Sarah Nixey
Sarah Nixey | |
---|---|
Born | 21 December 1973 |
Origin | Dorset, England |
Genres | Pop/Electronica/Alternative |
Years active | 1996–present |
Labels | Black Lead Records |
Website | SarahNixey.com |
Sarah Anne Nixey (born 21 December 1973 in Dorset, England) is a British singer songwriter, best known as the vocalist in Black Box Recorder. Her debut solo album, Sing, Memory, was released on 19 February 2007, followed by Brave Tin Soldiers, released 9 May 2011. Nixey currently lives in London with her husband, music producer Jimmy Hogarth, whom she married in late 2010 and has one son, Reuben (born late 2007). Hogarth acts as step-father to Nixey's daughter Ava from her previous marriage with John Moore.
Biography
Whilst working as a backing vocalist for the folk band Balloon, Sarah Nixey was approached by John Moore (who had been the drummer for The Jesus and Mary Chain) and Luke Haines (frontman of The Auteurs), who had formed a duo and were looking for a vocalist. The duo convinced Nixey to join them by promising her that she would become famous,[1] and in 1998, Black Box Recorder released their first album, England Made Me to critical acclaim.
Their second album, The Facts of Life, followed in 2000, and spawned a top 20 single of the same name, which saw the group perform on BBC's "Top of the Pops". A further single followed, and in 2001, Nixey married John Moore, and they had a daughter together (Nixey and Moore divorced in 2006). In 2003, Black Box Recorder released their third album, Passionoia; their first and only album for One Little Indian records, following the demise of Nude Records.
In 2004, Black Box Recorder went on hiatus; not officially splitting, but with all 3 members deciding to pursue solo projects. In late 2005, Nixey announced she was working on a solo album, to be produced and co-written by James Banbury (a producer, programmer, writer and string arranger, as well as former member of The Auteurs). In mid-2006, two songs were made available on legal download services, entitled "The Collector" and "Love & Exile". A third song was made available in September, entitled "Strangelove", backed by remixes of "The Collector". Nixey's debut full-length solo album, entitled Sing, Memory, was released on 19 February 2007, following the release of her third single, "When I'm Here With You", which was released on 29 January 2007, backed with non-album track, "Watching Over You". Drowned in Sound[2] awarded Sing, Memory 8/10 and MusicOMH[3] gave it 4 stars. The album was given 7/10 by the NME[4] and 6.3 by Pitchfork[5]
In December 2007, Black Box Recorder teamed up with Art Brut to create the single Christmas Number One under the collaborative title of The Black Arts.[6]
In October 2008 Black Box Recorder appeared at the Nick Sanderson (Earl Brutus) tribute concert. It was subsequently announced that the band would play their first headlining gig for five years at The Luminaire, Kilburn, London in February 2009. They then played their last gig at Queen Elizabeth Hall, London's Southbank, on 23 July 2009. A final statement was issued just prior to the 2010 UK general election stating ″on Thursday 6 May, Black Box Recorder go to the country for the last time″. Their last two recordings were Do You Believe in God? and Keep It in the Family, and are available as a download.
Sarah appeared as a guest vocalist on the track 'Water Drops on Burning Rocks' on the autumn 2009 EP 'Blips Don't Lie' by American electronic duo Microfilm as well as appearing on their 2013 third album 'AggroPastels' providing vocals for the tracks "Pretty Revolutionaries" and "Penthouse." She will also feature on their fourth studio album to be released in 2015.
In April 2011 it was announced that Nixey had written and produced a new album, Brave Tin Soldiers to be released 9 May 2011 on her own label Black Lead. The press release described the album as such: "lush piano, string and choral arrangements envelop her vocal which reveals family secrets, erotic entanglements and tragic love stories". A week prior to the album, Brave Tin Soldiers EP was released with remixes by dadahack and Kids Love. The Freelance Hellraiser also released a bootleg mix entitled Brave Tin Lovers.[7]
The album Brave Tin Soldiers was given 4 stars by The Sunday Times and Scottish Sunday Express,[8] very favourable reviews in The Independent[9] and Uncut and radio support from BBC6 Music.
On 18 July 2011, The Homecoming EP was released with remixes by Microfilm and Kids Love, plus a further reworking of Black Rose by Half Cousin. A music video was also made available via YouTube, directed and produced by Black Lead Films.[10]
Discography
Black Box Recorder
Singles
- "Child Psychology" – 1998
- "England Made Me" – 1998
- "The Facts of Life" (UK #20) – 2000
- "The Art of Driving" – 2000
- "These Are The Things" – 2003
- "The School Song" – 2003
Albums
- England Made Me – 1998
- The Facts of Life (UK #37) – 2000
- The Worst of Black Box Recorder – 2001
- Passionoia – 2003
Solo
Singles
- "The Collector" Single (download only) – 2005
- "Strangelove" EP (7" vinyl & CD) – 2006
- "The Collector" Remixes EP (download only) – 2006
- "When I'm Here With You" (download only) – 2007
- "The Black Hit of Space" (download only) – 2007
- "Le Temps de L'Amour" (download only) – 2008
- "Brave Tin Soldier" EP (download only) – 2 May 2011
- "The Homecoming" EP (download only) – 18 July 2011
Albums
- Sing, Memory (CD and download) – 2007
- Brave Tin Soldiers (CD and download) – 9 May 2011
References
- ↑ Haines, Luke (7 January 2010). Bad Vibes: Britpop and My Part in Its Downfall. Windmill Books. p. 256. ISBN 0-09-952226-8.
- ↑ holliy (21 February 2007). "Sarah Nixey – Sing, Memory / Releases / Releases // Drowned in Sound". Drownedinsound.com. Retrieved 31 December 2011.
- ↑ "Sarah Nixey – Sing, Memory | album reviews". musicOMH. Retrieved 31 December 2011.
- ↑ Snapes, Laura. "NME Reviews – Sarah Nixey – Sing, Memory". NME.
- ↑ Tangari, Joe (12 April 2007). "Album Review – Sarah Nixey – Sing, Memory". Pitchfork.
- ↑ Drowned in Sound – News – Eddie Argos joins race for Christmas number one
- ↑ "sarah nixey vs freelance hellraiser : brave tin lovers". Ireallylovemusic.co.uk. 24 March 2011. Retrieved 31 December 2011.
- ↑ "Press". Sarah Nixey. Retrieved 31 December 2011.
- ↑ Simon Price (8 May 2011). "Album: Sarah Nixey, Brave Tin Soldiers (Black Lead) – Reviews – Music". The Independent. Retrieved 31 December 2011.
- ↑ "Sarah Nixey – The Homecoming". YouTube. 18 July 2011. Retrieved 31 December 2011.
External links
- Official website
- Official MySpace
- Official Facebook page
- Official YouTube Channel
- Black Box Recorder – Record label homepage
- MTV profile of Black Box Recorder
- Rolling Stone profile of The Auteurs