Nia_Archives

Nia Archives

Nia Archives

English record producer, DJ and songwriter


Dehaney Nia Lishahn Hunt (born September 1999), known professionally as Nia Archives, is an English record producer, DJ, singer and songwriter. Born in Bradford in West Yorkshire, she moved to Leeds aged seven, out of the family home aged sixteen, and then to Greater Manchester, during which time she was inspired by jungle documentaries and their women participants. After finding herself messed about by local producers, she began producing her own jungle and drum and bass works; after moving to Hackney Wick for university and finding that no record labels would release them, she released them herself, attracting attention for the EPs Headz Gone West and Forbidden Feelingz. After featuring on numerous 'best of' lists, she released a third EP, Sunrise Bang Ur Head Against the Wall, in 2023, which topped the UK Dance Albums Chart. Hunt is generally regarded as being at the forefront of the post-2020 drum and bass revival, and has been cited as an inspiration by Piri.

Quick Facts Birth name, Born ...

Life and career

1999–2019: Early life

Dehaney Nia Lishahn Hunt[1] was born in Bradford, West Yorkshire in September 1999, and has two brothers. When she was seven,[2] they moved to Horsforth,[3] where being half-Jamaican,[4] she was one of the few people of colour.[5] Hunt never met her father, and he is not listed on her birth certificate.[6] Her ex-stepfather, a former producer and rapper,[5] had a dancehall radio show on a Bradford radio station,[6] and set up a studio in her house, where local MCs such as Lunar C would visit to make music,[2] introducing her to Logic Pro when she was twelve.[7] Hunt is a third-generation Windrush immigrant;[8] her grandmother Liz had moved to Bradford from Jamaica at age fourteen,[9] and with one[10] of her four sisters[11] ran a pirate radio station.[10] Their large afros earned them the sobriquet "The Bradford 5" after The Jackson 5.[11] She also owned a sound system and used it to soundtrack family gatherings with tracks by Goldie, Roni Size, Shy FX, and assorted gospel, soul and R&B,[12] and introduced Dehaney to successful women of colour such as M.I.A., Jennifer Lara, and Ms. Dynamite.[5] She also ran a community school, where Dehaney first learned about Black history, which she was not taught at school; her Year 3 teacher was moved to tears after listening to a presentation by Rosa Parks.[12]

As a child, Dehaney was a studious reader, and began taking photographs and making films[2] on a Handycam[4] gifted to her by her grandfather.[2] Her first introduction to music was the gospel music her Pentecostal church played, and the first CD she bought was Rihanna's Music of the Sun.[7] She realised she wanted to be a singer aged eight, though spent time also wanting to be an archaeologist.[2] Aged twelve, she became a fan of Emeli Sandé after listening to her drum and bass song "Heaven", although did not discover the name of its genre until later.[12] Family issues caused her to move out of her family home when she was sixteen, and she moved solo to another area of Leeds, before moving to Bury, Greater Manchester, and then to a hostel in Radcliffe, Greater Manchester, where she had a social worker and spent time claiming unemployment benefits before taking up posts at KFC and as a cookery teacher.[2]

Around this time, she found her interest in photography revived after she went down digital rabbit holes, and watched documentaries like the LTJ Bukem film Modern Times (1996), the Talkin' Headz (1998) Metalheadz documentary, and Channel 4's film, All Junglists: A London Somet'ing Dis (1994), taking particular interest in the role of women in the scene such as Kemistry & Storm and DJ Flight. Mainstream clubs were not open to her as she did not have ID, so she made friends during this period by attending squat raves and underground house parties, using her Handycam to strike up conversations.[2] In 2017,[13] to accompany the videos she was creating,[4] and as an outlet for the emotions she was feeling, she downloaded a bootleg version of Logic Pro, having become fed up by the way local producers were treating her;[2] finding herself speeding her music up, she discovered she was making jungle after researching its roots.[2]

2019–2022: Early works, Headz Gone West, and Forbidden Feelingz

Her early works were uploaded to SoundCloud under the name Indigo D. After finding herself in a toxic relationship in Manchester, she worked sixty hour weeks at KFC to save for a move to London,[12] and in 2019,[14] she enrolled on a course at CM, which had a music production and business course in partnership with the University of Westminster, and moved to a warehouse in Hackney Wick[15] next to a glass factory,[16] which she initially paid for using a part-time job in Wetherspoons.[15] One of her tutors on her course was Jason Alexander, a former acid house DJ under the name Warlock, who encouraged her to apply for DJ Flight's EQ50 Mentorship Scheme,[10] a twelve-month mentorship for five womxn,[17] at which she found herself working with V Recordings and mentored by DJ Flight herself.[10]

