Itâs not easy to tell whoâs doing what on âMata,â one of the highlights of NÃdia and Valentina Magalettiâs debut album together. Neither artist has attempted a collaboration quite like this before, and perhaps thatâs why itâs so propulsive. Beatmaker NÃdia has never worked with a prominent multi-instrumentalist providing raw material on the fly; drummer Magaletti doesnât typically work within a dance music context, especially not one like NÃdiaâs. In âMata,â their scuffed congas, bongos, and synths go scrambling around the beat, alive with the anticipation of how they might interlock next. You can hear the two artists pushing each other as they meet in the middle.
Raised between Bordeaux and her birthplace of Vale da Amoreira, in the greater Lisbon region, NÃdia has moved outward from her roots in the Lisbon sceneâs continuum of diasporic sounds, like kuduro and tarraxinha, from Lusophone Africa. Since emerging on SoundCloud as a teenager and joining the label PrÃncipe Discos, sheâs put her spin on tracks from Fever Ray, Yaeji, and Kelela and mingled with a wide sweep of global party sounds to demonstrate just how far she can take her beats without losing her signature flair. The Italy-born, London-based Magaletti is similarly prolific on a different circuit: Whether sheâs making post-hardcore with Moin, tight psychedelic jams with Tomaga, or her anthological solo projects, her unassuming but versatile approach treats percussion as a ânarrativeâ in which each new breakbeat or clattering found object is a naturalâand functionalârhythmic choice. NÃdia and Valentina have been leaning in parallel directions lately. NÃdiaâs 2023 album 95 MINDJERES brought her strain of batida into a looser, more open-ended mode, uncannily approximating the improvisational feel of a live band with her laptop-producer chops. Meanwhile, a recent project by Magalettiâs dub band Holy Tongue with Shackleton spotlights the way dance musicâs constraints can give a performerâs off-kilter textural idea the freedom to take root and evolve across an extended beat.
NÃdia and Magalettiâs collaborative debut, Estradas, gets a lot out of its setup. Each track is built out of shifting polyrhythms that they compose together: Magaletti plays various instrumental lines to make up the beats, while NÃdia contributes her own programmed loops. The frothy MIDI snap of NÃdiaâs earlier projects gives way to a rigorous studio mix courtesy of Magalettiâs Moin bandmate Tom Halstead, with each instrument dutifully micâd up and given space. When itâs played straight, adapting NÃdia-style dance beats to an aesthetic closer to Raime can feel gratuitous, like those blown-out remixes of popular songs you hear in movie trailers. But the ensemble-oriented presentation helps the duo pull off some new tricks.