Janine has been waiting for this moment for a long time. It's been two years since the Kiwi singer, songwriter and producer finished 99, her debut album, and almost 20 since the year it's named after. After attracting buzz since 2013 with her singles, EPs and mixtapes – especially Hold Me, her breakthrough single featuring Pusha T – Janine says finally releasing her first full-length almost feels like "fantasy".
"It was meant to come out the year before last, and then it was meant to come out the beginning of last year, then late last year," says Janine. "It got stuck in one of those situations where [Atlantic Records] were like, 'we want to build your buzz', and then I'm like, 'well, I need new music to build the buzz'."
But Janine's not frustrated with her label; quite the opposite. "With major labels, there are pros and cons," she says. "But I also think as artists, it's easy for us to mope sometimes and not take responsibility. The thing that was hard [is that] no one said it was going to be two years until it comes out. I was just waiting and waiting. But I could have put out a bunch of mixtapes and songs and then do things on my own; I didn't do that.
"So, like I said, as artists, as much as it's really really difficult and frustrating, I don't think you can ever fully rely on anyone else, you've got to make sure you make your own plans and keep pushing regardless of what the label does."
99 is the genesis of a new Janine. Her moniker used to be Janine and the Mixtape; a name she changed as she saw herself poised to have more agency and power as an artist. "When I first came up with it I was still living in New Zealand at the time … and now I thought, once I put this album out, I feel like I'm big enough as I am, and I want something moving forward that I can connect with when I'm a lot older."
As for the album's title, it pays homage to the innovators of her genre and takes aim at the sky. "99, and around the late 90s/early 2000s, I became very conscious to the music that I like, and a lot of the music around that sound influenced the album," she says. "Mariah Carey was one of my main influences. Then there was so much like Aaliyah, Craig David, Usher… a lot of Monica, Brandy, Ashanti, Janet Jackson. I also listened to Celine Dion so there was that pop influence.
"And then also, 99's one step away from being complete. I feel like this process has just been me being one step away from reaching where I want to be."
The fingerprints of the aforementioned artists are stamped all over 99, but it's Janine's ability to blend these elements with her intoxicating vocals (ranging from breathy and ethereal to anthemic and soulful) and cutting-edge production and that enables her to find her own unique identity within the genres of RnB, indie and pop.
It's a dynamic introduction to a rare kind of Kiwi singer – one who has found greater success in the US before building a fanbase back home. Janine moved to Brooklyn in 2012, when she began her professional music career, and signed with Atlantic Records in 2014. And now, fresh off the back of her first headlining tour, Janine says her US fans offer a generosity like none other.
"Fans over here are absolutely amazing … I can't express how they're just the best people," she says. "I've got such a huge mixture of people and they go nuts. I have people who wait so many hours before door, and I meet all my fans after shows and that can go on for like an hour."
As for fans in her homeland, watch this space. "Right now it's hard for me to foresee what's coming but I definitely am talking about that. When I come back I want to do everywhere in New Zealand."
LOWDOWN:
Who: Janine
What: New album 99
When: Out now