A collision of post-punk, dub, and girl group pop,
Anika is defined by its namesake's voice.
Anika's stiff Teutonic alto evokes not just the ultimate German ice princess
Nico, but the brazen haughtiness of punks like
Malaria! and
Mania D. Backed by
Portishead's
Geoff Barrow and the rest of
BEAK> -- whom she met while working as a music promoter -- she uses the near-robotic aloofness of her voice to brilliant effect on wisely chosen covers and a handful of originals.
BEAK>'s inspired minimalism is the perfect foil for her deadpan cool, and in many ways
Anika feels like a more focused, feminine second album from the band. Like
BEAK>'s debut, this album was recorded in just a dozen days;
Barrow's production sounds like
Joe Meek dabbling in dub, and
Billy Fuller's inventive basslines nearly steal the spotlight from
Anika more than once. Yet
Anika is far more subversive than
BEAK> could be on their own. Many of the album's best moments happen when
Anika lends her avant-garde chill to '60s girl group singles: in her hands,
Twinkle's morbid biker love song
"Terry" is sleek, sardonic, and a little bit eerie; atonal edges and angles trade innocence for nihilism on
Skeeter Davis'
"End of the World"; and
Anika is at her most
Nico-esque on a stark revamp of
Greta Ann's
"Sadness Hides the Sun." Conversely,
Yoko Ono's
"Yang Yang" is transformed into a fantastic anti-pop single, with klaxon-like synths providing the hook and a bassline so strutting it could have been stolen from a blaxploitation soundtrack. Though the album is mostly covers,
Anika imprints her identity on every track. The dubby version of
Bob Dylan's
"Masters of War" and its reprise reflect her background as a political journalist as much as her original song
"No One's There" does.
Anika is a bold, often fearless debut, and even if it's occasionally an acquired taste, it doesn't hedge its bets. ~ Heather Phares