatment.




Unreleased & Tidbits

Unlike their previous album, Trinity included quite a few cuts that ended up being shelved, withdrawn or demoted as b-sides for their singles. Lets first look at the unreleased stuff.


Kick Back Relax

This really should’ve been on the album. Their version even got some UK airplay only to see the winner of Swedish Idol Agnes and her label eventually release the song which meant Clea could not longer put the track on Trinity despite the fact that they sound a lot better on the song than Agnes does (I am a huge Agnes fan). Written by Swedish maestro Jorgen Elofsson, Kick Back Relax was made for a girlband. It isincredibly catchy which perhaps explains Sony’s interest in the track that ultimately paid off given her eventual big chart position (no.2). A massive achievement for Agnes who’d previously seen her single Stranded flop. Still, Clea’s Kick Back Relax is perfect for the summer sun and fits incredibly well on the album.


Don’t Go

A perfect song that would’ve sound ace on Trinity and arguably Don’t Go sounds a little bit like a much stronger version of Physical.

Addicted

Sounding like a track from Come And Get It by Rachel Stevens, Addicted by Clea would easily make a great bonus track if Trinity had been released in Japan or Australia. Basically territories that love their special editions with bonus content. In many ways, it fits the album more so than the re-recorded Identity Crisis tracks.

Faith

The other cover recording in the Trinity sessions. Staying pretty faithful to the original, Clea’s version even includes a tiny bit of George right at the start of the cover. Excellent production too. If Clea were ever to re-issue Trinity this cover would be a must.

Hey You

One of my all time favourite Clea songs that is immensely fun and screams leg-warmers and big hair from the outset. It's a sublime slice of synth-sample sugar that recalls all the reasons why we loved Vanity 6, The Flirts and Strawberry Switchblade. Not included on the album as the The Rick Steady Crew sample required clearance which demanded a whole lot of paperwork and lawyers. A shame as Hey You totally illustrated the sound and vibe of Trinity.

Who Do You Think You Are

A very interesting and obtuse unreleased Clea song. The record company decided to capitalize on the bands success in China by arranging new shows but with a twist – they would perform a few songs that were in the charts by Chinese pop acts and this was one of them only this included English lyrics. Its pretty cute.

B-sides


Romeo

Lynsey sounds absolutely fierce on Romeo – a b-side to their second single Lucky Like That. Romeo stays true to the 1980s sound of its parent album.

Clea Bad Girls

Like Romeo, Bad Girls was recorded in Sweden yet this sounds very much like schlager type number you may hear during Sweden’s Melodifestivalen only with a country and western lilt in the production.


Ricki-Lee (Come & Get In Trouble With Me) - She's back!

HEROES - FIRST BE A WOMAN (This is very good)

Ricki Lee - Come & Get In Trouble With Me

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Fresh pop from Australia. And it sounds like I'm gonna love it.

Hearts Collide by Eleftheria Eleftheriou (fresh pop from greece)

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Ok so the video is fab! Think Le Kid mixed in with a little bit of Tom of Finland, Kylie's Slow and of course Cher's If I Could Turn Back Time. Thank you Eleftheria Eleftherio! Looking forward to the album!

Paola e Chiara Giungla!

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The brilliant new album by the Italian powerpop sisterband Paola e Chiara called Giungla is out now and highly addictive. Along with the new Icona Pop album, the album is a beautiful hybrid of C-Pop, Goldfrapp's album Headfirst and has elements of the best of Pet Shop Boys. Indeed, a rather perky pop song A Modo Mio is actually sung in Cantonese. The band truly deserve to be bigger than beyond their homeland as everyone their releases is thick with excellent electropop anthems. They believe in fillers. Always killers. Its well worth seeking out their Win The Game album too. Its strikingly wonderful. Its heartbreaking to know that they may be calling it a day. The lead single Divertiamoci (Perché c'e feeling) is absolutely bombastic.

