FEATURE: Spotlight: Annahstasia

FEATURE:

 

 

Spotlight

PHOTO CREDIT: Rio-Romaine for NME

 

Annahstasia

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AN artist I am fairly new to…

PHOTO CREDIT: Rio-Romaine for NME

I am going to start out with some biography before coming to some recent interviews and a review of her debut album, Tether. The artist in question is the incredible Annahstasia. If you have not heard of her or only know a little, I hope this feature is of use. Let’s start out with some biography of an artist who is not played on the radio as widely and much as she deserves. Not in the U.K., anyway:

As a kid, singer-songwriter Annahstasia Enuke says she used to hear actor Morgan Freeman’s voice in her head. His distinctly rich baritone narrated her younger years as pleasantly as it does on screen. “The way I see things is very cinematic,” she says, touching on a childhood growing up in Los Angeles and classifying her identity and artistic practice as steeped in fantasy and romanticism. When Annahstasia writes a song, it embodies a world of its own. Her rose-colored perspective is elucidated by her enchantingly sumptuous and acrobatic voice, one she developed through a lasting appreciation for complex vocalists like Bill Withers, Nina Simone, and Janis Joplin, artists she was first introduced to via an iPod her uncle gifted her for her 14th birthday. “Those were the first musicians that I felt lended their voice to their music and not the music to their voice,” she explains. Annahstasia’s own stunning voice is the powerline that weaves together her forthcoming folk-rooted record, Revival, a delicately produced project that both renewed her love of music after a period of uncertainty, and facilitated a potent resurgence of self.

Annahstasia’s first experiments with music were self-taught, and her foray into the folk genre was more of a practical approach than a stylistic choice. The anthology of soul, blues and folk she discovered on the iPod was a history lesson that encouraged her to pick up a guitar for the first time.

“I would learn the guitar parts of the songs and then I would re-write over them in my own words,” she remembers. At 17, Annahstasia signed her first record deal when the parent of another student at school caught her singing after class let out. A producer, he offered her a session and Annahstasia was thrown head first into the music industry. “I spent three years being put in situations where my voice became more and more muddled,” she confesses, and after seven years, she found herself out on her own as a budding musician.

Annahstasia’s newfound independence panned out as a double-edged sword. Her first solo release, 2019’s Sacred Bull was an honest, no-frills experiment. Released without traditional industry support (no label, distribution, nor PR), the hypnotic, soul-lifting record nevertheless primed her for a promising path, opening doors to collaborations with the likes of singer Raveena, who features on her new record. That summer, Lenny Kravitz invited her to support him as an opener on his “Raise Vibrations” European tour, where she performed Sacred Bull live to arena crowds in over 17 cities. And yet, the trials of an independent career took a toll. “I was so burned out at the expectation to just keep going and make things happen on my own,” she says. “When COVID hit, it allowed me the proper time I needed to reevaluate my place in the industry and what I actually wanted to bring to it.”

Revival was born from the spiritual lessons Annahstasia learned during that period of stillness. Through a process she deems channeling, she reclaimed the dreamy and intuitive approach to creative expression she relates back to a younger Annahstasia—the one who experienced life like a film. She rarely, if ever, writes her lyrics down, instead preferring to imagine the spirits that live in her songs—how they might look, move, talk or dance—and speak to their identities in real time through her music. “I like to write from the fantasy of Americana, this very grandiose fallacy of the American dream,” she describes. Songs like “Power” and “Millionaire”, whose characters and stories explore the intricate dualities of human existence—of pain and joy, of the tumultuous beauty of her blackness—illuminate the spiritual foundation of Annahstasia’s personal revival. “I write my music from an earthly opulence, from that sense of abundance,” she says. “Everything is heavy and has weight, but you can always see the weight as gold”.

Before bringing things up to date, I am heading back to 2023 and an interview with Fifteen Questions. To coincide with the release of her E.P., Revival, we find out some interesting information about an artist who has only come under my radar this year. I am compelled to make up for lost time and learn as much about Annahstasia as I can. Her voice and songwriting is like nothing I have heard! Tether is an album that will not get the attention that many mainstream releases do. I think it is one of the most remarkable albums of 2025 and needs to be seen as such:

What were your very first steps in music like - and how do you rate gains made through experience versus the naiveté of those first steps?

