Nadine Shah Announces New EP ‘Dreary Town’
Following the release of last year’s ‘Aching Bones’ EP, Nadine Shah has announced she will be releasing her brand new EP ‘Dreary Town’ on 15 April via new home R&S Records imprint Apollo.
The title track is available to stream now:Â http://bit.ly/YZR2Rs
Artist:Â Nadine Shah
Title: âDreary Townâ EP
Label:Â Apollo
Release Date:Â 15 April 2013
Formats:Â Vinyl & Digital
Cat Number:Â AMB1306
Web:Â http://nadineshah.tumblr.
Following last year’s critically acclaimed âAching Bonesâ EP, Nadine Shah has found a new home with R&S Records imprint Apollo, who will be releasing her brand new âDreary Townâ EP on 15 April 2013. Picking up where her debut left off, âDreary Townâ continues the emergence of a significant talent.
Hailing from the north east town of Whitburn, yet London based, this young artist’s compositions lean towards the dramatic, with her smoky husky-hued vocals imbued with an understated unease, with a stage presence that belies her youthful age.
Lead track ‘Dreary Town’, with its plummeting melodies and anguished vocals, is the most personal of all three and the track that convinced producer Ben Hillier (The Horrors, Blur, Depeche Mode) to work with her upon hearing an early version uploaded to youtube. Closely followed by ‘Bobby Heron’ with creeping guitar strums driving a story about her great grandmothers only boy. âHe died at seaâ Nadine reveals, âmy great gran was obviously distraught but even more so because she couldn’t bury her little boy. There was this clairvoyant in our hometown, a blind guy everyone knew. She went to see him and he told her exactly where the body was. That night my great grandad went out in his fishing boat. Sure enough the body was where they’d been told it would be, and with a grappling hook he retrieved Bobby’s body. My mam and Aunty always tell that story. I wrote the song for my mum really, I wanted to ensure that her tale lived on.â
The new EP is topped off with the singer’s wonderfully sinister take on ‘Cry Me A River.’ Having begun singing it when she was a much younger jazz singer, Nadine just loved how you could âreally twist the lyric and rather than sounding like a wounded woman you can be more of madwoman seeking revenge!â
Press for Aching Bones:
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âExpect her to be next yearâs criticsâ darlingâ The Independent
‘The emotional and sonic depth she attains on the glowering debut EP âAching Bonesâ is the work of a singularly unique artist’Â Daily Mirror
‘Her dark tales of lust, loss and vengeance bring to mind Broken English-era Marianne Faithfull and are due belated critical acclaimâ Guardian âNew Band of the Dayâ
‘Shah possesses one of those pin-you-to-your-seat voices that will penetrate even the thickest layer of cynicism and jadedness’Â Sunday Times
‘An album is due next autumn â and it already looks to be one of 2013’s most promising debuts.’Â NME
âAn enticing debutâ Mojo
‘Keep your eye on this one, because I can see 2013 being a big year for herâ DiS
‘Shahâs voice marks her out as someone distinctive and to very much keep an eye on.’Â CMU
‘If you fancy a cheeky flutter youâll get a decent price on this girl to win awards next year.’Â 8/10 This is Fake DIY
‘That intangible, emotive sense of foreboding leaves you mesmerized, intoxicated and just a tiny, tiny bit in love.’Â 8/10 DJ Magazine
‘If all live debuts were as breathtaking as Nadine Shah’s then the walls of the music industry as we know it would crumble to dust, and in their place proud palaces of hope and beauty would spring forth.’Â BBC Manchester
‘Like early Bad Seeds, searing, intense, frightening and amazing’Â Notion Magazine
‘It can take just 44 seconds to fall in love. Thatâs the exact time it takes for Nadine Shahâs haunting croon to kick in over an ominous piano refrain on the title track of her debut EP, Aching Bones. Sounding like a young, desolate Polly Harvey, the former jazz singer delivers huge gulps of emotion over the EPâs three Ben Hillier-produced tracks.’Â The Line of Best Fit
âChannels the towering intensity of To Bring You My Love-era PJ Harvey with a hint of Philip Larkin-esque humour and the intoxicating sadness of her fatherâs Urdu ghazals’ Time Out âOnes To Watch for 2013âÂ
Forthcoming Shows:
Friday 15 February London John Kennedy / XFM The Remedy Tooting Tram And Social w/ Luls and Thumpers
Sunday 24 February London Lock Tavern w/ The Intermission Project
Monday 4 March London Amazing Radio Royal Albert Hall (Elgar Room) w/Reuben Hollebon and Eliza and the Bear
Weds 27 March London PRS Presents 229 Gt Portland St w/ Tankia and Little Night Terrors