The New Zealand Herald

INSIDE BENEE’S BUBBLE

We talk to NZ’s indie pop superstar about life in lockdown and the wild vibe of her upcoming album ...

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FOR THE last four weeks of level 4 lockdown, Benee’s been happily bubbling away inside her bubble.

“It’s actually not too bad,” she says. “I can still make music and I’m able to do most of my work so I’m not minding it. And I’m at home, which is nice.”

Benee is proving to be the soundtrack to many people’s isolation. Her song Supalonely has become a viral TikTok sensation during the Covid-19 pandemic and is one of the biggest tracks in the world right now.

She’s the No. 98 Global Artist on Spotify and has swooped up a following of 22 million monthly listeners.

They’re mind-boggling numbers, but far from sounding supalonely herself due to our enforced isolation, Benee is instead as fizzy and effervesce­nt as her music. The only thing bringing her down is that damn pandemic ...

“I’m meant to be on tour right now, which is really sad. I was so gutted when I had to cancel or postpone everything ... But it’s totally fair enough,” she says.

The flipside to her not being overseas is that she’s here, which could work out well for the legion of local fans wanting to see her perform.

“This is very true,” she says. “I was actually thinking about this. If we can completely contain it, and then eliminate it — get it outta here! — then there’s nothing here. If we’re not bringing anything in, or taking anything out, then it could be really good for New Zealand music. It’d be great. I miss gigging so much. It’d be so cool to just play shows here for a while.”

She has been spending her time during lockdown busying herself with work on her new album, which she reckons will be out towards the end of the year.

“I’ve been working on a couple of new songs,” she says. “Me and Josh Fountain, my producer, were making music before we went into lockdown and then it got put on pause, obviously.” Benee says the vibe is “super-experiment­al”, and that she’s been cutting loose and cutting all musical restrictio­ns.

“I just wanted to go wild. I’ve tried out a bunch of different genres. I tried rapping in a song! It could be a big flop,” she laughs. “It’s quite different from Fire on Marzz. Hopefully, people like it. You never know ... ”

It’s obvious Benee is a natural star, effortless­ly genuine and cool. Her music appeals to everyone from grizzled old rock journos to tweens on the hot new social media platform to everyone in between.

What’s the secret?

“As I’ve been making music I’ve realised that you can do anything with anything and it doesn’t matter. You can make a song and try out bad girl trap and it doesn’t matter if it flops. That’s what I’ve been trying to do — just try stuff.”

Then she laughs and says, “A lot of it sounds real bad when I do it ... But some of it actually is kinda cool. It’s trial and error.

“As long as you’re trying all the new stuff and just experiment­ing, that’s when the coolest stuff comes.”

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