“Painless” is the follow-up to Nilüfer Yanya’s renowned 2019 debut album “Miss Universe”, which fully established her as a singular artist and a distinctive voice that simply has to be heard. The critically acclaimed “Miss Universe” – a widescreen concept record that took a tongue in cheek swipe at the most self-involved corners of the health and wellness industry – was followed last year by the three song ep “Feeling Lucky?“, which further explored Yanya’s fascination with ‘90s alt-rock melodies and drew on themes of resentment, her fear of flying, and the concept of luck. And her now peerless song writing aptitude best: “Nilüfer Yanya’s melodies have a pull so strong they almost necessitate their own law of physics.” Yanya also re-released her early eps on vinyl for the first time this year on the record inside out. the release is a fundraiser for artists in transit, a collaborative not for profit group she founded with her sister molly that delivers art workshops to displaced people and communities in times of hardship. as the daughter of two visual artists (her irish-barbadian mother is a textile designer and her turkish-born father’s work is exhibited at the british museum) creativity was always destined for Nilüfer Yanya’s future. now she enters the next stage of her creative journey, Yanya is running head first into the depths of emotional vulnerability on her sophomore record painless.
The album was recorded between a basement studio in stoke newington and riverfish music in Penzance with Miss Universe collaborator and producer Wilma Archer, Deek recordings founder bullion, Big Thief producer Andrew Sarlo, and musician Jazzi Bobbi. where miss universe stretched musical boundaries to include a litany of styles from smooth jazz melodies to radio ready pop, painless takes a more direct sonic approach. by narrowing down her previously broad palette to a handful of robust ideas that revolve around melancholy harmonies and looped industrial beats to mimic the insular focus of the lyrics, Yanya has smoothed out the idiosyncrasies of previous releases without losing what is essential to her. painless is a record that forces the listener to sit with the discomfort that accompanies so many of life’s biggest challenges whether it be relationship breakdowns, coping with loneliness, or the search for our inner self. “it’s a record about emotion,” Yanya explains. “i think it’s more open about that in a way that miss universe wasn’t because there’s so many cloaks and sleeves with the concept i built around it.” she adds, summing up the ethos of the new album, “I’m not as scared to admit my feelings”.
Nilufer Yanya’s new release ‘Inside Out’ is a compilation of her previous eps, ‘Small Crimes’, ‘Plant Feed’ and ‘Do You Like Pain?’. Londoner Yanya might just be one of the most interesting guitarists operating right now, her songs are technically impressive but never bypass the instant pleasures a good riff can bring. “Stabilise,” the first single from new album “Painless” (March 4th, 2022), is a dizzying experience built for repeat listens.
After picking up heaps of critical praise (including a Best Music Music designation from Pitchfork) with her debut, Nilufer Yanya looks to make good on the hype with her follow-up “Painless”. The UK singer/songwriter cuts through the fog of the first record for a piercing display of emotional vulnerability.
Recorded between a basement studio in Stoke Newington and Riverfish Music in Penzance, the record is a more sonically direct effort, narrowing her previously broad palette to a handful of robust ideas. Yanya’s debut album “Miss Universe” (2019) earned a Best New Music tag from Pitchfork and saw support tours with Sharon Van Etten, Mitski and The XX.
Nilufer is donating her release profits to the organization artists in transit, ait is a non-profit collaborative artists project bringing creative workshops to displaced communities and people in times of hardships.
The playing card that sits on the sleeve of Nilüfer Yanya’s Feeling Lucky? EP has seen some things. Dog-eared and creased, it’s sealed as many desperate fates as it has sparked moments of wild, disbelieving excitement. From feeling like your luck is out to last-minute reprieves, this dynamic is hard-coded into the record with songs that ask whether we’re looking at the idea of good or bad fortune the wrong way.
