Snakehips

Since forming only 18 months ago, Snakehips have made their name with Hype Machine chart-topping remixes for Banks, The Weeknd, Bondax and Wild Belle, which between them have notched up more than 30 million plays on Soundcloud and YouTube. Last May, the mysterious production duo built on their early acclaim with On & On, a Radio 1-championed debut single that set out their signature sound, a sensual up-to-date take on old school R&B and hip hop.

In time to usher in another summer and ahead of appearances at major festivals across the UK and abroad, Snakehips are ready to release their glorious, second single, Days With U, featuring Disclosure and Rudimental vocalist Sinead Harnett. With the vibe of long, hot, hazy days coursing through its veins, Days With U sounds both retro and fresh and as dreamily laid-back as it is dancefloor-friendly. Driven as much by melody as by hip hop beats and shimmering synths, itā€™s a song about heartbreak that, somehow, sounds resolutely life-affirming.

With a debut album well underway and due out early next year, Snakehips have decided itā€™s time to reveal themselves as 24 year old Londoners Oliver Lee and James Carter. Despite a shared home city, the pair met on separate business trips to Hong Kong, where they bonded over shared musical interests. They shared a flight to L.A., began talking music and booked a studio in which to work on a track. It went so well that within days of returning to London they nudged their laptops together and Snakehips was born.

The pairā€™s first release was a remix of Chicago band Wild Belleā€™s Itā€™s Too Late; their next a remix of Gold by electronic duo Bondax. Both used only the original vocal, topped the Hype Machine chart and revealed Snakehipsā€™ love of ā€˜90s hip hop, disco and vintage soul.

The reaction to their own music, however, was in a different league. The steamy, sultry, lushly-produced On & On, featuring up-and-coming, Australian singer George Maple, sent blogs in to a frenzy, reached the Top 10 of the iTunes electronic charts on both sides of the Atlantic and caught the attention of Radio 1ā€™s Zane Lowe, Annie Mac, Mistajam and Monki, for whom Snakehips recorded a guest mix. Like Days With U, On & On was a song about heartbreak that sounded like summer. Or as Ollie outs it: ā€œItā€™s about a bloke George was in love with who didnā€™t love her back.ā€ On & Onā€™s soulful blend of retro and modern became Snakehipsā€™ trademark.

ā€œWe love the vibe of 90s music ā€“ Hi-Tek, Pete Rock, that golden era of R&B with singers like Aaliyah and SWV,ā€ says James. ā€œWeā€™re suckers for anything with cool soul samples and old drum beats. But weā€™re also influenced by living in London. We borrow from the past to make music for the future.ā€

Last year, Snakehips heard the Banksā€™ song Warm Water and loved it so much they contacted Banks, asking to remix it. She sent the acapella, they added funky disco music, had another blog hit on their hands and were rewarded by being asked to rework The Weekndā€™s Wanderlust. After The Weeknd tweeted his praise for their version, it received a million and a half plays in less than a month.

In between official singles, Snakehips have put out a handful of sample-based tracks, among them the Annie Mac-premiered Make It and Miss U Always, a love song posted for fans on Valentineā€™s Day. They sold out a tour of Australia, shows across the UK and were in demand to play clubs and festivals everywhere from Paris, Vienna, Warsaw and Berlin to the Netherlands. The pairā€™s debut London date, this May, at Village Underground, sold out so quickly a second show had to be added.

Most of 2014 so far has been spent working on their as-yet-untitled debut album, which will be preceded by a third single, Falling, featuring Meleka. All releases are on Snakehipsā€™ own label Hoffman West, named after a fictional character Ollie created to get in to clubs for free.

ā€œPut the name Hoffman West, plus five, on a guest list and no one asks questions when you get to the door,ā€ he explains. ā€œThereā€™s something about that name that sounds so important that youā€™re always ushered straight in.ā€

Itā€™s a busy summer ahead for Snakehips with appearances lined up at festivals such as Glastonbury, Reading & Leeds, Love Saves The Day as well as European jaunts at Outlook in Croatia and Pitch in Amsterdam. With a debut album also in the pipeline, thereā€™s certainly a lot more of exciting things in store from the London based production duo.