Welcome to Nicola Roberts UK,
your largest fan site and gallery for
Nicola Roberts from Girls Aloud.
We have the latest news, pictures
and videos on Nicola's solo career.
Her third solo single will be 'Yo-Yo'
and will be released on the 8th January 2012.
Enjoy your visit, and come back soon!
- Admin
VIDEO: Nicola Roberts talks ‘sticks + stones’ on BBC Breakfast
Nicola went on BBC breakfast this morning and talked about her amazing song on ‘Cinderella’s Eyes’ album sticks + stones(Listen here if you’ve not heard it yet!)
This song gives me absolute goosebumps everytime i hear it so to see it being played on the BBC for the first time is amazing. Hope Nicola is gaining more fans day by day.
GALLERY: New photoshoot and interview in this weeks LOOK magazine
So much Nicola promotion going on at the moment so i hope your all up-to-date! (as long as you visit us everyday you will be )
As well as Nic being in Bliss magazine, she is also in this weeks LOOK mag, with yet again another gorgeous photoshoot (how many has she done for this solo era??!!) and new interview.
The scans are in the gallery, click the picture above. However i do recommend you buying the mag as its one to keep and look at all day!
The girl’s alone and loving it: Nicola Roberts on going solo
Once considered the odd one out in Girls Aloud, singer Nicola Roberts has blossomed from an ‘ugly’ duckling into a sassy – and business savvy – style icon. And now, as Benji Wilson discovers, she’s ready for her solo moment
Nicola Roberts is curled up on a sofa, face hidden by an avalanche of copper hair and intergalactic sunglasses. She looks a little like a cat, and as it happens she is not the only cat on the sofa. The photo studio has its own, and there’s a dog too, a russet spaniel. ‘I love the fact that there’s a ginger cat , ginger dog and,’ she says, looking over at the goldfish bowl on the other side of the room, ‘even a ginger fish.’ And then she laughs, long and loud, as if YOU had booked an auburn entourage to make the girl Cheryl Cole calls ‘Ginge’ feel better.
Poking fun at herself, happy in her own skin: this is not the Nicola of Girls Aloud folklore. She was always the odd one out, the little china doll who stood at the back and looked unsure while Cheryl, Kimberley, Sarah and Nadine strutted and pouted. Instead, the Nicola we have here is sexy, sassy – and on her own. She has a solo album ready to launch. It’s called Cinderella’s Eyes
and it’s full of confessional, take-me-as-you-find-me statements of intent. ‘I’m a different girl to who I was ten years ago. It’s just my confidence. I still have the same personality, but I’m a lot more sociable now as well. Before, I was so shy.’
She pauses for thought, removing the sunglasses. ‘Do you know what it is? I’m quite good at psychology and reading a situation. But analysing things is not necessarily a good trait to have because you can’t switch it off. We [Girls Aloud] would be on stage and I’d read the reactions. We’d do a gig and all of the boys in the crowd would be staring at Cheryl and Nadine. Because of that, my confidence was so low. I could see what people thought of me, very clearly.’
Essentially, the girl who went from the Halton Brook estate in Runcorn to one of Britain’s biggest girl bands (via Popstars: The Rivals at 16) just didn’t fit in to the pop world. And she knew it. ‘In this industry, at parties, if there’s another celebrity that you don’t know but you recognise, you’re supposed to be all over them, saying, “Hi! How are you?” I’m not from a world like that, so I didn’t follow those rules. I’d say, “Why do they want to talk to me? Why would I do that?” I think I seemed quite aloof in that respect.’
Nicola Roberts on surviving teen stardom to become pop’s next big thing
She was the 16-year-old who found fame on the original reality-TV talent show. And then came the hateful digs that would punctuate her career with Girls Aloud. Hugh Montgomery meets Nicola Roberts, the porcelain pop princess whose first solo album should finally silence the critics.
Never let it be said that Nicola Roberts doesn’t do smiles. Over the course of our time together she runs through a veritable repertoire of them. There’s the demure simper with which she greets me in a London members’ club. The excited grin when discussing “the music”. The knowing half-smile that reproves a mischievous comment. The conspiratorial smirk after her PR comes over and hurries me to wrap things up. And then a beaming flash of the pearlies accessorising a firm(-ish) hug as I leave.
A famous person lifting the corners of their mouth in aid of good publicity? You might say this is not unprecedented. And yet charming, charismatic and forthright though she is, Roberts – one fifth of all-conquering girl group Girls Aloud – has a reputation to contend with. In 2002, when she, Nadine, Cheryl, Kimberley and Sarah won talent show Popstars: The Rivals and hit the tabloids running, she swiftly found herself dubbed the “moody one” of the band. Nine years on, and it’s a label she’s still tagged with, judging by my random sampling of some not especially pop-cultural- savvy friends. “I wasn’t moody,” she reflects now. “I was 17 years old and from a place which is very small and where people don’t walk around smiling all day, they have problems… And I smile when something makes me smile. If I’m walking out of a club, and there are paparazzi there, what the fuck have I got to smile about?”