“It’s these two energies, and we don’t really have any control over them,” Yanya says. “But they can control a lot of what we do – the luck element. A lot of the time we’re not thinking of it. We think it’s all down to us, or down to other people. Sometimes things just don’t turn out the way you expect them to, and sometimes they turn out better. Some people tend to be very appreciative of it, but some people do the opposite: ‘Well, you know, I was just really lucky.’ I think it’s about balance.”
Feeling Lucky? is a short, sharp shock of a release that finds Yanya refining her work further following the arrival of Miss Universe, a debut album that anointed her as one of the most exciting new voices in British music through its blend of fuzz-pop brilliance and heavy-lidded R&B-adjacent jams. Its three tracks are picture-perfect examples of her writing, melding clever, immensely hooky guitar lines together with complementary synth flourishes and electronic percussion.
But where Miss Universe was a quasi-concept album that luxuriated in skits and set dressing across an 18-song running order, its follow up is far more interested in the here and now. It is a snapshot of Yanya’s current creative preoccupations that takes cues from the rapid-fire series of EPs she released between 2016 and 2018. It’s a format that feels comfortable. “I prefer it, I think,” she says. “I’ve done a lot more EPs. I’m more used to it.”
The elephant in the room is the same elephant that’s in every room right now: COVID-19. Work on Feeling Lucky? couldn’t proceed in exactly the same manner as work on Miss Universe, but the lessons Yanya learned from crafting that record as a studio beast were carried over. In a sense it’s about being adaptable and refusing to cling on to a single way of getting the job done. “I’d written some of the songs in the studio for Miss Universe, which was new to me,” she says.
“Normally I write by myself or at home and I’ve lived with a song, at least played it with the band in rehearsal, if not at a show, before taking it to the studio. By doing that album in reverse, when you take things on tour you find that some of them just don’t work the way you’d think they would work. Maybe you haven’t got the right arrangement for them. “It was interesting to see that, and with this EP they’re all studio-based songs as well. I have a feeling they’ll work quite well [live]. On the album I was also trying to push myself, trying new ideas all the time, trying to change it up and keep it interesting. With the EP I don’t need to worry about that as much – it’s a collection of the best things I’ve written this year.”
Day 7.5093, the third song on Feeling Lucky?, made its debut in the most 2020 manner possible: as part of a live stream. Back in July Yanya performed for NPR’s Tiny Desk Home series, pausing after playing Heat Rises to acknowledge the aftermath of the killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police. “One of the things that’s been on my mind a lot is the racism and violence and injustice going on towards Black people and people of colour, not only in America but here in the UK and all over the world,” she said. Yanya also noted how strange it was to be promoting her music while the world was in turmoil, and that’s not an observation she’s moved away from in the intervening months. Sitting in front of a camera, being greeted by piercing silence, is no way to road-test unheard material. But there is a silver lining to be found with the way it ties into the EP’s of-the-moment focus.
“I found the livestreams a bit hard to connect with,” she admits. “There’s nothing to bounce off. It doesn’t really feel like anything happens. But it’s quite refreshing just to put new music out and not have to build up towards it. Just do it. The next day you’re free to think about other things. You don’t have to do the whole press thing, a show around the EP. It’s like, ‘Okay, what do I actually want to do now?’”
Yanya was raised in a creative home in West London by artist parents of Turkish, Irish and Bajan heritage, and her family is a key feature of her story. Her uncle, Joe Dworniak, is a noted session musician and producer, and it was at his Cornish studio that Yanya’s earliest work came into focus. So too much of Miss Universe. Continuing a long tradition, the video for Feeling Lucky? single Crash was helmed by her sister, Molly Daniel. The forthcoming promo for Same Damn Luck was even more of a close-knit affair.
“With Crash we just did it in a studio in London in one day,” she says. “I was just thinking about ways to embody the song, and we took it literally, making it on an aeroplane. We just went with that. With Same Damn Luck, we went to Greece. It was so nice. My cousin, who’s a DOP, came, my younger sister came, my mum was doing set design. It was kinda like a road trip. It was more about different textures, sort of like a constant mood board. It was mad to be able to do a video like that instead of thinking about storyline all the time.”
