Nerina Pallot

Summary

Nerina Natasha Georgina Pallot (born 26 April 1974) is a British singer, songwriter and producer, who has released seven albums and over a dozen EPs. She was nominated for British Female Solo Artist at the 2007 BRIT Awards and nominated for an Ivor Novello Award for "Sophia" in the category of 'Best Song (musically and lyrically)' in the same year. Besides her own material, Pallot has written songs for Kylie Minogue and Diana Vickers. She mostly tours around the UK and is married to record producer Andy Chatterley.

Nerina Pallot
Nerina Pallot at Cornbury Music Festival, 2006
Nerina Pallot at Cornbury Music Festival, 2006
Background information
Birth nameNerina Natasha Georgina Pallot
Born (1974-04-26) 26 April 1974 (age 49)[1][2]
London, England
OriginJersey, Channel Islands
Genres
Years active2001–present
Labels

Early life edit

Pallot was born in London and brought up in Jersey by a half-French father and a mother from Prayag, India, together with her sister.[citation needed] Pallot played piano as a child and wrote her first song aged 13. She has identified seeing singer and pianist Kate Bush perform her hit song "This Woman's Work" on television series Wogan as a catalyst for her to pursue a music career.[3] She attended Jersey College for Girls[4] and received a music scholarship for Wellington College.[5]

Career edit

2001–2003: Dear Frustrated Superstar edit

Pallot released her debut album, Dear Frustrated Superstar, on Polydor records in August 2001.[6] This spawned two singles, "Patience" and "Alien". She was subsequently dropped from the label mainly due to failing sales.[7] The album was eventually re-issued several years later after her second album, Fires had become a commercial success. Her then-manager Richard Ogden noted that his company spent "three years managing her while she had a huge record deal and was a massive priority for Polydor. We did the best job we possibly could, but it just didn't happen".[8]

In 2003 she sang lead vocals on the track "Truly" on Delerium's album Chimera, which was also released as a single in the UK.[9]

2004–2008: Fires edit

Her second album, Fires, was released in April 2005 on her own independent label, Idaho. It was published by Chrysalis Music Publishing, to whom she remained signed and provided her with a development deal. They initially provided her with £50,000 to make the album. When that proved insufficient for Pallot's needs, she remortgaged her house to complete the rest of the album.[7]

The album was produced and mixed by Howard Willing together with producers Eric Rosse who produced "Learning to Breathe" and "Heart Attack" (co-produced by Willing) and Wendy Melvoin who produced "Damascus". After the initial tracks were finished the rest of the record was apparently completed by Willing and Pallot flying files back and forth from London to Los Angeles.

The album was preceded by a download-only single, "Everybody's Gone to War". A second single from the record, "Damascus" was released in June 2005, and a third, "All Good People" (a Radio 2 single of the week) was released in September 2005. She performed at the 2005 Guildfest music festival and headlined her own show at Bush Hall in Shepherd's Bush, London later that year.

At the end of 2005, Pallot signed with 14th Floor Records (a Warner label), who re-issued the album after adding strings on some tracks, on 24 April 2006, earning Pallot a chart success by reaching Number 21. With over 100,000 sales it was certified gold in the UK.[10]

The first single from the revamped album was "Everybody's Gone to War", which was playlisted on most major British radio stations. The single became the third most played song on British radio the week before its release, and reached Number 14 in the UK Singles Chart. She undertook her first full headlining tour in support of the Fires album in May 2006. During the year she also played headline shows in London at ICA, the Bloomsbury Theatre, Regent's Park Open Air Theatre and at Shepherd's Bush Empire.

The second single from the album was "Sophia", a re-recorded version, created in LA along with producer Mitchell Froom, entered the UK singles chart at Number 32. In April 2007, the song was nominated for an Ivor Novello Award, while she toured around the UK and Ireland in January and February of that year. The next single from the re-released version of Fires was "Learning to Breathe", which reached Number 70 in the UK singles chart.

2009–2010: The Graduate edit

Pallot worked with several big name co-writers in preparation for the follow-up to Fires, including Linda Perry (Christina Aguilera's "Beautiful") and Rob Davis (Kylie Minogue's "Can't Get You Out of My Head"). She also wrote an album's worth of material with Rick Nowels (Madonna's "Power of Goodbye", Belinda Carlisle's "Heaven Is A Place on Earth"). However, she struggled with the co-writing process and in the end only self-written songs made the album.

The Graduate was released on 5 October 2009 in the UK and reached number 46 on the Official UK Albums Chart in its first week of release. The standard version of the album features 10 original tracks, whereas the iTunes version contains three additional tracks, and the deluxe version contains seven acoustic versions of the tracks. The album polarised critics, with some lauding it as her best album yet and others seeing her change of direction from Fires as a mistake. Having had no intention of releasing Fires 2, Pallot has defended the need for a progression between the two records. She toured the UK in October 2009, including a performance at Glasgow's Oran Mor venue on Wednesday 7 October, showcasing songs from the new album The Graduate.

