Nicole Shenko has
been busy. While on the one hand things are starting to fall into
place for the Melbourne singer and songwriter, on the other it
seems that there is no rest for the wicked. After the last few
years, which have seen Nicole tour China with one band, release
a critically acclaimed album with another (2005’s Alchemy)
and live a divided life between Sydney and Melbourne, an average
person might assume that a well-earned break is in order. Nicole
Shenko, however, has other plans.
My first question to her is of
course, what is she singing at the moment? As
it turns out, changes have been afoot.
‘I’m in a new band called Lychee Martini,’ she
tells me, then goes on to elaborate on how it came to pass. ‘I
met Rob Bell, the percussionist, at a party about four years ago.
He called me up a couple of months later and said ‘Do you
want to come to Hong Kong?’ so I said ‘Absolutely,
what are we going to do?’ He said ‘Why don’t
you come down to one of our gigs, and just, you know, get up and
do some improv, and see how we go.’ I said ‘Sure, I
mean, why not?’ So I went down to this club, the band was
playing, and I did a set with them. I’ve really never found
a group of musicians that I’ve done that with as comfortably
before. We just played and the songs just flowed and it was incredibly
easy. So we went to Hong Kong, and we toured a bit around China,
and had some great ideas to play together, but they had a different
line-up at the time, and I was doing Shenko and I was living between
Sydney and Melbourne. So it really wasn’t set up that it
would work for us. I kept in contact with the guys, but we were
in different places at different times.’

While Nicole was playing with Shenko
(the band which shared her name), Lychee Martini had undergone
some line-up changes and started working on some new songs. When
she came and added some vocals, the musical chemistry that had
occurred before was re-ignited. One sure
sign that things were on track was the ease with which the group
gelled together in the studio. Another is the way that Nicole’s face lights
up when describing how things are proceeding.
‘They had been working for months on a whole bunch of instrumental tracks,
and they called me up before Christmas, and said ‘Do you want to get
together and have a jam on some of these tracks?’ and I said ‘Sure,
why not, let’s just see how it works out.’ When we had this first
jam, it was just after New Year’s, everyone had been partying for a week-
so it was off to a rough start already. We got in the studio and from the first
beat we were in, we just played for hours, and it was just so easy. It was
fantastic. So I just pretty much just said, ‘I’m joining the band!’ That
was January, and I still had a couple of months left in Sydney. I got back
to Melbourne in March, and we’ve just been playing together ever since.
Now we’re twenty songs in, and very close to gigging soon- very exciting!’

So I’m intrigued- how would Nicole describe Lychee
Martini to someone who hasn’t heard them before?
‘Soft
orange’ she says, and laughs. I can’t help but feel
as if I’m missing something here. Fortunately, she goes on to enlighten
me.
‘We came up with that the other day after a jam. It’s not like
intense rock, like what I was doing beforehand. It’s like you throw it
out, it’s pleasant, it hits you, but it’s kind of enjoyable.’ Noticing
perhaps that my confused expression hasn’t entirely left my face, she
gives me a little more detail.
‘It’s always difficult to describe what you do, but essentially,
it’s deep groove, based on a dance sensibility. We’re all into
dance music- all of the guys do remixes. All of us are very eclectic in terms
of what we like, but essentially dance music builds, it has absolute peaks
and troughs, and dynamics that make you want to dance, and so we play like
that. With a music that’s deep groove with elements of hip hop, dance,
reggae, jazz, funk, soul, little tidbits of everything, just lashing in on
these solid grooves.’
With the addition of a vocalist to the
Lychee Martini recording line-up, some re-writing of the material
was inevitable. With the eclectic musical backgrounds and tastes
of the band, it’s
no real surprise to find out that constructing
songs with a standard verse/chorus format isn’t necessarily at the top of Lychee
Martini’s things to do list.
‘We’re kind of in the process where we’ve got
twenty songs, and up until I came along they were probably about
ten, fifteen minutes long each song. But of course, naturally when
you add lyrics you’ve got the
verses, or choruses, or bridges- whatever it is, there needs to be a form,
in some shape, to sing to. So at the moment we’re just working out which
songs will be structured more so than others. Because we just do improv so
well we don’t want to become just a song-based band, because it would
totally take away from why we’re really good. So we’re just kinda
working out which songs we can keep relatively short, that require that kind
of a length, and then which songs can be ten-fifteen minutes long, that are
just dance tracks!’