Musically, Yanya’s collaborators on Feeling Lucky? ticked boxes marked ‘old’ and ‘new’. Having worked on Miss Universe, songwriter Will Archer returned to help bring Same Damn Luck to life, while another old acquaintance in electronica producer Bullion was drafted in on Day 7.5093. Yanya was drawn to the aesthetic of Brooklyn songwriter Nick Hakim, whose work fuses gloopy psychedelia with decaying tape hiss, to add a chunky, distorted edge to Crash.
“With Will this one was a bit different because he had a guitar loop for the verse and we basically wrote the song over that. It’s more like a pure collaboration,” Yanya observes. “With Nick and Bullion, it was more like bringing a song to them, which was kind of there but not really, and working on structure, instrumentation, arranging it. You can get so much out of just doing that with another person. Everyone has different ideas.
“With Crash, it’s really simple chords. You could play that a million different ways but it was really fun in the studio just to do one or two takes. They were really messy, but they had the right energy and vibe. We just went with that, and with loads of distortion and gain you can’t really make out what’s going on. I’ve always wanted to play around with that idea as well, of going into more defined tonal work. It was really nice to do that with Nick and Bullion, and the part lends itself to that anyway.” Having spent much of her early career playing Stratocasters, Yanya has traded them in for a Jazzmaster of late. It’s all over Feeling Lucky?. Something that hasn’t changed, though, is the almost alchemical relationship between her voice and guitar. Yanya’s music is defined by the manner in which she finds pockets of space between undulating lead lines, and rarely in the past has she achieved such a perfect balance as she does on Day 7.5093.
Its setup is weird, like holding a circus mirror up to a garage-rock riff, but it makes complete sense in her world. Existing fans will eat it up, while newcomers should look no further for a way in. “If I write by myself, that [guitar and voice] will be the first part of the song,” she says. “It’s like a binding element.” When Yanya first began making waves there was the usual bout of music critic hand-wringing about what genre she best fit into. Increasingly, the fact that she’s both a Pixies fan and a purveyor of atmospheric, groove-driven alt-pop is irrelevant. It just feels like her, and it’s exciting to wonder what styles she might bend to her will in future. “With these songs, although they’re different in terms of being records, I like them because of the song writing,” she adds. “It’s not because I think I’m being clever, it’s just about the song. I’d like to keep moving forward in that direction, just putting out your best work and not having to fill in the gaps or make it sound more like this or that.”
Nilüfer Yanya’s “Feeling Lucky” EP is out on December 11th through ATO Records.
London-based artist Nilüfer Yanya announced a new EP Feeling Lucky?, due out on December 11th via ATO Records. This EP follows her 2019 debut album “Miss Universe”, This week, she has unveiled the first single/video “Crash.” The song, which was co-written and produced by her labelmate Nick Hakim, features bold, garbled guitars and her stylish, layered vocals.
The new three-song EP called comes with the lead single “Crash” and its corresponding music video, where she plays a flight attendant. The track was co-written and produced by Nick Hakim. “The video for ‘Crash’ takes place on a flight,” Nilüfer Yanya said in a statement. “Last year, doing a lot of touring I found myself becoming more and more anxious each time I boarded a plane, something which was new for me as I’ve never had a fear of flying. With each flight we took it felt like the turbulence was getting worse and I was convinced my luck was due to run out. I didn’t write ‘Crash’ about being on an aeroplane but I really like it visually as an embodiment of the song.” Yanya released her debut album Miss Universe last year, following three earlier EPs: 2016’s Small Crimes, 2017’s Plant Feed, and 2018’s Do You Like Pain?.
“Crash” is the first single on Nilüfer Yanya’s new EP ‘Feeling Lucky?’ which will be released December 11.
