Zola Jesus
Hometown: madison, Wisconsin
Tags: dj, psychedelic, ambient, lo-fi
In the last three years Nika Roza Danilova has gone from being an outsider experimental teenage noise-maker to a full fledged internationally celebrated electronic pop musician. It was a huge feat to accomplish, and despite her age (young), her geography (mid-western, desolate), her accelerated scholastic requirements (high school and college were completed in three years each) and her diminutive physical size (4”11, 90 lbs) she has triumphed. She has emerged as a figurehead—a self-produced, self-designed, self-taught independent woman.
Zola Jesus is not a singer; she is a musician. Zola Jesus is not a band; it is a solo project. That is not to say the people who have helped her along the way were not deeply important. Her irreplaceable live band, who’s drummer Nick Johnson lends a hand on several tracks here, and her friend Brian Foote who co-produced this album in addition to the live string players (Sean McCann, Ryan York) who contribute here were all crucial in the process. Nika however, is a woman who can command a room, any room, without needing a band, a stage, or even a microphone. Her voice is unmistakable; it cuts right to the core.
Conatus is a huge leap forward in production, instrumentation and song structure. It says it all in the definition of the title: the will to keep on, to move forward. From thumping ballads to electronic glitch, no sound goes unexplored on her new record. It is an icy exploration in refined chaos and controlled madness, an effort to break through capability and access a sonic world that crumbles as it shines.
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PASTE's Best of What's Next on Zola Jesus
7 months agoNika Roza Danilova stumbles when asked to describe... more at pastemagazine.com
Pitchfork Best New Tracks on Zola Jesus
7 months agoZola Jesus: "In Your Nature (David Lynch Remix)"
Nika Roza Danilova's Zola Jesus project has always been known for its sense of dark, foreboding atmosphere-- a sense of sonic space that sounded cavernous on 2010's impressive Stridulum and Valusia EPs, but became smaller and more claustrophobic on last year's full-length Conatus . Legendary filmmaker David Lynch is someone else known for a way with atmospherics-- both in his body of celluoid work and on last year's musical bow, Crazy Clown Time -- so his remixing ZJ's Conatus cut "In Your Nature" makes a lot of sense, and not just because both of them favor the darkness. Whereas Zola's original was... [from the "In Your Nature" 7" single; out 02/21/12 via Sacred Bones]
more at pitchfork.commySpoonful on Zola Jesus
about 2 years agoAt once sounding like it will bring on the apocalypse and protect you from it, the voice of Zola Jesus is a truly magnificent instrument. And over the course of her brief, yet bountiful career, she has harnessed its power into an operatic whirlwind, swirling epic noise pop catharses around her listeners until the beautifully haunted longing of her words settle deep within their bones. more at myspoonful.com