Laura & Kylie

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The Italian legendary pop diva Laura Pausini has announced that she's releasing her greatest hits celebrating the fact its been twenty years since releasing her debut single La Solitudine. The album contains a new song called Limpido, a duet with Kylie Minogue, that has already gone to number one in Italy. A Spanish version of the song was also recorded as Pausini is relevatly large in Spain as she generally always records her albums in Castilian too.


Edurne's Climax

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Coming 5th in Spain's answer to American Idol a few years ago the singer Edurne has just released her album in Spain via Sony called Climax. The first two singles, Pretty Boy & Painkiller, were unable to break the top 30 but the album will hopefully fair better as its produced by the legend Mike Busbee of Pink! The overall sound of Climax is rather different from her previous electropop releases as its clear Edurne was inspired by guitar-pop outings by Kelly Clarkson, Pink and Avril. 

Donatella

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 As Paola & Chiara decide to hang up their pop stilettos, its a relief to see another Italian band consisting of two sisters called Donatella arrive on the scene. Launching themselves via the Italian version of X Factor Donatella have just put out their debut album Unpredictable which sounds very like an album produced by the Pet Shop Boys. If Neil and Chris were to produce an Italian girlgroup from Italian X Factor that is. Donatella even cover Love Comes Quickly. If you like your Queen Of Hearts, Little Boots and Robyn you will rather like songs like Enemy, Fooled Again, Magic and Reflection of Things.

Chenoa Otra Direccion

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One of my favourite releases this week comes from Chenoa. She's from the very same TV show as Edurne who also saw album come out this week too (see below). Ensuring a big opening, Chenoa has doubled her chances of selling her usual platinum by recording a portion of the album in English as well as Spanish and making sure her first single was absolutely bombastically poptastic which is exactly what her hit Life's An Equation irrefutably was. The rest of the album is perhaps one of her strongest in her career.

The Soraya Interview

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The singer Soraya is about to release her 6th studio album through her very own record label, Valentia Records. Comparisons with the Swedish firework of a popstar, Robyn, who left her own major label SonyBMG to set up as an independent, have been made and understandably so. With the release earlier this year of the stand-alone single Con Fuego under her belt, tomorrow sees the release of Soraya's first single, Plastic, from the new album Universe In Me. On the eve of this new chapter in Soraya's career, as she firmly parks herself in the captain's chair, DSTP spoke to the singer about the creation of the album, the good early reviews of Plastic and what it feels like to be boss!


So lets start with the album! It has elements the disco movement of the 1970s, Moroder and of course the 1980s..what was the genesis of the album

I was inspired by the early legendary pioneers of electronic dance music - the likes of Donna Summer, Grace Jones, The Supremes and Gloria Gaynor. I wanted this album to be different from my last five. I wanted to create a journey through the album. As if it told a story. A story of music. I wanted the music to be central to my first album released through the label I set up myself. I had so many ideas so I called up Tortuga as I wanted this album to be a little bit like Robyn's Body Talk, Madonna's Ray Of Light and Donna Summer's Greatest Hits. All rolled into one. I wanted this album to be dance, but to feel live. With real instruments. Alive. That was very critical to me from the start. To feel the passion of the dance within.

You're completely in control on this album.


Yes. I am a businesswoman. I run my own music company now. That was the central framework to the album. At the very beginning of the process, I would sit with the songwriter Isabel Guzman and we would brainstorm where to start. I love that funky disco sound by Nile Rodgers and I absolutely loved a particular song she demoed and put aside especially for me and a project like this.

Which was?

Plastic. It became the starting point. That's where I would work to create and direct the vibe of the album. Isabel had written the song Plastic a few years ago and hadn't discovered the right project for it until now. When I heard the demo I knew it was right. So Isabel and my production team Tortuga flew out from Stockholm to Madrid throughout the year and we'd really start to work on formulating the sound of the album. The rest of the album was written and recorded in Spain.
 
Was Plastic always going to be the first single from Universe In Me?


