Nilüfer Yanya has ridden the hype wave all the way to her debut album; as it prepares to drop, the real journey starts here
"It's not really about me anymore," she says.

If we told you Nilüfer Yanya, the 23-year-old Londoner known for her minimal, plucky guitar tunes, had made her debut album a sort of post-apocalyptic sci-fi record, would you be shocked?
Well, that's what it is. ‘Miss Universe' centres around a fictional health company ‘WWAY HEALTH" (think Black Mirror meets Flat Tummy Tea Co), with their phone service, narrated by ‘Miss Universe', greeting the listener when they hit play.
‘Miss Universe' wasn't meant to be a concept album (and Nilüfer still might not think it is), but it's definitely a different direction for her. If you got to know her as a minimalistic singer-songwriter type, there's far more to her first full-length than just a girl and her guitar.
Experimenting with different instrumentation was on the album checklist – and it gets pretty diverse. There's a classic emo vibe on ‘Heavyweight Champion Of The Year', pop punk-ish guitar on ‘Angels', Florence-sized drama on ‘Baby Blu', as well as some sparkly, psychy pop on ‘Safety Net' and ‘Heat Rises'.
"The songs are just songs, right? But the production kind of really makes the songs sound like something. So some of them are very much in the pop direction, we were listening to a lot of pop music. I think a lot of it is like an amalgamation of my music tastes; I think that comes through.
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