2011–2013: Year of the Wolf edit

In July 2010, Pallot returned to Geffen Records and to the A&R that first signed her to Polydor while embarking on an eight-day tour around the UK and Ireland. She confirmed her new album would be titled Year of the Wolf via her Twitter page on 21 January 2011. She recorded with Bernard Butler for the album. The lead single was "Put Your Hands Up", released 24 April, while the album was released 13 June 2011.[citation needed]

2014: Year of the EPs edit

For her next project, Pallot decided to release an EP every month in 2014, as she "just got sick of the album, tour, single... that whole cycle".[11] The first was called The Hold Tight in January, followed by We Should Break Up in February. She found that "I'm at a point in my career where I can pretty much make it up now. I've also realised that a true fan base [...] cares about hearing as much music as they can get their hands on".[11] Pallot supported the releases with a handful of tour dates across the UK. In September 2015 she released her fifth album The Sound and the Fury.[12]

 
Nerina Pallot at Cornbury Music Festival 2006

2015–2016: The Sound and the Fury edit

In 2015, Pallot independently released her fifth studio album The Sound and the Fury via her own Idaho label.

2017: Stay Lucky edit

2017 saw the release of Pallot's sixth studio album, Stay Lucky. The album includes the track "The Heart is a Lonely Hunter", which takes its title from Carson McCullers' debut novel of 1940 - and which Pallot herself has described as 'the best song I have ever written'.

2022–present: I Don't Know What I'm Doing edit

2022 saw the release of Pallot's seventh studio album, I Don't Know What I'm Doing

Videos edit

Pallot has released six videos to go with singles from Dear Frustrated Superstar, Fires, and Year of the Wolf.

Her first video for "Patience", directed by Swedish director Emma Hvengaard, features Pallot in various scenes, notably wearing white and barefoot, continually floating to and from earth. "Alien" begins with Pallot lying down, it then becomes apparent that she had fallen onto a plumber's van, crushing it, and the video implies she has fallen from the sky "like an alien". The unreleased "If I Know You" video features multiple Nerinas fighting each other in a theatre.

For "Damascus", Pallot is seen playing piano and singing in a recording studio. Pallot's next video was for "Everybody's Gone to War", which includes cabbage-throwing goths and pineapple bombs. Her next video was for "Sophia", and was filmed in the middle of the desert in Morocco. It has Pallot sitting at a piano, playing and singing while fire surrounds her in a circle and her piano smokes and is also alight. Pallot's next performance, "Learning to Breathe", is more "abstract" and is computer-generated with her playing the guitar in a house with many pictures decorating the walls.

The video for "Put Your Hands Up", the lead single from Year of the Wolf, was shot in and around Lant Street in Southwark, London.

Songwriting and production edit

Notable events edit

Personal life edit

In early 2006, Pallot became engaged to Howard Willing, one of the producers who worked on her second album Fires, but the relationship ended later that year.

Pallot met fellow Jersey resident and Grammy Award-nominated record producer Andy Chatterley in January 2007. They became engaged within the first half-hour of their first date, and married six weeks later on 14 February 2007. The story was told by Pallot on Janice Long's BBC Radio 2 show on 3 June 2009. In 2009 she completed her degree in English Literature at Birkbeck, University of London.[citation needed] The couple reside in London.[13]

On 9 September 2010, Pallot gave birth to her first son.[citation needed]

Pallot has said that she is a fan of Arsenal F.C.[14]

In 2010, she revealed that she was a member of the Labour Party, but expressed disillusionment with the leadership of Gordon Brown and accused former Prime Minister Tony Blair of war crimes.[3]

Discography edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ankeny, Jason. "Nerina Pallot: Biography". Allmusic. Retrieved 26 February 2012.
  2. ^ Singer Nerina Pallot tells us... Archived 20 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine Bath Chronicle, 28 November 2014
  3. ^ a b Sawer, Patrick (4 April 2010). "Nerina Pallot: Cowell, Minogue and me". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 28 August 2014.
  4. ^ "Nerina Pallot to play Jersey music festival for Haiti". BBC News. 26 January 2010. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  5. ^ "School news", The Times page 14, 15 May 1990
  6. ^ Listing for the Dear Frustrated Superstar album on Discogs.com, (accessed 12 January 2015).
  7. ^ a b Lindvall, Helienne (10 September 2009). "Behind the music: How to survive being dropped". The Guardian.
  8. ^ Bouwman, Kimbel (3 November 2004). "Artists need to understand where exactly they fit into the media spectrum". Hit Quarters.
  9. ^ Listing of the Chimera album on Discogs.com, (accessed 12 January 2015).
  10. ^ Certified Awards BPI – British Recorded Music Industry, 9 June 2006
  11. ^ a b Kheraj, Alim (27 March 2014). "Interview: Nerina Pallot". planetnotion.com.
  12. ^ "Nerina Pallot: Sound and the Fury – album review – Louder Than War". 4 September 2015. Retrieved 11 September 2015.
  13. ^ Nerina Pallot Blog Archived 13 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine MySpace
  14. ^ FOTP Exclusive Q&A with Nerina Pallot Flop of the Pops Music Blog

External links edit

  • NerinaPallot.com — Nerina Pallot official website
  • Times article
  • Interview at Wears the Trousers Magazine
  • Article by Nerina on her internet presence at Wears the Trousers Magazine
  • Asian Woman Magazine photo shoot