Nicole Atkins | |
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Nicole Atkins performs at La Zona Rosa during SXSW in Austin, Texas, on March 18, 2010
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Background information | |
Born | Neptune, New Jersey, United States |
Genres | Crooner, Soul, Psychedelic, Americana |
Instruments | Guitar (Hagstrom Viking, Fender Jazzmaster, Martin D15, Sennheiser 421 with Echoplex |
Years active | 2002–present |
Labels | Single Lock Records, Oh' Mercy/Thirty Tigers, Razor & Tie Records, Columbia, Red Ink |
Associated acts | Chris Isaak, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, Avett Brothers, Jim Sclavunos, A.C. Newman |
Website | Official website |
Nicole Atkins (born October 1, 1978) is an American singer-songwriter. Her influences include 50s crooner music, 60s psychedelia, soul music, and the Brill Building style of writing. Atkins has been compared to Roy Orbison and singers from the Brill Building era.
Atkins was born in Neptune, New Jersey. She grew up in Shark River Hills, a middle class enclave within Neptune overlooking the Shark River. Atkins has cited the bay as a major inspiration for her music, particularly the imagery of “the river in the rain” found in the title track on her album Neptune City. She started playing piano at nine years old and taught herself to play guitar at 13. She eschewed more popular acts of the day for musical groups her parents listened to, such as The Ronettes and Johnny Cash and The Beach Boys She has cited The Sundays’ Harriet Wheeler and Cass Elliot as a major early influences.
She started playing in pick-up bands and doing gigs at local coffeehouses while attending St. Rose High School in the nearby town of Belmar.
After high school, Atkins moved to Charlotte, North Carolina to study illustration at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. She ingrained herself within the city’s independent music scene, discovering bands like Superchunk and Uncle Tupelo. She also started writing original songs and befriending other local musicians. Among other bands, she joined a supergroup in the city called Nitehawk that, at one point, had almost 30 members. After she returned, she joined the band Los Parasols, releasing an EP with them entitled The Summer of Love in 2002. That same year, Atkins moved to the neighborhood of Bensonhurst in Brooklyn, New York. Influenced by the artists signed to independent label Rainbow Quartz, she strayed from the louder rock music she’d played in North Carolina and moved toward the songcraft style of Wilco and Roy Orbison. She returned to Charlotte and played with several bands, most notably a group called Virginia Reel. At this time, she started writing what she termed “a mix of Americana, 60s, and indie rock.” She also recorded her EP Bleeding Diamonds.