In 2020, she sent her track "Sober Feels" to all of the local jungle and drum and bass labels in the area. Finding that none of the local labels were interested, she released it herself,[2] using the name Nia Archives, and on her own label Hijinxx;[18] both were nods to her videography, and the latter was named after a move by her stepfather's favourite skater.[4] After she spent £500 of her student finance on digital advertising for it, the song became popular with Britons who were unable to go out,[19] and by May 2023, the song had been streamed over 7,000,000 times.[20] The success of the song enabled Hunt to drop out of her course.[21] In April 2021, she released the single "Headz Gone West", followed by an EP of the same name,[22] both of which took their title from her poor mental health during lockdown;[12] the former was written as the second track for the project, after "Sober Feels", and in an interview with Complex Networks, she noted that the EP comprised extrapolations of beats she had produced during nights.[22]

She then collaborated with Rebel MC on a remix of Lava La Rue's "Magpie", and in October 2021, she released "Forbidden Feelingz", which sampled Columbo, a murder detective series, in tribute to Liz, and which was accompanied by a music video directed by Delphino.[23] She then released "18 & Over", which sampled Cocoa Tea's "Young Lover", alongside a video that referenced Babylon and The Harder They Come and was directed by Taliable,[24] the production alias of Talia Beale;[25] in a March 2022 interview with Dazed, she noted that she picked the sample after hearing discovering her stepfather's SoundCloud account and finding it on there.[6] In February 2022, she released "Luv Like", a song about her own body dysmorphic disorder,[26] which was released alongside a music video,[27] and the following month she released the EP Forbidden Feelingz, which included "Forbidden Feelingz", "18 & Over", and "Luv Like".[28]

2022–2023: MOBO Award and Sunrise Bang Ur Head Against The Wall

In April 2022, she published a handwritten open letter to the MOBO Awards to introduce an Electronic/Dance category, on the grounds that the last such act to win an award was Goldie, who had won for Timeless in 1996; the Nova Twins had put in a similar request the year before for a Rock/Alternative category, but had been unsuccessful.[29] However, on this occasion, Hunt's request was entertained; working alongside the newly-formed Black Electronic Music Association, or Club BEMA, such a category was created for that year's ceremony, which was won by Hunt.[30] She then collaborated with Watch the Ride on "Mash Up the Dance", and Clipz, Beenie Man, Cristale and ShaSimone on "No Time".[20]

In September 2022, she released "Baianá", which sampled the traditional Brazilian choir Barbatuques, alongside a video shot in Brazil.[31] In November 2022, she released "So Tell Me...",[32] a song about her decision to leave home,[12] which was released alongside a video produced by Dan Emmerson,[32] and the following month, she released "Conveniency", which alongside "Baianá" and "So Tell Me..." appeared on her EP Sunrise Bang Ur Head Against Tha Wall in March.[33]

In June, she supported Beyoncé on her Renaissance World Tour at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium;[34] she told The Face in February 2024 that she had only discovered she would be performing there on the day, and that she had received "a lot" of abuse for playing jungle.[3] Alexis Petridis noted in April 2024 that cameraphone footage for the gig indicated an audience looking like jungle was "the last thing they want to hear", but opined that her slot was indicative of her success.[35] A week after playing the gig, she released "Off Wiv Ya Headz", a remix of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs' 2009 single "Heads Will Roll",[36] and a week after that she released a remix of Jorja Smith's "Little Things".[37]

2023–present: Silence is Loud

In August 2023, she released "Bad Gyalz", a song about the women who attended her raves, and which featured vocals from MC Moose and production from Clipz and was accompanied by a video directed by Beale;[38] she, Central Cee, and Kano then featured on a JD Sports Christmas advert, and she then released a remix of Fred Again's "Leavemealone".[39] In January 2024, she released "Crowded Roomz", a combination of jungle and indie rock[40] co-written and co-produced by Ethan P. Flynn[41] and about her experience of being surrounded by people while touring but still feeling unable to be herself; its music video featured Maverick Sabre,[39] who had previously featured on her Sunrise Bang Ur Head Against Tha Wall track "No Need 2 Be Sorry, Call Me?",[33] and Corbin Shaw.[39]

