“I dread my birthday every year,â Nieve Ella sings on â19 In A Weekâ, her latest upbeat indie-pop single. Through the lyrics, the 19-year-old paints pictures of her fleeting adolescence, and âturning in my sheetsâ on the daunting cusp of adulthood. âFeeling like Iâm grown but Iâm still in the backseat,â she sings, encapsulating this uncertain period which she is figuring out beautifully through song.
The fact that NME is chatting to Ella from the London office of AWAL â home to Little Simz and Girl In Red â speaks volumes. Prior to the release of her debut EP âYoung & Naiveâ in January, Ella had only picked up the guitar as COVID took hold, using the âdoomsdayâ feeling of a global pandemic and the time afforded by lockdowns to fire up her long-harboured desire to be a pop star.
âI never knew how to write songs before; it would just be me singing melodies,â Ella says, sitting cross-legged on a sunken sofa. But as soon as she played a guitar that her late father had left behind at home in Wolverhampton, she âjust figured it outâ. Ella studied tabs online, writing her first song âFour Years Goneâ in less than a week. âPlaying guitar was a saviour for me,â she adds.
Fast forward three years and Ella has streams in the hundreds of thousands, and recently supported Inhaler on their UK dates as well as Dylan on her European stint. After every date of the latter, Ella â whose backing band comprises her âbest friendsâ Finn Marlow (guitar), Matt Garnett (drums) and Fran Larkin (bass) â had hour-long queues of fans waiting to greet her at the merch stand. âSome girls were crying and saying, âYouâve really inspired me,â she says. âI want people to feel the way I feel when I listen to music; connected and not feeling alone.â
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Ellaâs songwriting process is as direct as it can be. Honed from her bedroom in lockdown, she found that speaking rather than singing lyrics over her guitar helped keep her style âconversationalâ. Thatâs reflected in the snippets of recorded phone calls with her mother on her âYoung & Naiveâ. Elsewhere, on EP standout âGlasshousesâ she addresses her father, who passed away when she was 11, in the present tense (âI know youâre still out there somewhereâ). Her father never lived with Ella and her two brothers at home with their mother; when she was a child, he moved to Spain and they had little contact. Songwriting, therefore, is a form of therapy for Ella.
Ella says that she used to be âvery shyâ, and when NME suggests that her teenage years were stunted by grief, she nods. âI think so too. I’ve definitely realised that before it was like, âOh, I’ve just got to carry on with life.â But actually itâs a big thing.â She continues: âMusic literally did save me. I can’t imagine doing anything else. Itâs just the best feeling.”
Her songwriting heroes Sam Fender and Phoebe Bridgers have done much to inspire her raw writing style. They in turn have helped pave the way or boosted the profiles of dozens of other exciting British acts, such as last yearâs BRITs Rising Star winner Holly Humberstone. The Grantham artistâs heartbreak anthem, âScarlettâ, for example â written about her best friendâs doomed relationship â mirrors Ellaâs flair for imagery of splintered romances. âMy friends say you donât care / I can tell by the way you stare when Iâm talking to you,â Ella sings on âFall 4 Uâ. Performing the track live has allowed her to unlock the confidence that has always been there, hiding behind her timidity.
âI feel like I’ve connected to my family more because theyâve heard me now,â Ella says. âInstead of me just being a child at a party, sitting in the corner not talking, they all say to me, ‘Nieve, you’ve become so confident.’ I’m like, âThis is who I am; I am confident.â I just didn’t want to show it before.â
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Despite applying twice to sing on Britainâs Got Talent as a child, Ella used to hesitate about sharing her musical dreams with her family. Songwriting has since provided her with that avenue. âIt feels like a relief,â she says. âThey can finally hear how I feel about growing up â and my dad â without me directly telling them.â
While other songs on âYoung & Naiveâ explore emotionally unavailable boys (âBlu Shirt Boyâ, âGirlfriendâ) over peppy indie compositions, Ella teases that the new music sheâs writing has a rockier edge. âI love writing angry songs,â she says, describing how her bright melodies may have given a false impression of the frustrations sheâs felt towards previous exes.
Yet Ella is willing to let her music evolve naturally. Tunes full of vigour about relationships and growing up, paired with emotive acoustic ballads, may be her starter pack, but a pluckier sound â starting with forthcoming single âBig Houseâ, which sheâll take to Reading & Leeds and TRNSMT Festival this summer â lies ahead. âI feel like the new music I’ve been making has a lot more grit to it,â she says. âI just want to be out there on stage playing my songs; I want to do this forever.â
Nieve Ella’s new single ‘Big House’ will be released on April 7 via AWAL
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