Nika Roza Danilova (AKA Zola
Jesus) returns to New Orleans this Sunday for the first time in three years.
Along with her operatic vocals, she’s bringing with her a brand new album, Taiga (Mute Records). Leaning more
towards the pop scene than perhaps her previous works, the album nestles itself
in a strange, yet desired middle ground, balancing itself between darkness and
light, despair and hope, and even self-doubt and confidence. Musically, Taiga is minimalistic in nature, yet it yields
the grandiose peaks of a symphony. This compliments the meaningful lyrics,
allowing one to give their full attention to the words, while the powerful sound
of brass and string instruments floods them with emotion.
Danilova spared some of her
time to chat with me about the album, past and present collaborations, and the
story behind her stage name.
hi.good.music: Referring to the taiga in Eastern Russia and
growing up around the boreal forest in Wisconsin, Can you tell us a little more
about why you chose the title Taiga
and what it means for you?
Zola Jesus: Well, There’s already quite an obvious connection with growing up
near the forest, and then also my family when they moved to the US, they moved
from Russia. They lived off the land. Yeah, there’s just something about the
connective tissue there, and I was thinking a lot about, when you look back at
your ancestry, and you kind of never really change. Everyone evolves in a
certain way, but if you’re a farmer, you always have that farmer spirit in you
in a way, if you’re a merchant, you kind of always have that spirit in you, and
no matter what it’s always going to follow you. I liked that idea in a way, so
I would explore that a lot. That’s part of the theme of the record. More
philosophically or culturally speaking, I started thinking a lot about humanity
and how, you know we are essentially animals, yet we feel so uncomfortable in
the natural world. And the way in which we build these synthesized microcosms
within nature to protect us from nature. It just feels very bizarre to me, so I
thought a lot about that as well.
h.g.m: Taiga is now
your fifth studio album. How have you transitioned and changed as an artist between
each album, or do you consider yourself the same Zola Jesus?
Zola: Because it [Zola Jesus] is a
solo project, the things that I believe in, the things I’m fixated on, those
things never really change. But so much of what I do, I feel, is a reaction of
what I did in the past or what I just did. So there’s always going to be ping
ponging and evolution happening that will constantly change and transform.
h.g.m: You
collaborated with Blackbird on a new, unisex perfume & incense
inspired by Taiga and you are selling
it on tour. It’s described as smelling like firewood,
ash, dry moss & mineral. Did you intend for people to wear the fragrance,
or burn the incense, while listening to the album, creating a visceral
experience utilizing multiple senses?
Zola: Definitely! That’s the goal
and the exciting thing about doing something like this fragrance. It helps
control the universe of the record more and the experiences of the record and I
like that. That’s the thing that I love about music videos. You have this other
medium to communicate your ideas in a whole different way, you know? I got
really into scents recently because it does something really similar. I’d smell
firewood, and it would remind me of being home at my childhood home where we
would always burn fires and they had a wood stove and everything, and it
instantly transports you to a different place and time, and I like
experimenting with that.
h.g.m: Luckily, only the second track to be released from
John Carpenter’s debut album, Lost Themes,
was “Night” so I
was able to check it out. So until the February 3rd release date, I can
only imagine what you added to this track. Can you tell us a little about your
experience remixing the track with Dean Hurley?
Zola: It was actually a lot of fun
and very automatic in a way. Dean sent me his adjusted remix and I just did top
line stuff and sang over it. Quite instantly I thought of, like, a deranged
hunter. I don’t know why (laugh). But it was a lot of fun and I got to explore
different things that I maybe did more of in the past. Musically, I’ve shied
away from making things that are overly dark and sinister in a way. It was a
cool exercise to do something sinister and a little off, which I didn’t do much
on Taiga. So it was fun to do that.
h.g.m: You’ve done a couple collaborations in the past,
most notably with M83.
Can you speak to how those came to be and who contacted whom?
Can you speak to how those came to be and who contacted whom?
Zola: Well I certainly love solo
work, but that’s the fun thing, you have this freedom to work with other people
in a very unencumbered way, and that’s what I loved about working with the
people I’ve worked with in the past. Usually those things happen really
organically. With M83, Anthony and I just had this really strange kismet. I’ve
always been a really huge fan of his work since the beginning and I really
wanted to work with him. I was trying to find out how to contact him, and a day
later, someone from his camp contacted me and said, “Hey, Anthony wants you to
sing on his record.” He didn’t know I wanted to contact him at all. That was
really funny. So yeah, that was really cool and working with him was just
completely unbelievable. Everything happens organically, or they’re friends,
you know? I just love what they do and we feed off each other, so it just
becomes really, really easy to work with people like that.
h.g.m: Do you plan on collaborating more in the
future? Do you seek it out sometimes?
Zola: Definitely. I think it’s fun
to seek it out when you find other artists that you feel you have something in
common with and you think that putting the two artistic mentalities together
would make something really interesting. There’s a collaboration I’m working on
now that’s kind of like that which I can’t really mention, but it’s cool
because the person I’m working with is in a completely different world, but I’m
a huge fan, and I don’t know, it could be cool.
h.g.m: I was curious about your stage name. I read online that you donned the name Zola
Jesus after Jesus Christ and the French writer Émile
Zola because you consciously wanted to alienate peers. Can you
explain that a little further?
Zola: Well I came up with the name outside
of music, when I was just a 14-year-old high school student, so I wanted my
peers to call me that. I don’t know why, I guess I just thought it was funny.
When I started making music I was just like, well I’m not going to put it under
my own name because it seems a little vain, so I’m just going to put it under
this Zola Jesus thing. Yeah it’s interesting too because I’ve noticed, as I’ve
been doing this for five or six years and it’s interesting witnessing people
having a hard time trying to say it. They don’t really want to say the name,
which is frustrating, but it also makes you realize what a stronghold
Christianity has over this country. It’s just a name. ‘Jesus’ is just a word,
but it holds so much weight and I just found it very interesting that it holds
so much weight.
h.g.m: Do you
consider your music written for a specific group of people with specific
beliefs?
Zola: It’s definitely written for
everybody. You can only hope that everybody will find something. I don’t set up
to write a song for a particular group of people. That feels a little
alienating.
h.g.m: What can your fans expect from you in 2015?
Zola: A lot of touring. I’m not really ready to write
yet. The record’s still pretty fresh.
h.g.m: Do you have another music video in the works?
Zola: Yeah, I have one for “Hunger”
that should come out soon, and maybe one after that. I’m not sure yet.
h.g.m: Do you have anything else you’d like to tell
your fans?
Zola: I’m very excited to come to
New Orleans and eat some really good food (laugh) and see the beautiful city.
Well, Nika, we’re just as
excited to have you back in town to do so.
If you live around the New Orleans area, grab your tickets now and come out this Sunday night to hear this “dark princess of sound” live at Republic.
If you live around the New Orleans area, grab your tickets now and come out this Sunday night to hear this “dark princess of sound” live at Republic.
good.hi.
Find Concert Tickets HERE
Purchase Taiga on iTunes
Follow Zola Jesus on Facebook
Photo by Julia Comita
No comments:
Post a Comment