Royel Otisâs profile is on an exponential uptick. Since the start of 2024, the Australian duo have released their debut album âPratts & Painâ, went viral with a zeitgeist-riding cover of Sophie Ellis-Bextorâs âMurder On The Dancefloorâ following its needle-drop moment in Saltburn, and graced The Cover of NME. Busy boys, indeed.
The pair â vocalist Otis Pavlovic and multi-instrumentalist Royel Maddell â appear unfazed by their growing fame. Speaking to NME midway through an LA photo shoot, the pair ooze laconic Aussie chill. âStoked about it,â Maddell says about gracing the front page and appearing on âBose x NME: C24â. âGrowing up, my brother had a stack of NMEs in his room. I never thought weâd be in them.â
Royel Otisâ blend of indie pop-meets-psych rock recalls â00s indie kings MGMT and Passion Pit, yet the pairâs genre flexibility and emotional vulnerability feels distinctly their own. Their varied, fluid scope reflects an industrious couple of years. Since their 2019 formation, the band have clocked extended periods of time away from their Sydney home, spending months with producers in London, as well as touring Europe, America and their Australian homeland. From the outside, Royel Otisâ career thus far looks like a whirlwind blur of motion.
Predictably, this has resulted in a songwriting process that âchanges a lotâ according to Pavlovic. âSometimes one of us will have a voice note or demo and we’ll see what we can flesh out,â he says, âbut sometimes Royel or myself will have a full song readyâ. Maddell adds: âOnce we get an idea, the best way to get a vibe is to lay down a drumbeat and try the idea over it.â

On their contribution to âBose x NME: C24â â the pair have taken another leap forward, with an effort thatâs defined by bluesy, desert rock-inspired guitar leads and infectious vocals. They join their Ourness labelmate Genesis Owusu as artists whoâve created without boundaries for the C-Series mixtape in recent years.
Maddell explains that they wanted the song âto sound like a David Lynch filmâ and it was inspired by the late composer Angelo Badalamenti, who worked with Lynch on TV show Twin Peaks and cult classic film Mulholland Drive, aiming to emulate the âtone and colourâ heard in Badalamentiâs scores. While the relaxed vibe of âNack Nostalgiaâ may not immediately feel in sync with Lynch and Badalamentiâs surreal vision, the comparisons reveal themselves in the glistening textures and the heady, ethereal tone.
The ânostalgiaâ part of the title is, according to Maddell and Pavlovic, to be taken literally. âI think itâs about jumping the fences at parties,â says Maddell. âBeing a bit naughty but having a good night nonetheless.â âNack Nostalgiaââs good times vibe seeps through loud and clear. Its tone feels adroitly on par with Royel Otisâs effortless Aussie cool; a musical milieu aided by the circumstances of the trackâs creation. Recorded in a studio in Byron Bay, its resplendent scope feels like a direct translation of their areaâs famous coastal beauty.
Compared to the south London environment in which the band recorded their debut album, Byron Bay might as well be another planet. âItâs a little sunnier and more beautiful,â laughs Pavlovic. Itâs easy to wonder if the globe-trotting pair ever get homesick. Both say that theyâre âfeeling itâ. According to Maddell, âitâs definitely been tough.â Pavlovic adds: âYou get busy so you donât think about it a lot, but sometimes you just think, âI miss my mates back home.ââ
Despite the homesickness, Royel Otisâs hard graft and brilliant debut album has brought them a rapidly growing fanbase, with NME describing âPratts and Painâ as a âdelightful rhythmic rush of guitar-popâ. The pair are keenly aware of this burgeoning community that their fans are building. Maddell says that their growing audience means there are now âless restrictionsâ on what he and Pavlovic can create. A lot of musicians in similar situations might feel the opposite. Pavlovic agrees with this suggestion, but explains that, for him and Maddell: âIt gets boring if you just do the same shit over and over.â
Stay tuned to NME.com/C24 for the latest on the return of the iconic mixtape
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