Fortunately Lychee Martini’s transition
from an instrumental sound to a vocal one has been seamless-
Nicole puts it down to the consummate professionalism of her
bandmates.
‘Because they all have studios, and they’re really into sound,
there’s no egos competing when we play, there’s nobody trying to
outplay someone else. And they’re totally respectful of what I do as
a vocalist, because if you can’t hear the vocalist, then it’s not
going to connect to the audience. That’s what you have a vocalist for,
to connect to the audience. If you can’t hear that it’s frustrating-
be an instrumental band! So they’re amazing, they’ll play to whatever
level is required, so the singing comes in just on top of it.’
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It’s a
very different kind of operation from the previous group that Nicole
recorded with. The experience of playing with the rock outfit Shenko,
which originally started out as a solo project, gradually turning
into a band endeavour, ultimately gave Nicole a new determination
to pursue what she really wanted. The creation of Shenko came about
through Nicole recording in the same studio as Dan Hall (ex-Taxiride).
Dan and Nicole collaborated on some tracks, with other musicians
becoming involved as time went on.
‘It (Shenko) just sort of evolved into a band. So even though it was
really my solo project and my songs, it became a band energy. And when you’ve
got that, it’s wrong. There’s already a problem here. There was
always a conflict of interest in Shenko- everyone felt really passionate about
playing together, for sure, but because of that conflict of interest, we just
didn’t share a collective heart. And ultimately, I just recognised that
in Sydney last year. I was looking at how to sort out everything in my life.
I thought, the only way to do that is just really look at what my
truth is, and just move towards that, whatever it is I want, move
towards that and don’t beat around the bush. So I rang up the
boys and I just…left my band. And I think too that I wanted
a different experience. We’d been playing together and we stretched
each other’s boundaries and pushed a lot of buttons, and I
don’t think it was healthy, for writing music from my perspective,
to bring it to a band. It just wasn’t working in the end, so… It
was the best thing that I did really, because the universe had it
lined up that Lychee Martini would be there, and we’re right
as a collective whole, it’s five people equally sharing song-writing,
and everyone’s really into what each of us do, so it’s
great.’
This doesn’t mean that her taste for solo work has been in
any way dulled. While Lychee Martini is taking top priority at the
moment, Nicole is also working on some solo material. Will
the introspection that coloured so much of Alchemy be as
present?

‘No…’ she muses, ‘it’s really changed actually.
There’s a lot more stories to tell. I don’t think I really want
to talk about myself anymore! I’m definitely drawing on my own experiences
but I think I’m in the Year of the Friend. I’ve been meeting lots
of people and sharing lots of stories and being inspired by everyone else’s
stories.’
While we’re on the topic of inspiration I have to ask the inevitable
question- what is she listening to at the moment?
‘I’ve just started getting into Wolfmother, I’m really loving
what they do. I’ve also been getting into a bit of Harry Manx. He’s
great, he’s a singer songwriter, and beautiful, really beautiful. He
just has a great peace and space in his playing, and it’s just from the
heart. I listen to a lot of good stuff, a lot of jazz, I’m really back
into Miles Davis at the moment. Ravi Shankar, Crazy Penis. I’m listening
to a lot of Melbourne bands too, some of my friend’s bands are some of
my favourite bands at the moment. The Ben Smith band, he’s a good mate
of mine, his band’s fantastic. Brain Dead Lovers, they’re a great
new band.’
Apart from the fact that Ravi Shankar and Crazy Penis have probably
never been mentioned in the same sentence before, at the mention
of the Sitar guru I’m curious to know if Nicole has
some Eastern influence in her music at the moment.
‘I always have! My parents were entertainers and I grew up on world music,
so I’ve always had that in my house. I think I probably tried to get
away from it for a while. When we did Shenko, everyone was kind of saying ‘That’s
a little bit too Eastern, can’t we make it more mainstream?’
And that was another thing in that whole process with Shenko- we
ended up writing all of the tracks to fit a certain formula, and
the one thing I did was take them away from their original inspiration
and how they originally sounded, and now I’m just so not interested
in doing that ever again. Music makes itself, so play it how it’s
meant to played and if it’s not a hit single then…so?

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