My first steps in music were quite triumphant. In the sense that in my lack of expectation I was presently surprised by the kernel of talent I found there. I already knew I liked being on stage but I didn’t feel a strong reason why until I sang on a stage by myself for the first time. From there music and I got to know each other slowly. I learned little kernels of her and she gave me words in return.

Gains of experience are satisfying and you feel a grand sense of will power but the gains and discoveries made in nativity are what make creativity exciting. The experience just tells you the general direction in which to look. But I’m always open to being surprised.

According to scientific studies, we make our deepest and most incisive musical experiences between the ages of 13-16. What did music meant to you at that age and what’s changed since then?

A lot changed for me in the window in terms of what I was listening to. At 13 I was listening to Disney channel, whatever came on the radio and the CDs I was gifted for holidays and birthdays. There wasn’t much curation, and music was mostly secondary in my life, I enjoyed it but I enjoyed almost anything I heard.

But then I had the chance to go on tour with a family member over summer break when I was 14 and to watch a group of people live in music was a great cognitive shift in the significance of sound, the magic in it. That same family member gave me an iPod full of music and from 15-16 I listened to those records on repeat. That was my introduction to soul, folk, rock, Motown, etc.

That’s when I found Bill Withers and Nina Simone and fell in love with their expression and started to desire developing that type of expression in myself.

Sound, song, and rhythm are all around us, from animal noises to the waves of the ocean. What, if any, are some of the most moving experiences you've had with these non-human-made sounds? In how far would you describe them as “musical”?

My favorite non-human sound is wind. How it makes all sorts of melodies as it rushes past different surfaces and material. It makes the world sing.

I’ve had many moments alone with wind that having been moving to me. The feeling though is always the same, the feeling of smallness, but like you’re a child of the planet and the mother is caressing you cheek as a way of reminding you that she’s there. And sometime the violent wind is more like being caught in the earths scream, and you become the rock as it thrashes against and around you and you feel like you’re still so small but this time you’re holding some minuscule part of that mothers hand as she cries.

All those stories illicit music.

If you could make a wish for the future – what are developments in music you would like to see and hear?

I would hope that music retains its material value again. The advent of streaming and data storage tech has completely devalued music as a physical thing that took time and labor and resources. Because it is so accessible it is easy to forget that what went into the making of it was not free and those artists need some reciprocity in order to live comfortably. There is no reason musicians should have to pursue super stardom in order to have a chance at living from their work.

I hope that through musicality we can learn to step away from capitalism and into collective forms of support and care. The reason music suffers so much from the current model of the world is because unlike a painting or a sculpture, music cannot be acquired and bragged upon, it cannot be a tax shelter, it cannot be presented in museum collections for all to ogle at. It is a living breathing and non-corporeal organism.

If we take a look at what our society values currently and what music is, it shows why musicians specifically suffer under the foot of capitalism. I wish in the future that our world aligns more with music, harmony, and love as the abundant forms of wealth that we value”.

In a 2024 interview where METAL speak to an artist who tells them about “having a unique voice, her upcoming debut album, spirituality, and love as base principle of the universe”, I have highlighted some sections that I find particularly interesting and useful. She was speaking with METAL around the release of her E.P., Surface Tension.

I’ve read you got into music through the likes of Nina Simone and Janis Joplin, which your uncle recorded into an iPod he gifted you when you were fourteen. We’re speaking of incredibly unique, talented, powerful artists with voices that broke the mould and made it into the mainstream somehow. To me, your voice is very similar in that sense. Do you draw any parallels between yourself and those artists?

