Daniela was recently interviewed by Mark Stevenson of her local paper, The Olney Phonebox, and just got my hands on it:
Daniela Bove
With gigs lined up nationwide from Newport Pagnell and Milton Keynes to Liverpool and the Isle of Wight, the attention towards Olney living Daniela Bove has been growing for a number of years now. With the Myspace fan count hitting nearly 25,000 it’s easy to see how this Bletchley born singer of Italian and East End descent is becoming increasingly popular with music fans. Listen to Deep Blue her last album and check out what inspires Ms Bove in life and it’s easy to see why so many people can relate to both her and her music – it’s honest, heart on the sleeve music. Growing up in the concrete jungle streets, hanging around rooftops and stairwells as she puts it “getting into all sorts of trouble and never quite fitting in”, a childhood love of singing was born and continued to grow stronger as the years progressed. Absorbing the life style of big city living the dedication to music quickly jumped up to a more serious level with Daniela moving to London for Uni life where she formed a Trip Hop band, gigging like mad for years, “living and breathing music 24/7.” In 1997 Daniela decided to go solo and took time out to concentrate more on her own song writing. A couple of years later she met a gentleman named Stephen Altman which led to an “immense” musical chemistry whereby Stephen became her guitarist, producer and good friend. Together they formed “a beautifully ambient sound.” Deep Blue, along with the contribution of Jimmy Naples is the result of that engaging meeting back in 1999. The creative coming together of this trio over the years was rewarded with the album release back in 2009. The result is Daniela’s pure, gorgeous and honest vocals floating over a blend of Folk, Electronica, and Trip Hop all of which flirt with Pop every now and again. I managed to catch up with Daniela albeit through email (I’m a busy boy). The result though is some really interesting answers.
So your roots lie in an urban lifestyle and trip hop, a sound I love myself – I feel like I can still hear some of the Massive attack, Portishead in your music now, I guess in the way you sing and express your lyrics and especially the sample style openings of ‘Higher’ for example – would you agree and also how has your sound progressed into what we hear today?
I did my apprenticeship in bands in London at a time when Massive Attack, Portishead and Bjork were at their most inspirational. I fell in love with the way they mix live instruments with samples and with the way that they, for me, kept music fresh and alive at a time when all you could hear were guitar bands and boy bands. I still need to feel a freshness and an excitement when I write a tune, and can’t wait to get into the studio to translate the new live songs I’ve written and performed with the Belongings into a sample-laden ethereal landscape!
So you went to Uni in London – what did you study?
I studied Business at the Uni of Westminster, which as fate would have it had a new, and now one of the best, Commercial Music degrees running in the country. I quickly hooked up with a bunch of musicians from that course and started my first band, which was called ‘Close’. The other members of that are now in the DJ collective London Elektricity or producing Syze Up – I was humbled by their talent! I also met Tom Baxter on that course who became one of my best friends, and with him, his sister Vashti, brother Charlie and best pal Spencer we gigged the London acoustic scene, all supporting each other’s gigs for the next 8 years!
I see that you began to jam at a tube station with a gentleman named Stephen Altman who you consider to be like a brother now right? How does the creative process work with you guys? (does Stephen work around your lyrics, hooks etc?)
No, I wasn’t busking! I was working for a music management company, Steve for a film production company across the road, so we knew each other’s faces. We got talking on the tube platform and discovered a similar love for folk and electronica. He was just starting out as a producer then, and I was just starting out on my own as a solo artist, having left ‘Close’.
It felt like the perfect combination, because although I write the songs myself on guitar and piano, I’ve never had the commitment required to
play an instrument well – and he was the exact reverse, he played piano, classical guitar, cello, sax, programmed beats etc.. but wasn’t that into song writing. So I played him my songs, he welcomed my awful playing with open arms, could spot the diamond in the rough and would play exactly what was in my head and say ‘Do you mean this?’.. my jumping up and down and clapping gave away the answer!
Much of it was recorded across the pond – Steve being LA based at this time (and still), and me being in the UK. So it was a slow and sometimes frustrating process, but one that was ultimately rewarding.
Who else would you say has been instrumental in influencing / shaping your sound?
For me music has to make you feel something; I realised this from a young age – so I don’t think I’m very genre specific, as long as what I hear makes me feel. My mum flooded my ear drums with The Beatles and Motown as a kid, my dad with Led Zepellin and Stevie Wonder. So now I love songs that stand the test of time with beautiful melodies and a bit of edge. My main inspirations have got to be Kurt Cobain’s musical genius and Bjork’s eccentric beauty. Stevie Wonder would feature highly as would anyone as a kid that I would listen to that had good harmonies in it, like ELO, Ten CC and now I’m loving today’s equivalents, Fleet Foxes, Mumford and Sons, Laura Marling. Oh not forgetting Madonna – she rocked my world aged ten!!
