First Things First: Erika de Casier
The Danish star recounts her first musical memories and influences on her latest album.
first-things-first-erika-de-casier
December 07, 2021
ready
4
---
id: a37cdb71-8938-4628-818c-fb97bb3313c3
blueprint: article
title: 'First Things First: Erika de Casier'
date: 2021-12-07T11:28:24+01:00
wp_id: '198542'
subtitle: 'The Danish star recounts her first musical memories and influences on her latest album.'
slug: first-things-first-erika-de-casier
teaser_image: legacy/first-things-first-erika-de-casier/First_Things_Erika_de_Casier_SITE_01-scaled.jpg
contents:
-
type: text
text: '<p class="highlighted">Last month, Erika de Casier dropped a remix compilation of her sophomore album <em>Sensational</em> and offered her North American fans something to look forward to in 2022: her first tour across the pond, kicking off in March.</p><p class="highlighted">On <em><a href="https://erikadecasier.ffm.to/thesensationalremixes" target="_blank" rel="noopener">The Sensational Remixes</a>, </em>de Casier invited friends and respected peers to reimagine her songs, resulting in Mura Masa’s sulty, stripped-down version of her single “Polite”, a footwork-infused rework by Smerz, and a reggaeton twist on “Friendly” by rising Miami producer Nick León. This summer, we caught up with de Casier at Pop-Kultur in Berlin during her European tour to talk about her some of her musical firsts, the recording process of <em>Essentials</em>, and more.</p>'
-
type: images
images:
- legacy/first-things-first-erika-de-casier/No-Butterflies-cover.png
-
type: text
text: '<p><strong>What is your first musical memory?</strong></p><p>Sitting in the car with my mom, listening to “The Police”. That was when I noticed music the first time, driving around and singing along to it.</p><p><strong>And what was the first record you ever bought?</strong></p><p>A 1998 ‘Absolute Hits’ compilation. There’s some Backstreet Boys, “All I Have to Give,” there’s some Faithless, “God Is a DJ”, N-Trance “Da Ya Think I’m Sexy?”</p><p><strong>Who were the first artists to massively influence your style as a musician?</strong></p><p>Tricky and Portishead was the first time when I noticed sampling and where I thought to myself: ‘Woah, it’s so simple and there’s so much space in this music, and it’s still so powerful.’ Very subtle and whispery and intimate.</p><p><strong>Can you remember your first performance in front of an audience? </strong></p><p>It was in a bar, I played in front of a crate of beer. And I just stood behind the keyboard and closed my eyes the entire time. I was so nervous. I just played a bit of keyboard and I was shaking. It was horrible (laughs). I didn’t even look at the audience, I think I didn’t even look up once.</p><p><strong>What was the first track you wrote for ‘Sensational’?</strong></p><p>It was “<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LNszZBmTAtY" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Call Me Anytime”. </a> I wrote that a while back before lockdown. I was just in the studio one day and I had this synthesizer called Virus Indigo. The whole track is made entirely with that synth. I was just playing around, and I wrote the song just like in that one session with myself.<strong> </strong></p>'
-
type: text
text: '<p><strong>What was your first collaboration with Natal Zaks AKA DJ Central like?</strong></p><p>Mostly because of lockdown, I was spending a lot of time alone. And when I was making music, when Natal was over, we would send things back and forth. It was a very intimate process. I think my songwriting developed in a way where I was more or less not afraid of saying what I wanted to say.</p><p><strong>When did you first come up with “Bianka”, the character you invented during the making of the video for ‘</strong><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kxX1fVBkOns"><strong>Drama</strong></a><strong>’?</strong></p><p>I imagined this “Hausfrauen” [type], you know, like cleaning and cooking, and taking a bath, and then I ordered this wig online and once I got it, I tried it on and I was like, “Whoa – I feel like a completely different person.” And it gave me a new confidence that I don’t think I had before. I think she helped me become more extroverted. But I don’t think I’m going to take her onto the stage, I’m saving her for special moments.</p><p><strong>And finally: when are the ‘Sensational’ club remixes dropping?</strong></p><p>There’s going to be different remixes by different artists. My idea with asking all these different artists to do the remixes was to have a lot of different inputs and not just pick one musical scene.</p>'
-
type: text
text: '<p><a href="https://erikadecasier.ffm.to/thesensationalremixes" target="_blank" rel="noopener">The Sensational Remixes</a> <em>is out now.</em></p>'
---
# First Things First: Erika de Casier The Danish star recounts her first musical memories and influences on her latest album. Last month, Erika de Casier dropped a remix compilation of her sophomore album *Sensational* and offered her North American fans something to look forward to in 2022: he...
**And what was the first record you ever bought?** A 1998 'Absolute Hits' compilation. There's some Backstreet Boys, "All I Have to Give," there's some Faithless, "God Is a DJ", N-Trance "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?" **Who were the first artists to massively influence your style as a musician?** . T...
The whole track is made entirely with that synth. I was just playing around, and I wrote the song just like in that one session with myself.** ** [1]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LNszZBmTAtY **What was your first collaboration with Natal Zaks AKA DJ Central like?** . Mostly because of...
My idea with asking all these different artists to do the remixes was to have a lot of different inputs and not just pick one musical scene. [1]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kxX1fVBkOns . [The Sensational Remixes][1]{: target="_blank" rel="noopener"} *is out now.* [1]: https://erikadecasier...