Yes. Two other songs were quite popular in the studio when we first started recording. One was actually the second song we recorded for the album called Walking On Water. I cannot wait for you guys to hear it. I wanted a song about empowerment and picking yourself up after you've been knocked down and Walking On Water was that for me. I picked Plastic. It had to be Plastic.

It is a turning point for you? Sound-wise.

Yes. My producers wanted to really push me, which I loved! And naturally I pushed them in return. It was vital for me that parts of the album explored the dark side of relationships but also the beauty of love. That's the spirit behind the song Something. I loved layers of that song. The strings are thrilling. When that was being written the studio came alive. The sparks flew. It was amazing to hear the strings filter through the speakers. The same must be said for the Vega song El Huracan and Armour which is a big electronic ballad. Vega and Björn of Tortuga created an amazing production on El Huracan as I wanted to experiment with trip-hop. The arrangement is enchanting.

The Vega song is a little bit like the British bands Massive Attack and Portishead.

Yes! Exactly. I wanted this album to be different yet follow from Dreamer and Sin Miedo. Universe In Me has different moods but the songs are all interwoven together. They had to fit.

What was it like recording the album?

A joy. I had a very specific story of the album in my mind. In fact, there was a moment when we recorded what was going to be last song of the album, Is It Worth It, when I challenged Tortuga to up the ante. I wanted two more songs on the album. I really wanted this album to sparkle with all the glamour of the disco era of the 1970s. Isabel thought about two demos from the same session as Plastic; Love Song and When You Were My Friend. Those were actually the last two songs to be a  part of the album. Like Plastic, they were waiting for an album just like Universe In Me. It all fell into place. The moment I heard them I needed them. They sounded like disco gems you'd hear at Studio 54 and Danceteria. That's what I wanted the sound of the album to be. For me, the album became immediately one in that moment!

Yes. Although the album feels retro, it is also very modern and forward. For instance, the title track is a little AlunaGeorge meets Disclosure meets Eurythmics.  
That's an interesting comparison! Jocke, Isabel, Bjorn and myself have the similar music tastes and are roughly born around the era of the cassette and disco so I think that's why the writing, production and direction came together very naturally in the studio in Madrid. Actually it was a few years ago when we met in London that the stars already began to align for the album. I wanted it to be retro but modern. If it could be described as a colour I'd say it was neon blue.

Yes! When You Were My Friend fits that description. It is very dark.

Yes. I liked Isabel's demo. But I wanted changes. I wanted it to be darker with strands of Depeche Mode. When Vega gave me El Huracan it was a revelation for the album. So the album needed a connecting song and that had to be dark and maybe a little sinister. So I had to re-direct the ambiance of When You Were My Friend. Tortuga are excellent in listening and delivering exactly what I wanted.
  
The reaction from fans, djs and music critics to Plastic and the shift in that direction have been very positive.

I am so thankful for my fans. It is humbling. Especially during this moment. Words cannot express how I feel about it. My fans are the best.

It is a massive step you are doing with this album which just also happens to be the first under your own record label. I mean, its the first album with Valentia. You could've played it a little safer.

Yes, this album is a shift. A development from the last. I had to. It was in my blood burning in my heart. I wanted my voice to be really be free. In many ways, this is what the song Armour is about. You have to meet the challenge that you set yourself. Armour has a lyric that I love that goes "When the curtain falls, then its up to you". You have to be bold, an artist and strong. I had to take this next step with this album.
   
How did you come up with the title of Universe In Me?

The Universe In Me conveys a lot to me. It says everything. Yes, it is me on stage but I am also about my family, fans, friends, my community and loved ones. My label, management and my production team. They are all a part of this...All my fans are a part of this journey. I can't overstate this. That is the meaning behind the title. What makes this dream possible is the universe around me.

Veronica Maggio - Dallas (Wagner Remix)

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It is Wednesday which can only mean one thing! Its time for a Maggio remix! By Wagner! Nay of X Factor or German opera composer. But of the Danish outfit ColorKaleido! Its a rather funky remix with delicious disco trimmings on the side. Yummy. More remixes Wagner.
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