22 June 2018 - 0 Comments
New Zealand synth pop musician Princess Chelsea (aka Chelsea Nikkel) is back with her fourth album The Loneliest Girl, due for release via Lil' Chief Records on 7 September. The first single from the album I Love My Boyfriend sounds like a garage rock trio who just discovered the Mellotron and discusses the situation of feeling attracted to somebody else when you're in a monogamous relationship. The narrator feels guilty about their feelings for another person even though they "love their boyfriend" and don't intend to act on it. It's sung in a cheesy girly sort of way inspired by all those 60's pop songs with the word 'boyfriend' in the chorus, but the lyrics are pretty cynical particularly in the spoken word section in which the narrator appears to make fun of their own feelings. The music emulates this contrast of sweet and sour with pretty harps and harpsichords set against a dirtier garage rock arrangement. Chelsea shot the psychedelic video at her home in front of a green screen and cloned herself to create a band.
The video was premiered over at Noisey, who chatted to Chelsea about the new album and wrote: "The Auckland musician is here to subvert expectations... she begins in a voice sweeter than peach pie and syrup, her voice gliding over slow, classic garage rock riffs that sit somewhere between Velvet Underground and The Cramps... her eyes sparkling through a deadpan expression, injecting a pure shot of cynicism into an otherwise saccharine tale of romance." You can read all about it here.
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The Loneliest Girl was recorded by Chelsea between 2016 and 2017 in her home studio in
West Auckland, New Zealand with production assistance from labelmate Jonathan Bree.
Chelsea’s trademark arrangements featuring classic 80's Synths (Yamaha DX7,
Roland D-50), ambient guitars, and orchestral instruments are all here but are
presented in a more refined and simple manner than on her previous releases.
The album examines the loneliness and ultimately the artistic satisfaction a
strong work ethic can bring, the result of which is this eclectic collection of
pop songs. As a studio based artist Chelsea was conscious of not wanting
to fall too deep into a production hole for her third album and wanted to more
than ever before capture moments of inspiration, madness and spontaneity on
record.
A classically trained pianist, Nikkel lent her talents to self-professed "circus punk" act Teen Wolf in the mid-2000s, and later in the touring lineup of indie pop outfit the Brunettes. When she wasn't performing, she worked as a composer for a local recording studio, all the while refining her songwriting and production skills. Her full-length debut as Princess Chelsea, Lil' Golden Book, was released in late 2011 by New Zealand label Lil' Chief, and included the viral YouTube hit Cigarette Duet (nearly 41 million views and counting). The album was a collection of songs about her youth presented with innocent melodies and baroque arrangements to create a musical fairy tale. The juxtaposition of her simple arrangements, childlike delivery and cynical wit is a significant and defining characteristic of her music.
She followed up with a synth-heavy sci-fi opera about a future world rendered helpless in the face of depression brought on by technology, The Great Cybernetic Depressionwas released by Lil' Chief and Flying Nun in June 2015. She also released a surprise album of covers called Aftertouch, featuring covers by Nirvana, The Beatles, Interpol, Lucinda Williams and Marianne Faithfull.
Stylistically The Loneliest Girl moves away the more uniform synth sounds of The Great Cybernetic Depression to more eclectic territory similar to her first release Lil’ Golden Book and certainly sounds like a record made by a lover of pop music across all genres from 60's girl groups to 80's power ballads, and late 80's acid house to 90's pop. Like her earlier work, adult issues are presented in a humorous and sometimes childlike manner, and this juxtaposition rather than softening the blow makes jarring social commentary hit harder.
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