Nilüfer Yanya dwells in life’s absurdities and anxieties. The English singer-songwriter’s ambitious debut album, “Miss Universe”, is based around a loose concept, a faux self-care hotline that promises to cure the pains of existence. Her voice flickers with controlled chaos, a glimmering falsetto in one breath and a rich rumble in the next. Shining synths give way to buoyant guitar fuzz, a la the Strokes. On a few tracks, Yanya interjects with the soothing monotone of a call specialist, emphasizing her striking power upon returning to the regularly scheduled programming.
London singer-songwriter Nilufer Yanya released her debut single Small Crimes back in 2016. Inspired by the actions of a petty thief, it is a haunting but simple tale that showcases Yanya’s lyrical talents, influenced by the likes of Nina Simone and Jeff Buckley as well as Connan Mockasin. Keep On Calling is similar in style to Small Crimes,Yanya’s vocals accompanied only by carefully picked guitar. Soon though, she adds another string to her bow, as the song transforms itself into a quasi-R&B number with only a few handclaps and a slight tonal shift. It’s still minimalist, but Yanya shows that you can do a lot with a little.
“Keep On Calling” by Nilüfer Yanya released on Blue Flowers Music
At 18, Nilüfer – who is of Turkish – Irish – Bajan heritage – uploaded a few demo’s to SoundCloud. Though she’s preternaturally shy, her music – which uniquely blends elements of soul and jazz into intimate pop songs with electronic flourishes and a newly expressed grungy guitar sound – isn’t. And it didn’t take long for it to catch people’s attention. She signed with independent New York label ATO Records, following three EPs on esteemed london indie label Blue Flowers, and earned a place on the BBC Sound of 2018 longlist.
She has also supported the likes of The xx, Interpol, Broken Social Scene and Mitski on tour. Now, Nilüfer releases her debut album, “Miss Universe”. Though she recorded much of it in the same remote Cornwall studio she used to jam in as a much younger person, it is bigger and more ambitious than anything she has done before. Angels, with its muted, harmonic riffs, channels ideas “of paranoid thoughts and anxiety” – a theme that runs through the album, not least in its conceptual spoken word interludes which emanate from a fictional health management company WWAY HEALT H TM. “You sign up, and you pay a fee,” explains Nilüfer of the automated messages, which are littered through the album and are narrated by the titular Miss Universe. “They sort out all of your dietary requirements, and then they move onto medication, and then maybe you can get a better organ or something… and then suddenly it starts to get a bit weird. You’re giving them more of you and to what end?
Nilüfer Yanya performs “In Your Head” on Later… with Jools Holland, BBC Two
A remixed and pumped-up version of ‘Heat Rises’ from Yanya’s superb debut LP Miss Universe results in ‘H34TRises’. Not that we needed convincing on the original cut but this new edit gives the track a beefier, more electro driven feel. Peep the video shot in Istanbul too.
She emerged in May 2016 with an elegant take on the Pixies “Hey” and followed it up with two stunning songs of her own, “Small Crimes” and “Keep On Calling”. In the space of three songs she outlined her aesthetic – sparseness, deftly intricate guitar and vocal melodies and brilliantly observational lyrics.
Yanya cites Nina Simone, Jeff Buckley and Connan Mockasin amongst her influences She grew up in West London and her parents are both artists, coming from a multi-cultural heritage of Turkish, Irish and Bayan. Yanya started learning the piano at the age of six but at twelve realised a long held ambition to learn the guitar. Her Mother encouraged her to take up the cello at the same time, which Yanya persevered with for a few years, but the practical issues of carrying it, coupled with her emotional attachment to the guitar led her away from classical music.
Inspired by her sister’s CD collection, in her early and mid-teens Yanya developed a taste for skater-rock and indie bands but discovering a passion for Jazz was the eureka moment, the trigger for the type of expression she was looking for as a songwriter. After taking her A Levels Yanya got a scholarship, started performing her songs and now, is one of the most exciting new talents around.