The following month, she announced her debut album, Silence is Loud, which was also co-written and co-produced by Flynn,[42] and released its title track, an ode to her love for her brother.[43] The album comprised her attempt at fusing jungle with Britpop, on the grounds that she had not heard the genre in dance music before.[21] She then collaborated with Shaw to release "Cheese Chips N Bloody Gravy", a piece of merchandise, and then in March 2024 she released "Unfinished Business", about a current partner's feelings for their past.[44] Silence is Loud was released in April 2024,[45] and featured "Silence is Loud", "Crowded Roomz", "Unfinished Business",[35] and "So Tell Me..." and "Forbidden Feelingz" from previous EPs.[46]

Artistry

"I've been massively inspired by Burial when it comes to my own music – I'm literally obsessed with him, it's unhealthy! I follow the subreddit and I'm deep in the Burial world; I've got a massive poster of the Untrue artwork on my wall. But I would say he's been a massive inspiration just because, for me as a producer, I look at him as a great case study of somebody who chose to be anonymous and didn't reveal so much about himself publicly. But if you listen to his music, you can find out so much about his personality: what he likes and what he's into… video games, films and just his own personal music preferences. I really like that he details his personality within the production without actually saying things in words. You just need to listen to get an idea of who he is."

Hunt in November 2022[47]

When producing, Hunt takes inspiration from the classic era of jungle, between 1992 and 1996.[10] She is massively inspired by Burial;[14] in an interview with Crack in November 2022, she stated that she first discovered his album Untrue (2007) when she was "17 or 18" and listened to the album on loop after moving to London, that she submitted an essay about him while at university, that she was specifically inspired by the personality he put into his work, and that she was inspired to sample Columbo and "Young Lover" on "Forbidden Feelingz" and "18 & Over" by him.[47] In an interview with the BBC in January 2023, she stated that she was inspired by Maya Angelou's conversion of pain into poetry; she first became interested in her via Liz's community school, would refer frequently to her memoir I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings as a child,[12] and would sample her poem And Still I Rise on her Forbidden Feelingz album track "Ode 2 Maya Angelou".[28]

Reviewing Forbidden Feelingz, Pitchfork described her voice as "indebted to the jazzy licks of Erykah Badu and Nina Simone", and with "a soulful lilt and lyrics from the sunnier sides of reggae music".[28] In June 2023, Gauchoworld described Hunt, Piri & Tommy, and PinkPantheress as "at the forefront of the "bedroom rave" movement",[48]:64 and in September 2023, Clash described her as one of the leaders of the post-2020 drum and bass revival alongside Venbee, Charlotte Plank, and Piri,[10] the last of whom used a January 2024 The Guardian piece to state that the success of both Archives and Yunè Pinku was inspirational in her choosing to become a producer herself.[49] Additionally, Alexis Petridis used a Silence is Loud review to observe that Hunt occupied a "roughly equivalent" position to Goldie, a 1990s jungle musician, describing both as a "striking, charismatic figurehead for a genre traditionally lacking in striking, charismatic figures", and that on Silence is Loud, Hunt was "unafraid to tether her breakbeats to a pounding four-to-the-floor kick drum, a move that would have been absolutely verboten in 90s jungle"; he also noted that Forbidden Feelingz and Sunrise Bang Ur Head Against Tha Wall posited Hunt as a "weightier counterpoint" to the works of PinkPantheress.[35]

