Photos + Editing /Â Andrew T. White
Styling + Creative Direction / Sam Bates
Makeup / Tony Tulve using Fluid Beauty + Starlina +Megan KellyÂ
Photography Assistant / Owen Benfield
Set Created by Indie Studios
STORY / ERICA RUSSELL
If Charli XCX is the Nick Fury of pop music â always geniusly one step ahead of the game, whether sheâs behind the scenes or at the forefront of the battle for next-level music â then Nasty Cherry are the Avengers of pop-rock.
Featuring model Gabbriette Bechtel on lead vocals, Charli XCX live drummer Debbie Knox-Hewson on drums, Kitten frontwoman Chloe Chaidez on guitar, and set decorator Georgia Somary on bass, Nasty Cherry are a whoâs who of diverse It Girl power players. Signed to Charliâs label, Vroom Vroom Recordings, the alt-pop group was conceptualized and A&Râd by the pop heavyweight in 2018.
âShe had this idea a long time ago, about putting her friends together to make an all-girl band that actually played instruments,â Gabbriette shares of Charliâs involvement in their formation. âWe all knew her at different points in her life. She brought us together to make music and, at the time, none of us even knew each other that well. Sheâs a curator in that way.â
While the band is autonomous, Charli maintains a deeply collaborative relationship with Nasty Cherry, helping them with promotion and even co-writing on some of their songs. âSheâs very much like a pop artist fairy godmother,â Georgia quips. âWe all respect her as an artist. Sheâs included in official things, as well as fun things and music that we work on. Sheâs part of it. She also has such a great ear and eye, so we all look to her.â
Adds Gabbriette, âSheâs always told us to be absolutely and completely ourselves all the time. To listen to each other and not be afraid to speak upâeven argue if thereâs something we really believe in, but come together in the end. Sheâs also helped us by showing us the way she writes. I think weâve all learned a lot from her about writing and how to collaborate.â
On New Yearâs Day 2019, Nasty Cherry was introduced to the world in a way that can only be described as the epitome of groupâs irreverent, badass, sexy bravado: with an Instagram video of champagne being poured into two flutes balanced on Georgiaâs flawless bare ass in a jacuzzi.
âWe thought it would be a really fun way of getting it out there,â Gabbriette admits, laughing. âI donât think we thought that was going to be how we announced it, but we decided to tell the world we were a band and that was our favorite moment captured together at that point. So, we thought weâd share the love!â
Three months later, the band released their official debut single, âWin.â The track, a delightfully cocky, glittering, Garbage-esque guitar-driven anthem about not letting shit get you down, offered a promising, instantly-catchy sonic introduction â but by then the four women had already garnered a considerable fanbase online courtesy of their mysterious social media rollout.
âIt was quite mental,â Georgia says of gaining a following before the band even knew when they would release their first track. âIt was funny to see people commenting, âWe canât wait to hear your music!â We were like, âWe hope you like you like it! We promise weâre not just putting our asses in front of your face!â You really want people to like the music when theyâve already been invested. Itâs amazing how much people care.â
Aside from coming from four very different backgrounds and not really knowing each other before jamming together for the first time, the women of Nasty Cherry also hail from opposite sides of the pond: Gabbriette and Chloe from the U.S., Georgia and Debbie from the U.K. Their cross-cultural roots lend an expansive edge to their distinct sound, which pulls influence from hallmarks of both American and British pop and rock.
On Georgia: Top / Orseund Iris Skirt / Greta Constantine Boots / Model’s Own Jewelry / Shiny Squirrel On Gabi: Dress / Sies Marjan Shoes / Tabitha Simmons Jewelry / Shiny Squirrel Briefs / Fisch On Debbie: Jacket / Sally Lapointe Dress / Cinq a Sept Shoes / Salvatore Ferragamo Jewelry / Shiny Squirrel Belt / Orseund Iris On Chloe: Top / Orseund Iris Tights / Stine Goya (Bottom Option 1) Briefs : VDM the Label Jewelry / Shiny Squirrel Boots / Joseph
Nasty Cherryâs myriad visual and musical influences are deeply apparent in the songs theyâve released thus far, from the â90s electro-grunge glam of âWin,â to the surfy sparkle of âLive Forever,â to the dreamy, lo-fi, â60s girl group shoegaze of âWhat Do You Like in Me.â (The latter trackâs spooky â80s VHS tape-meets-Elvira aesthetic is not to be missed.) Luckily, the bandâs collective library of favorite songs helps to stimulate the ladiesâ creative mojo.
