British singer-songwriter (born 1987)
This article is about the British singer. For the Danish singer, see
Annika (singer) .
Anika
Anika performing in 2011
Birth name Annika Henderson Born (1987-02-06 ) 6 February 1987 (age 38) Surrey , EnglandGenres Occupations Musician songwriter record producer writer journalist poet DJ Instruments Vocals keys e-guitar acoustic guitar bass Labels
Musical artist
Anika (born Annika Henderson , 1987)[ 1] is a British and German singer-songwriter, musician, political journalist and poet.
Anika was born in Surrey , England and grew up speaking English and German.[ 2] [ 3] Before she began her singing career, Anika worked as a music promoter in Cardiff and political journalist and UK correspondent for ESNA European Higher Education News in Berlin.[ 4] During this period, Anika was writing songs but found her lyrics were often drowned out by guitarists when they performed together in bands.[ 3]
After meeting producer Geoff Barrow , who was looking for a singer to work with his band Beak ,[ 4] they recorded an album in 12 days with no overdubs .[ 5] The album was titled Anika , with Anika explaining she chose the name by taking out one letter from her real name as a way to distance herself from it personally in case people hated it.[ 5]
Anika was released in 2010 by Barrow's Invada imprint in Europe and by Stones Throw Records in the US,[ 1] and received positive reviews from contemporary critics. According to the music review aggregation of Metacritic , it garnered an average score of 65/100.[ 6] The album included a number of covers , such as "Yang Yang " by Yoko Ono , "Terry " by Twinkle , "End of the World " by Skeeter Davis , "Masters of War " by Bob Dylan , and "I Go to Sleep " by Ray Davies .[ 7]
Several of the songs on Anika found digital success on iTunes. "End of the World" peaked at number seventy-eight on the iTunes Japan Top 100 Alternative Songs,[ 8] while "Yang Yang" peaked at number sixty-four on the iTunes Spain Top 100 Alternative Songs.[ 9]
Anika later formed the band Exploded View , based in Mexico City, along with local musicians / producers, Martin Thulin, Hugo Quezada and Amon Melgarejo,[ 10] who released their self-titled debut album on Sacred Bones Records in 2016.[ 11] They later released a follow-up EP on the same label entitled "Summer Came Early, " which was said to be a comment on global warming , in November 2017.[ 12] A second album Obey was released in 2018.[ 11]
She returned in 2021 with a new Anika album, Change .[ 2] It received positive reviews from contemporary critics; according to the music review aggregation of Metacritic , it garnered an average score of 79/100.[ 13] This is to be followed by an album titled Abyss in 2025. [ 14]
Anika EP (Stones Throw / Invada April 2013)[ 15]
"Yang Yang " (Stones Throw / Invada 2010)
"No One's There" (Stones Throw / Invada 2011)
"99 Red Balloons" Invada Allstars feat. Anika* (2016) *Charity single for the Anti-trident Campaign
"No More Parties in the Attic" - Exploded View (Sacred Bones - 2016)
"Finger Pies" (Sacred Bones / Invada 2021)
"Change" (Sacred Bones / Invada 2021)
"Rights" (Sacred Bones / Invada 2021)
"Never Coming Back" (Sacred Bones / Invada 2021)
"Hearsay" (Sacred Bones 2025)
"Walk Away" (Sacred Bones 2025)
Anika & Camera - 2am (Bureau B - 2014)
Anika & T.Raumschmiere - Sleeping Pills and Habits (Shitkatapult - 2015)
Dave Clarke I’m Not Afraid (Feat Anika) (Skint Records 2017) from the Dave Clarke LP The Desecration Of Desire
Tricky - Lonely Dancer (Feat Anika) ([False Idols] 2020) from Tricky 2020 EP
I Like Trains - Eyes To The Left (Feat Anika) (Atlantic Curve 2020) from I Like Trains KOMPROMAT
Summer Came Early EP - Exploded View (Sacred Bones 2017)
Behind the Glass - Shackleton with Anika (Woe To The Septic Heart! July 2017)
^ a b "Anika · Biography · Artist ⟋ RA" . Resident Advisor . Retrieved 9 March 2025 .
^ a b Jensen, Ingrid (2 August 2021). "ANIKA: the Totally Wired Interview" . Totally Wired Magazine . Retrieved 9 March 2025 .
^ a b O’Shaughnessy, Michael P. "The Agit Reader • Feature: Anika" . www.agitreader.com . Retrieved 9 March 2025 .
^ a b "Interview: Anika, Working with Portishead's Geoff Barrow, Makes an Album You Don't Have to Like" . CDM Create Digital Music . 4 March 2011. Retrieved 9 March 2025 .
^ a b Valen, Violet (12 December 2010). "Buddy Society Blog" . Archived from the original on 12 December 2010. Retrieved 9 March 2025 .
^ "Anika Reviews, Ratings, Credits, and More at Metacritic" . Metacritic . Retrieved 5 March 2011 .
^ Phares, Heather (2010). "Anika – Anika" . Allmusic . Rovi Corporation . Retrieved 5 March 2011 .
^ "End of the World by Anika – Song Analysis" . Music-chart.info . Archived from the original on 18 July 2011. Retrieved 5 March 2011 .
^ "Yang Yang by Anika – Song Analysis" . Music-chart.info . Archived from the original on 18 July 2011. Retrieved 5 March 2011 .
^ Troyano, Maxime (1 October 2018). "Exploded View - 'Obey' " . Mowno (in French). Retrieved 9 March 2025 .
^ a b "Anika returned to music by accidentally forming Exploded View" . Loud And Quiet . 11 July 2016. Retrieved 9 March 2025 .
^ McBride, Cathal (14 November 2017). "Exploded View – Summer Came Early" . The Thin Air . Retrieved 9 March 2025 .
^ "Critic Reviews "Change" by Anika" . Metacritic . Retrieved 9 March 2025 .
^ "Anika Shares "Hearsay" From New Album: Listen" . Stereogum . 4 February 2025. Retrieved 9 March 2025 .
^ "Anika | Anika EP | Stones Throw Records" . Stonesthrow.com. Retrieved 13 October 2013 .