That’s a large compliment, thank you. Yes, I was gifted with a beautiful introduction to soul and singer-songwriter music by my uncle. Nina Simone, Janis Joplin, Bill Withers, Buffy-Saint-Marie, Leonard Cohen, Nico, etc. I was always drawn to unique voices because they felt like voices you could get used to and then you wanted to hear them all the time, telling different stories. The same stories change just because of how Nina would sing it versus Joni. I fell in love with those nuances and subtleties and spent those early years listening on repeat trying to quantify the differences.
I knew early on that my voice is unique, so most of my journey with learning to sing was focused on maintaining the rawness and tone of my natural choices. I would like to think I can defy the odds and make it in the ‘mainstream’ someday — just like the icons I look up to. It’s much more in the hands of the individual now that it ever was. The music industry barely has curation power anymore. The influence they do have, they use for the sake of selling you more stuff. I don’t think the goal has been the art for a very, very long time, it has always been about money.

You’ve just published the EP Surface Tension. You released another record just last year, titled Revival. So what prompted this new work in such a short period of time?

To me it hasn’t been a short time at all. I released Revival independently, so it took me three years to get it from recording to release. There is so much on the back end of being an indie artist that most people don’t see. There was so much patience involved with that process. So in the times I was waiting, I was also writing and wrote so much music.
Revival may have come out only last year, but that was my only recorded music since 2020. So for me, these projects are actually four years apart, which I would say is plenty of time. I’m very ready to share.

PHOTO CREDIT: Tatsiana Tribunalova

Both the songs in Surface Tension and Revival are very soothing, calming. They have a highly spiritual quality to them. Do you find making music spiritual? Do you feel it helps you connect with an ulterior force or achieve a different state of mind, perhaps?

I think that is mostly the quality of my voice that resonates as spiritual. Making music is undoubtedly a spiritual practice. Especially singing, where the whole body becomes an instrument. Sometimes when I really dig down deep, I definitely go somewhere else when I sing. It’s a nice feeling to leave your body for a little while.

You’re not only a musician; you’re also a model and a visual artist, mainly working in sculpture if I’m correct. When did your passion for art-making arise, and how do you balance all of these creative outlets? I mean, do you wake up and go to your studio to see if that day you’re more into writing lyrics or doing some ceramics?

My parents are artists, so it was instilled early. I always preferred to express that way. I am cultivating many media. Spiralling upwards in mastery of each of them through time. I paint, I make images, I sculpt, I sing — it’s all the same thing for me. Modelling paid the bills for a long time. It takes skill and is creative in a sense. It teaches you to relinquish control gracefully.
I’m not quite at the place yet where I have my own consistent art-making space, but I hope there will come a time when I can have all of it at my fingertips, and wake up and follow my whims. For now, I take it where I can get it in terms of studio time and access to certain things
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Before coming to a review of Tether, I want to come to a recent interview from Wonderland Magazine. The hugely talented Folk artist discussed her debut album. Its creative process and her musical origins. I would recommend that everyone reading this go and listen to Annahstasia. She is someone that you cannot afford to overlook! I think that Tether genuinely ranks alongside the very best albums of this year:

Describe your sound in a colour, an emotion and a culinary dish?

The Colour is brownish green like moss mixed with soil. The emotion is relief, culinary dish is homemade lentil soup with a side of fresh sourdough bread and some nice French butter.

Congratulations on your debut album, Tether! How are you feeling about releasing it?

Thank you!! I feel really great. I have been carrying this music for a long, long time and it will be a beauty to witness it’s spread throughout the world.

What inspired its choice of name?

“Tether” is a mantra for me through this last 3 years in my search for grounding through personal transformation and growth. It also represents a strong rooting, a solid starting point from which to grow tall.

How was the process of creation for the album?

It called for a lot of patience, and a lot of grit. I really had to confront and overcome so many interpersonal fears and industry traumas within me in the process. By the end it made for really fertile ground. The music leapt out of the air and into song.

What were the greatest challenges you faced?

The reoccurring seasons of doubt and depression in between all the waiting. That as well as finding balance between my love for spaciousness and my draw toward sonic maximalism.

The album is a long time in the running, a work that has been curated over a period of time. How did you decide that it was finally ready to be shared? Why is now the right time?