âGabby stays in a classic rock zone, like Bob Dylan and The Doors,â Chloe shares. âHer influences are always influencing me. It might not be new bands, but itâs her library thatâs refreshing for me. Iâve never felt freaked out by any music reference anyone has shared!â
âWe have quite a few bands that we love, like The Runaways. Itâs definitely fun to share artists we grew up with, like Hilary Duff.â Georgia adds. âWe just play songs that have meant a lot to us. There hasnât been a U.K.-U.S. splitâitâs been a big melting pot.â
Plus, Gabbriette says, much of the groupâs influences âcome from attitude and aestheticâ: âA lot of the stuff Georgia brings visually influences us directly. Weâre all big fans of Josie and the Pussycats and The Runaways. The Spice Girls are such a huge influence as both a band and an attitude.â
A DIY spirit runs heavy through Nasty Cherryâs veins, whether theyâre using their own clothes and housewares as props in music videos (âWDYLIMâ) or self-directing them (âLive Foreverâ). But embracing a passionate do-it-yourself attitude is part of the bandâs message of feminist empowerment, and allows the women freedom outside of potentially restrictive budgets or sponsorships.
âBeing in a band with three other women, youâve got your three biggest hype girls with you all the time,â Debbie shares. âEvery idea is championed to at least give it a go. Thatâs all you need to be in a band. We hope that people see that. Anyone can start a band and start making music.â
Adds Georgia, âI think thereâs a joy in making things and not having to ask permission from someone else, especially when you have an all-female band. Itâs been such a joy for us. The DIY nature of it means you can control your stuff a bit more.â
From the get-go, Nasty Cherry has largely been celebrated â and incessantly referred to â as a âgirl band.â While the group, whose debut EP is due out in the autumn, is indeed comprised of four women, the gendered marginalization and connotations of the âgirl bandâ designation has left Chloe, Georgia, Gabbriette, and Debbie with mixed feelings. Some find the phrasing problematic; others, uplifting and intentional.
âI like being referred to as a band, that feels more natural to me,â Georgia admits. âIâve definitely used the term âgirl bandâ thoughâsome days it feels empowering, other days it feels really demeaning. Itâs an up and down for me. Iâd love for people to think of Nasty Cherry as just a band. Iâd love to live in a world where we donât have to put the word âgirlâ in front of that.â
âThere doesnât need to be any âgirlâ context or whatever,â Gabbriette insists. âWeâre working just as hard as any other bands that are all-male or mixed gender. Our sound is different from anyone elseâs and it doesnât fucking matter.â
Debbie, meanwhile, âactually really likes the term.â âThere was a drumming day in London a couple weeks ago. Itâs super geeky, but I live for that kind of thing. There were 200 drummers and I was the only female there. I donât want to try and fit into the masses of the music industry. I want to make it clear. I want people to know that this is a girl band and put it out there. Maybe one day thatâll be something that wonât need to be explicitly stated, but for now, for me, it feels empowering.â
Chloe adds that the topic is a âcan of worms,â but that the term has lent a sense of visibility she didnât quite lean into early in her career. âIn my other band [Kitten], Iâd often get asked what it felt like to be a woman in music. For years, I didnât like that question, and itâs still a little irritating when you get asked over and over again. But I wasnât vocal about female empowerment throughout my teen years. Now that Iâm older, I think itâs really important to vocalize that youâre a woman in music, that you love women who make music. I feel both ways about it.â
âWhen you get those kinds of questions about being women in the industry and being in a girl band, I think, âWell, is it going to be young girls reading that, wanting to know what the answer is?â At which point I donât want to be like, âNo, I just want to fit in,ââ Debbie muses. âThatâs how I feel about it. Women are great and I just want to see them make more music.â
On Gabbi: Jacket / Acne Studios Dress / Orseund Iris Boots / Frye On Georgia: Dress / Kalmanovich Boots / Georgiaâs Own On Chloe: Top / Orseund Iris Skirt / Orseund Iris Shoes / Isa Tapia Earring / Shiny Squirrel On Debbie: Dress / Kalmanovich Shoes / Isa Tapia
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