Discography

Studio albums

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Extended plays

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Singles

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Awards and nominations


References

  1. "DEHANEY NIA LISHAHN HUNT". American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers. Archived from the original on 30 March 2019. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  2. Ochefu, Christine (7 December 2023). "Nia Archives: one for the headz". DJ Mag. Archived from the original on 2 January 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  3. Morris, Kadish (12 April 2024). "'I want to bring the party up north': Nia Archives on unleashing a Yorkshire rave revolution". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 12 April 2024.
  4. Hirst, Jake (25 May 2021). "Who The Hell Is Nia Archives?". UKF. Archived from the original on 1 January 2023. Retrieved 26 January 2023.
  5. Ahmed, Aneesa (1 December 2021). "Get to know Nia Archives and her 'future classic' take on jungle". Mixmag. Archived from the original on 2 January 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  6. Martin, Felicity (11 March 2022). "Nia Archives: the junglist bringing Black women to the front". Dazed. Archived from the original on 2 January 2023. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  7. Williams, Kyann-Sian (18 November 2022). "Nia Archives: "Jungle music has always been a strong sound of the underground"". NME. Archived from the original on 2 January 2023. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  8. DJ Flight (28 October 2021). "Nia Archives". Windrush Stories (Podcast). Apple Podcasts. Archived from the original on 2 January 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  9. "Nia Archives wants you to respect your elders". i-D. 27 November 2023. Retrieved 19 February 2024.
  10. Aklilu, Rahel (8 September 2023). "Queen Of The North: Nia Archives Interviewed". Clash. Archived from the original on 2 January 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  11. Kawalik, Tracy (3 May 2022). "Flying the junglist flag: Nia Archives is leading jungle's new era". Mixmag. Archived from the original on 20 December 2023. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  12. Savage, Mark (3 January 2023). "Sound Of 2023: Nia Archives is ushering in a new era of jungle". BBC News. Archived from the original on 2 January 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  13. Coney, Brian (18 October 2021). "Nia Archives shares new single inspired by '90s jungle and reggae, 'Forbidden Feelingz': Listen". DJ Mag. Archived from the original on 2 January 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  14. Wickes, Jade (10 March 2022). "An interview with Nia Archives on her new EP, Forbidden Feelingz". The Face. Archived from the original on 25 September 2023. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  15. Burgam, Becky (27 April 2021). "Sofa Surfing : Nia Archives". Galchester. Archived from the original on 2 January 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
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  22. Keith, James. "Premiere: Nia Archives Stirs Together Jazz, Soul And Jungle On "Headz Gone West"". Complex. Archived from the original on 2 January 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  23. Ahmed, Aneesa (14 October 2023). "Nia Archives releases new single 'Forbidden Feelingz'". Mixmag. Archived from the original on 2 January 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  24. Fielding, Amy (26 November 2021). "Nia Archives drops new single and video, '18 & Over'". DJ Mag. Archived from the original on 2 January 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  25. Ward, Billy (13 April 2023). "TaliaBle brings punk to the ends with new 'ZINC!' visual". DMY. Archived from the original on 2 January 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  26. Zhang, Cat (4 February 2022). "Nia Archives: "Luv Like"". Pitchfork. Archived from the original on 2 January 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  27. Ellis, James (3 February 2022). "Nia Archives' "Luv Like" is an exploration of self-image cloaked in jungle rhythms". The Line of Best Fit. Archived from the original on 2 January 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  28. Pritchard, Will (11 March 2022). "Nia Archives: Forbidden Feelingz". Pitchfork. Archived from the original on 2 January 2023. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  29. Shutler, Ali (14 April 2022). "Nia Archives calls on MOBO Awards to add electronic/dance category". NME. Archived from the original on 3 January 2024. Retrieved 3 January 2024.
  30. Buckle, Becky (1 December 2022). "Nia Archives on Electronic/Dance MOBOs win: "This is beyond my wildest dreams"". Mixmag. Archived from the original on 15 March 2023. Retrieved 3 January 2024.
  31. Richards, Will (30 September 2022). "Nia Archives shares Brazilian-influenced new song and video 'Baianá'". NME. Archived from the original on 2 January 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  32. McCarthy, Neive (17 November 2022). "Nia Archives has shared a new single, 'So Tell Me…', with an accompanying video". Dork. Archived from the original on 2 January 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  33. Williams, Kyann-Sian (8 March 2023). "Nia Archives – 'Sunrise Bang Ur Head Against Tha Wall' EP review: honest stories and subdued beats". NME. Archived from the original on 2 January 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  34. "Nia Archives opened for Beyoncé in London last night". Crack. 2 June 2023. Archived from the original on 2 January 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
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  40. "Nia Archives shares new song "Crowded Roomz"". The FADER. Retrieved 7 April 2024.
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  44. Dunworth, Liberty (15 March 2024). "Listen to Nia Archives' reflective new single 'Unfinished Business'". NME. Retrieved 7 April 2024.
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