I genuinely really love Deep Blue, you say the Album ‘’reflects the cathartic outpourings of us both’’ (you and Stephen?) This statement seems to mirror your lifes important influences and inspirations. Am I right in thinking the music from this album is created to purify, heal the soul?
Deep Blue is a collection of songs I wrote in my 20′s and tells the usual story of falling head over heels in love, only to discover it wasn’t quite what you thought it was. Writing ‘Deep Blue’ was a part of my journey and a cathartic one at that! Steve and I sat back when the album was finished and couldn’t believe how chilled it was. Both of us being two of the most feisty folk I know, that rarely hold back. So I see Deep Blue as reflecting our other sides… our sensitive sides that few get to see. I dunno about purifying the soul – but it has certainly helped the process of growing as a person.
You mention that when you were living in the cities you felt comfortable feeling lost for a while – Deep Blue is an album that is an open ‘this is me’ experience, where you highlight vulnerabilities, wear your heart on your sleeve – Am I hitting the nail on the head, is this one of the most personal projects to date?
Yeah the nail has cut right through the wood! I’d spent years in a band where songwriting was a co-writing experience, and don’t get me wrong we wrote some amazing songs together, but I was going through so much as a twentysomething, and it needed to find a way out. Deep Blue had to be personal – it saved me stacks in therapy! And as a thirtysomething I no longer need to be lost in the crowd – writing this album helped with that.
Deep Blue was obviously released back in 2009, what has happened since and what plans do you have in mind?
My plan is to get some exposure for this album, because I’m truly proud of it. But at the same time, since finding a new band of hand-picked beauties, ‘The Belongings’, I now have a similar need to get into the studio as I had before Deep Blue. I think I’ve written another ten or so tracks that I’m really happy with – less floaty, with more of an edge. I’ve been gigging relentlessly with the band, playing alongside some of my old friends that have now soared to fame and fortune, meeting some ridiculously lovely folk along the way (Mr Mitchell and Acollective topping my list!!!!) and am loving the process!
I hear your music and I feel like with the right artists there could be a Deep Blue (the remixes). Would you welcome such a thing and would you rework any tracks yourself??
Is your other profession clairvoyancy? So far I’ve had two tracks remixed by world-famous DJ Hakan Lidbo, Ninth and the Solar remixed one of the songs from the album, Flatland another and if I can get hold of the vocals again from Steve, I have another couple of DJs waiting on them to do more remixes. As for a release, they tend to release them theirselves through their own labels. I am always flattered by anyone wanting to remix my songs. As for me doing it myself – maybe one day..
Are there instruments that you would like to hear in your future music? (I’m thinking horn sections!)
Funny you should say that.. the dark horse in The Belongings, Christopher Robin, the drummer, also plays the flugel horn – we have him playing on a few tracks! Sounds for the next album…hmmm… I can hear orchestras in my head when I write songs, and so yes, the likelihood is there will be strings, a theramin, some weird oohhh weeee sample sounds, who knows! We’re recording the band instruments of album two this summer at the drummer and bass player’s houses – and then I hope to fly out to LA to record with Steve to add the fairy dust that will make it what I imagine it to be.
Lastly we should mention the Belongings – Can you tell us a little bit about them, what you guys do together and where we can go to see you play?
The Belongings came in the following order.. I was recommended Gareth Warren by a drummer I know, who at the first rehearsal had already learnt about 5 songs and played them beautifully to me in a pub garden.. I was sold! He has become one of my best friends. We’ve had a few member variations but of the current Belongings, next came Nicole Collarbone, cello in arm! She wowed me with a musical ear to die for and a pixie-like charm that I warmed to immediately. No one laughs at my jokes, or me hers, as much as Nicole! I love her! Next came
Christopher Robin Davy – it became apparent in the first rehearsal that here was a hidden talent that needed exposing! His freestyle jazz drumming had me sold after one song. It then turned out he played the piano, flugel horn, guitar, sang – I was having him in the band, for sure! And most recently came the wonders of Kev Cooke on bass, who almost played for us when he was in Terrapin Trainstation a year or so back, but it never quite materialised. But when the vacancy arose again he was first in line and turned up knowing the entire album already and with a lovely manner to boot. I am lucky to have them all – I know that!
Our tour started at the IF festival last Saturday and sees us going to:-
Fri 23rd July Vicarage Party, Wolverton Wed 4th Aug The Wheatsheaf, Leighton Buzzard
Sat 7th Aug Cayton Bay, Scarborough
Sat 14th Aug Across the Beaten Track @ The Blue Coat, Liverpool
Sat 14th Aug Zanzibar, Liverpool
Wed 18th Aug Softly Softly @ The Albert & Pearl, Islington, London
Sat 21st Aug Thorness Bay, Isle of Wight
Sun 22nd Aug Sno! Bar, Xscape, Milton Keynes
Sun 29th Aug Love in the Woods Festival, Devon
Sun 19th Aug The Living Room, Milton Keynes