The twenty-four-year-old London-based musician created a self-care protagonist named “Miss Universe,” the voice of the (fictional) organization We Worry About Your Health (WWAY Health). The 24/7 care program “worries about you so you don’t have to,” as she puts it, subduing symptoms of paranoia, anxiety, and all-around unhappiness.
The storyline that surrounds her zapping, intricate rock songs questions the commodification of mental upkeep. “They’re saying they care, but they don’t really care, and they’re just trying to sell you things that you don’t need,” she tells me.
We have been anticipating the debut album from British singer songwriter Nilüfer Yanya since 2016, when she first made a splash with the idiosyncratic singles “Small Crimes” and “Keep on Calling.” The debut album “Miss Universe” delivers on the promise made by those early releases, with 17 tracks of bright, soulful pop that’s like nothing else you’ll hear this year.
One of the album’s most raw, subdued tracks, “Monsters Under the Bed,” self-awareness and the perceptions of other people butt heads. “They all think I’m not okay / Such a shame, never felt so good,” she sings. Yanya tells me that’s the oldest song on the record. “I don’t know how it ended up on the album. It makes sense, but I didn’t plan to [include it]. I was a different person when I wrote it, and it’s kind of crazy it’s on there. I like that, as well—that the younger me is on the album.” She explains how it was revised for a documentary her sister was making about their grandmother who suffered from mental illness. “I wrote it from her perspective, or was trying to write it with her mind,” Yanya says.
Nilüfer Yanya’s debut album, Miss Universe, is out March 22.
Though she’d been writing songs in her head since she was six, and on the guitar since she was 12, it took a long time for Nilüfer Yanya to work up the courage to show anyone her music. “I knew I wanted to sing, but the idea of actually having to do it was really horrifying,” says the 23-year-old. When she was finally persuaded to do so, by a music teacher in West London where she grew up, she says “it was horrible. I loved it”.
At 18, Nilüfer – who is of Turkish-Irish-Bajan heritage – uploaded a few demos to SoundCloud. Though she’s preternaturally shy, her music – which uniquely blends elements of soul and jazz into intimate pop songs with electronic flourishes and a newly expressed grungy guitar sound – isn’t. And it didn’t take long for it to catch people’s attention. She signed with independent New York label ATO, following three EPs on esteemed london indie label Blue Flowers, and earned a place on the BBC Sound of 2018 longlist. She also supported the likes of The xx, Interpol, Broken Social Scene and Mitski on tour.
Now, Nilüfer is ready to release her debut album, Miss Universe. Though she recorded much of it in the same remote Cornwall studio she used to jam in as a much younger person, it is bigger and more ambitious than anything she has done before. ‘Angels’, with its muted, harmonic riffs, channels ideas “of paranoid thoughts and anxiety” – a theme that runs through the album, not least in its conceptual spoken word interludes which emanate from a fictional health management company WWAY HEALTH TM. “You sign up, and you pay a fee,” explains Nilüfer of the automated messages, which are littered through the album and are narrated by the titular Miss Universe. “They sort out all of your dietary requirements, and then they move onto medication, and then maybe you can get a better organ or something… and then suddenly it starts to get a bit weird. You’re giving them more of you and to what end?”
23-year-old Londoner Nilüfer Yanya has made waves with her eccentric, indie-rock-tinged soul and pop. Her debut album, Miss Universe, will drop on March 22nd via ATO Records, and it’s filled with hard-hitting, glistening pop songs with a mature and one-of-a-kind artistic vision (the album is interwoven with spoken-word interludes from a fictional medical company, her frantic new single, “In Your Head,” was among our list of Best Songs of January for her sassy vocals, glittery synths and driving indie-rock riffs. Other standouts include the headbanging “Heavyweight Champion of the World” with its wonderfully bare guitar plucks, charming vocal flutters and punchy melodies as well as the electro-rock stunner “Paralysed.”
Nilüfer Yanya’s debut album, Miss Universe, is out March 22.