Now 25, Roberts seems poised to shatter some more preconceptions with her pretty darned fantastic solo album. For though she may come from a manufactured pop band, Cinderella’s Eyes is anything but production line. The seeds of anticipation were sown with the lead-off single “Beat of My Drum”. Neither overblown balladry (hurrah!) nor cod-raunchy R&B (double hurrah!), here was a spiky, savvy electro-pop anthem, complete with cheerleader-style chanting, that bore the influence of French house honchos Justice and art-pop-rapper MIA. It was also, for my mind, the song of the summer. “[There's a] sense of seaside-surreality, a ‘British’ pop sense that has been missing from the airwaves for far too long… a brilliant pop moment from an unlikely source,” declared unlikely source NME. “Cheesy but super-cool” is the rather less guileful description we agree on, which I think just about nails it. Indeed, such cheesy super-coolness permeates Cinderella’s Eyes, with sassy Girls Aloud-esque hooks sitting alongside rap segues and off-kilter electronics.
We never expected Nicola Roberts to be such a force to be reckoned with when she announced she was working on her debut solo record. Cinderella’s Eyes delivers on many levels. Forward thinking, fresh and insanely addictive. I caught up with the lady herself this week and she told me all about working on the album. Where the music came from and we also touched on when the Girls Aloud babes will be back in our faces. Enjoy.
You must be thrilled with the finished results of Cinderella’s Eyes?
This is an incredibly personal album. It’s been incredible working out what I wanted to do as a solo artist. I was left to my own devices and roaming around to work out what I wanted to do. One of the things I’m grateful for is the fact I’ve learnt so much by doing this. I wanted to learn about making music. Before with the girls it was a completely different process. We go into the studio, sing the lyrics and leave. Thios time I was in there learning studio lingo. I’ve always loved to write. So it was about trying to perfect a new talent.
Did you know what route you wanted to go down with your solo music?
I knew I wanted to do electro stuff and that would be my sound. But in terms of concepts it was all quite vast and it took a while to find my sound. You go in with different people and different producers and you need to find people you work well with. It was hard to find the right person. It wasn’t until I found Dimitri Tikovoi that I found the person I could work with on the project. We worked so well together and we were a team. He took me under his wing and I enjoyed every second. He taught me as much as he could every single day. We wrote Yo-Yo and it just rolled. Metronomy’s Joseph Mount was so open to my ideas and we got the best stuff out of working together too.
Was it scary being all by yourself without the Girls Aloud ladies alongside you?
It was daunting being on my own. But I didn’t feel like I was under pressure. I was in the studio every day and it was like being on a treadmill for me. Some days I wrote shit songs but some days we got a winner and you were totally uplifted. For about a year I was there every day and submersed in studio life. I wore a hoodie and a pony tail every day and I was in charge of the kitchen. It was an enjoyable experience and not pressurised. There was no time line on it and if I wasn’t confident on it then it wouldn’t have been released. I didn’t tell anyone I was writing and wanted to do it at my own pace.
We chat to the former Girls Aloud star ahead of her new single release.
Nicola Roberts will be releasing single ‘Lucky Day’ later this month, with her solo album Cinderella’s Eyes to follow.
Her outfit in the single’s video drew a bit of controversy, but Nicola has taken it in her stride.
We chatted to the singer about the video, the upcoming album and spending time in the studio.
-’Lucky Day’ comes out in a couple of weeks. Could you tell us a bit about the track?
It’s a track I wrote with Dragonette. I actually wrote it in February 2010, a long time ago now. It’s a romantic reference, with a down-beat track underneath. The top-line’s quite cute and girly.
-How was it working with Dragonette on the track?
Amazing. I was with them for quite a while writing, and they were the first people that I went in with when I started making the record. I learnt a lot from them. They’re really lovely people, they work really hard, they’re so talented.
-You received a bit of cricism for the video. Did that bother you at all?
No. Not at all. I’m not safe with fashion, and I haven’t been for a long time. I liked it, and everybody on the team liked it on the day. It was 120 degrees, so anything longer, I’d have died!
-How’s the reaction been to the track from your fans?
It’s been really good. It’s totally different to ‘Beat of My Drum’. It’s important for me to show that the album is quite diverse. There are different sounds on there, and different subjects.
‘Lucky Day’ felt like the right one to go with next. We haven’t had much of a summer, but it feels like a summer track and the reaction’s been really good.
Pillow Magazine got to speak to Nicola last week about London Fashion Week, her boyfriend Charlie, her solo music, and Girls Aloud.
Pillow describes Nicola in the interview as ‘open, warm, honest and passionate’, traits we know and love Nic for.
We got speaking to @PillowMagazine on Twitter and asked a question for Nicola. Unfortunately, it couldn’t be included in the final article. However they did let Nicola know about her fans on Twitter:
@NicolaRobertsUK I didn’t get a chance to ask her your specific q but I told her I’d been tweeting you and that she has a very loyal army of supporters here in tweetland. She said she loved you guys and that it’s amazing to speak directly to her fans here!!x
After the interview went online, i asked why the above Twitter talk didnt get added to the interview. So they gave us an exclusive quote from Nicola, which they didnt include!
“It’s just nice to have a new school of connecting with the people that support you rather than the old school way of never getting round to write back. It’s nice”.
The best part of the interview is when Nicola confirms something is in the pipeline for Girls Aloud next year!
“It’s our tenth anniversary next year, so we’ll be celebrating that together. I can’t really say how… but something, yes,”
Check out the two videos above by clicking the thumbnails or links to each one. Nicola talks to MSN about her upcoming debut album and also her dainty doll make-up range.