FEATURE:
Spotlight
who released the stunning Green Car E.P. last year, I do think that Nadia Kadek is well worth seeking out. From Norwich, she was recently featured in NME’s rundown of the one-hundred artists who will define this year. For fans of Nell Mescal and Lizzy McAlpine, I am quite new to her music. However, I am already hooked and engrossed. Having played London’s The Social last week, I do wonder where else she is heading this year. Definitely one of our brightest new artists, I am going to get to some recent interview with Nadia Kadek. For CLASH last year, Nadia Kadek was spoke about “belonging, familial relationships and the diaristic feel of recent EP 'Green Car'”. This is someone who I recommend that you connect with as soon as possible:
“It is in the buzz and anonymity of London life that singer-songwriter Nadia Kadek has found her own sense of belonging. Growing up in a small town created rose-tinted memories for Kadek, but also came at a price. “If you go there for five minutes, you see someone you know. That always made me feel like I didn’t have a lot of space to breathe as a person,” Kadek tells CLASH. “I think London gives me a chance to hide a bit… I’m naturally very introverted and I need space. So it’s the perfect place for that. I can see why people would find it lonely, but I think I just love being alone.”
Kadek’s debut EP ‘Green Car’ is a collection of deeply personal songs which encapsulate a writing style she describes as coming directly from “organic experiences”. The writer strives to capture complex emotions: the unique clash of excitement and nostalgia which blooms as life’s realities reveal themselves; the wonder and confusion of reaching adulthood; and moving on with forgiveness from imperfect family ties.
“Songwriting for me has always been a way of trying to make myself feel seen and heard, and putting my feelings somewhere in order to understand them and understand myself,” Kadek says. “Because actually what I’ve learned from songwriting, and also from listening to other songwriters, is that you’re definitely not the only person experiencing a feeling.”
Although Kadek finds writing songs an essential form of emotional expression, and revels in performing them, it was only recently that she felt ready to commit her music professionally to tape. Her EP ‘Green Car’ came to fruition after Kadek found the right team (musician, engineer and producer Riccardo Damian, and co-producer Jamie Biles) at a time when she had grown and become more confident as a musician..
“I had these songs written for ages and I think they were so precious to me that I was paranoid about getting the recording wrong,” she says. “I kept waiting and waiting for something… I think I needed to do that to know what I know now, which is to trust myself”.
Although there are not a load of interviews out at the moment, there are a few from late last year that I want to get to. The second is from DIY who say that, at a time when A.I. is rising, Nadia Kadek provides these “heartfelt accounts of coming of age anxieties delivered with genuine heart and a desire for connection beyond engagement and algorithms”:
“You grew up in Norfolk, and have British-Indonesian heritage. How did your background and hometown influence your musical education? Did you take on the tastes of your family? Were there venues nearby, or much of a ‘scene’ to speak of?
I was very lucky to be taken along to shows and festivals growing up. My earliest memory was going to Camp Bestival when I was six. We listened to Florence + The Machine all the way there, and then I was on a random lady’s shoulders watching her sing right in front of me that same weekend. I think that exciting upbringing pushed me to see live music any way I could as I grew up, despite there not being much of a scene or any venues in my hometown.
What’s the story behind your first instrument?
I had guitar lessons until I was 11, but then got really into classical singing so stuck with that instead. Then at 15, I found I couldn’t express myself enough with just that, so I picked the guitar back up and learnt how to play as I started writing my own songs. I still don’t really know what I’m doing on the guitar… but I write very instinctively, so I kind of like the magic of just feeling what I’m playing.
Your debut EP, ‘Green Car’, centres around the bittersweet experience of coming of age and starting to navigate the adult world. Are there any particular albums, books, or films that you still return to, to help you reconnect with your child/teenhood?
Coraline has been my favourite film for as long as I can remember; it’s so clever that I don’t think I could ever grow out of it. All of Phoebe Bridger’s discography was the soundtrack of my life from 16 to 18, and comforted me so much as a sad teenage girl - if I catch myself listening to her now, it’s usually a sign that something is wrong. It makes me so emotional that I’ve had to put myself on a Phoebe ban!
If you could collaborate with one artist from the past two decades, who would you pick (and why)?
I would love to write with Glen Hansard; he’s such an incredible performer and storyteller, and I’d love to just have a cup of tea with him to be honest.
Finally, DIY are coming round for dinner - what are you making?
I think I’d just make a comforting lemon and courgette orzo, and then I’d finish with my homemade cookies that have white chocolate, dark chocolate and Crunchie bar in them”.
Although not an interview, this review from The Rodeo Mag, reacted to her set at The Waiting Room in London from last October. I do feel that this year is going to be one where Nadia Kadek continues to build her music and gains more and more fans. I would love to see her live, as it sounds like she is truly one of these breathtaking voices that can silence an audience:
“The sounds of Joni Mitchell, Lizzie McAlpine, and Lana Del Rey can all be heard blending to make Kadek’s soulful declaration of emotion. Kadek stares into the abyss wearing polka dots and retro earrings, effortlessly playing through a setlist of seven songs. Her second song, ‘Jenny From Dakota’, gives more of a melody to swing to: ‘I hope you don’t find some love with another one, I hope you don’t find this song on the radio’. Kadek’s songwriting is nothing less than beautifully transparent, never shying away from the pit of her feelings. In ‘Feeling it All’, her first ever release, she sings, ‘If you said jump I would, maybe that’s where I went wrong/ but I was only a kid, every child needs a hero to live’. Silence grows to every corner of the room, and stillness allows for each word to land like a teardrop. There is a casualness to her as she tunes her guitar, talking to the crowd like they’re sitting around a campfire roasting marshmallows”.
I am writing this feature before any new music from this year, though I am aware that something might come out soon. The tremendous and awe-inspiring Nadia Kadek is such a remarkable and hugely talented artist who is one of our best songwriters. Her voice is heart-stopping and filled with so much beauty and poetry. Anyone unfamiliar with Nadia Kadek really does need…
TO experience her music.
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PHOTO CREDIT: Phoebe Fox
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