All the right champions came together, I think when you have waited for so long for the vision in your head to become real, it really isn’t so hard to recognise when all the pieces are there finally to assemble. I am only slightly in control of these timelines, the album in some way decided when it wanted to be born into the world. It got pushed back a few times and I never fought it much because I figure the universe knows exactly what it’s doing in regards to music and time.

What inspired the musical approach of the record?

I was really inspired by my favourite singer-songwriter records, and across all of them I found they all had the commonality of treating space and silence as an accompanying instrument. Used to craft and carve the dynamics. I wanted to be just as fragile and sacred about the production of these songs as well.Considering each choice in the arrangement as a colour in broader landscape.

What else is to come from you, this year and beyond?

I will be on the road much of the year, touring and sharing various experiences with the music and inspired by the music. After this year I will probably go back into my hermetic mode, rest, get my hands into a garden I have been yearning for specifically that type of tending”.

This NME review hails an artist taking Folk to new heights. That spellbinding and unforgettable voice very much in the spotlight. You do not need to be aware of or a big fan of modern Folk to fall under the spell of Tether. Currently touring in the U.S., Annahstasia plays the U.K. in November:

Annahstasia’s debut album opens with a singular vocal – a fleeting moment before ‘Tether’ unfurls in all its exquisite, sprawling glory. Within this second of breathy solitude, she cements her philosophy as a songwriter, telling NME recently that “if you can’t strip a song down to its bare essentials and play it with one instrument and your voice, then it’s not a good song”. Here, this penchant for simplicity shines – her raw, unmistakable voice operating as the album’s unbudging anchor.

It’s been a long road to get to this point, and the journey is palpable, with ‘Tether’ the sound of an artist with something to prove. At 17 years old, Annahstasia took her first steps into the music industry and was quickly met by ghoulish exec figures keen to prod her into the shape of a palatable pop star, while dissuading her from making the folk music she longed to write. Now 30, her debut album highlights the sheer ridiculousness of those notions, flexing the vast scope of her artistry to those foolish enough to question her vision.

Here, she claims her rightful place as a pioneer of modern folk, propelling the genre to greater summits by weaving in moments of tense rock and intoxicating blues that constantly build to heavier, harrowing heights that just as quickly collapse into serenity like pale seafoam on a jagged shoreline. The result is an eclectic yet simultaneously streamlined record that balances the sweet, poignant lyrical observations of Labi Siffre and Joni Mitchell with the heavy sensuality of Sade’s ‘Love Deluxe’ and the immense vocal power of Nina Simone and Tracy Chapman.

And, after all these years, she has a lot to say. The punk-imbued ‘Silk and Velvet’ mimics the tumultuous internal monologue of attempting to create lasting art under capitalism with its ricocheting tempo and cutting lyricism: “Maybe I’m an analyst, an antisocial bitch/Who sells her dreams for money/To buy hеr silk and velvet.” Elsewhere, on intensely intimate ‘Villain’, she takes ownership of her wrongs, while the mesmerising ‘Slow’ enlists Nigerian musician Obongjayar for one of the album’s most romantic moments – their voices drifting weightlessly between each other over a glorious chorus of delicately plucked guitar strums, dreamlike harmonies and humming strings.

By the time closer ‘Believer’ comes around, it takes the form of a victory lap, with Annahstasia transformed into a fully-fledged rock star. Listening to her baritone growls interwoven with sludging baseline and heavy drums, it’s a mystery why a once-in-a-generation vocalist has spent almost half of her life trapped in a predatory, unproductive album contract. Perhaps now, though, Annahstasia has found peace in the process, with ‘Tether’ and all its weight and wisdom seeming to arrive right on time. “I’m going down in your history,” she asserts on ‘Overflow’ – and, listening, it seems unlikely that statement won’t come true”.

A truly phenomenal artist, go and follow Annahstasia. She is someone who you want to stay close to. Tether is an album that you will not forget. I will leave things there. As I said, even though I am very new to her music, I am fascinated and instantly struck! Annahstasia is someone who should be heard…

JOOLS HOLLAND

BY every person.

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