P032 – NÍDIA – S/T

Vinyl 12″ / Digital
Written and produced by Nídia;
Mastered by Tó Pinheiro da Silva, Artwork by Márcio Matos;
Released June, 2020;

VINYL/DIGITAL: Order from us

A1 – CHEF
A2 – Hard

B1 – Jam
B2 – Nunun

PRESS RELEASE

“Très peu d’hommes et de femmes existent par eux-mêmes, ont le courage de dire oui ou non par eux-mêmes.” Marguerite Yourcenar

Vinyl 12″; individually stickered sleeve, 300 copies available for the world.

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Where the album explores slower, melodic taraxho and R&B, Nídia’s 12” is built strictly for the rave with four tracks of proper dancefloor shapes made in her own style of electrifying body music compatible with heat from Nigga Fox to Nazar and the kind of style you might hear in a Shannen SP set.
‘Chef’ boots off royally with militant snares and rave fanfares locked to a churning technoid flow somewhere between Kuduro, Baile Funk and EBM trance, while ‘Hard’ rolls out on a stentorian, rictus march recalling vintage UKF, and ‘Jam Master’ strikes up high intensity trance riffs synched to industrial strength rhythms a la Nkisi, and the tumbling drums of ‘Munun’ sidewinds off along rhythmelodic vectors recalling a tempered Shackleton piece or a prime, deep Peder Mannerfelt workout.Tipped!

Boomkat, June 2020

Straight off the back of her brilliantly inventive Não Fales Nela Que A Mentes LP, Nídia releases companion EP S/T. Upping rave influences and tempos, S/T stands out in its own right, but with a similar streak of rhythmic imagination that happily finds space to pause and shift increments of the pulse out into new zones.
The Vinyl Factory, June 2020

Few words and little fanfare accompanied the release of S/T, Nídia’s latest EP on Lisbon dance label Príncipe. It made a surprise landing in early June, while across the U.S., collective rage about police brutality and state-sanctioned racism was boiling over and spilling into the streets. “We have to be more friendly and humane,” wrote the Portuguese producer, who grew up in outer Lisbon’s Vale de Amoreira housing projects, in a statement announcing S/T. “COVID taught us that we are nobody without each other,” she added. “Since I stopped judging and hating human beings my life has become as colourful as the LGBTQ flag and as firm as Martin Luther King’s fist.” While the creation of the tracks predates the current protests, the EP contains some of Nídia’s most urgent and invigorating beat work—a reminder that the batida rhythms she crafts are themselves a form of dissent.

“Calm music is for couples,” Nídia told The New York Times in 2018, shortly after moving back to Vale do Amoreira from Bordeaux, where she spent her adolescence. “When something comes out of the ghetto, it can’t come softly. It has to have strength.” That strength is evident across Nídia’s catalog, but particularly on S/T, which packs four relentless entries into a lean 16 minutes. S/T marks the third installment of a triptych, following Nídia’s Badjuda Sukulbembe 7″ and her latest LP, Não Fales Nela Que A Mentes, both of which arrived earlier this year. Those records are considerably more lax and spacious than S/T. The meditative Não Fales Nela Que A Mentes lopes and ripples, while Badjuda Sukulbembe is as thick and agitated as a kettle of simmering molasses. S/T detonates any previous calm, however. Nídia has said that her community’s music should be “like an explosion in your face,” and S/T is evidence of the young producer’s pyrotechnic touch.

The record is propelled by sharp synthesizer, insistent percussion, and the occasional squawking command. Opener “CHEF” tosses laser-beam bleats over snare patches like peppery spices—the more seasoning, the better. “Jam” dials up that intensity, looping a frantic, soccer-stadium synth melody over skittering breakbeats. Perhaps the song’s title stems from its resemblance to an over-caffeinated jock jam—one better blasted in the club than at a sports arena. While “CHEF” and “Jam” are optimally explosive, “Hard” and “Nunun” are the most dynamic cuts on S/T, maintaining velocity as they change shape. The latter pusles with organic, wooden percussion. It clatters and thumps as Nídia extrudes beams of glowing, ambient tone to glide between the polyrhythms.
Pitchfork, June 2020

“Temos de ser mais amigos e mais humanos. O covid veio para nos ensinar que sem o outro não somos ninguém. Desde que parei de julgar e odiar seres humanos a minha vida ficou mais colorida como a bandeira LGBTQ e firme como o punho de Martin Luther King.” É com estas palavras que Nídia enquadra esta nova adição com a sua marca ao catálogo da Príncipe, quatro bombas para pistas inclusivas, desenhadas entre o urgente pulsar do techno, o êxtase do trance e as cadências quebradas que só ela mesmo parece saber conjurar, em arranjos rítmicos de complexidade mais acentuada do que a “funcionalidade” linear das pistas pede à maior parte dos produtores. Mas Nídia, já o sabemos bem, não é uma produtora qualquer e nunca cedeu à mediania em nenhum dos momentos da sua já assinalável discografia (que também se tem expandido por via das remisturas: tem apenas dias o incrível retratamento que ofereceu a “Glorious” de Sudan Archives).

De “CHEF” a “Nunun” passando por “Hard” e “Jam”, tudo aqui é nervo e poder avassalador, com pads sintetizados que fervem como óleo em chapa quente (sobretudo na “trancey” “Jam”). Nídia volta a deixar claro que domina com pleno saber as suas ferramentas de produção, assinando um quadrado perfeito em que nenhuma das peças convocadas para os seus arranjos soa deslocada: por um lado, não há um elemento percussivo, um efeito ou uma frequência que seja fora do sítio, por outro, sente-se um corajoso alheamento das marcas que poderiam ancorar esta música no momento presente do continuum hardcore em que seguimos imersos e isso é o que lhe poderá garantir mais facilmente o futuro. É quando a música se liberta do seu tempo que mais facilmente se alcança aquele raro plano em que uma obra parece ao mesmo tempo pertencer ao passado e ao futuro. E Nídia é assim: criadora de malhas para as raves que um dia vão acontecer em Marte ou noutro lugar distante em que possamos, enfim, ser, como ela apela, “mais amigos e mais humanos”.
Rimas E Batidas, June 2020

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