If "by" was NiCKY alone at the piano, mascara slightly smudged, "with" is NiCKY after midnight, jacket off, lights low, surrounded by accomplices who know exactly when to enter and, more importantly, when to leave space. This EP doesn’t abandon intimacy, it dresses it up, then gently pulls the costume back off again.
NiCKY comes from London’s queer performance ecosystem, a place where persona is survival kit and art form at once. What’s striking here is how consciously that armor is loosened. "with" is not louder because it wants to impress, it’s fuller because it wants company. The songs breathe differently: piano still anchors everything, but now there are saxophones that sidle up like flirtatious strangers, drums that know restraint is sexier than bravado, and voices that appear like confidants rather than backing singers.
The EP opens with "I Saw You", a song that understands cruising not as provocation but as recognition. It moves with the calm assurance of someone who has learned that seeing and being seen can be an act of care. NiCKY’s vocal delivery, half-spoken, half-sung, carries that fragile authority familiar from artists who turn vulnerability into posture, though here it never curdles into mannerism.
"The Fall" is the emotional fulcrum, a piece that balances precarity and resilience without turning either into slogan. The spoken-word introduction feels like a threshold, the piano lines arrive cautiously, and then the song lifts itself into something quietly defiant. It’s not a rallying cry, it’s a hand on your shoulder saying: you’re not imagining this, but you’re not alone either.
Then there’s "Private Glance", which struts in wearing a grin sharp enough to puncture art-world pretensions. Saxophones skitter, rhythms tilt, and NiCKY delivers one of their most playful performances to date. It’s funny, yes, but not frivolous. The humor cuts because it knows the room too well, the mirrors, the masks, the choreography of cool. Camp here is not decoration, it’s a diagnostic tool.
Across the EP, collaboration never feels like dilution. The presence of musicians from adjacent worlds, alt-jazz, avant-pop, underground performance, doesn’t blur NiCKY’s voice, it frames it. "Fool’s Convention" closes things on a note of tender introspection, floating somewhere between torch song and dream sequence, as if the EP itself is exhaling after a long, necessary confession.
"with" is about queer vulnerability, yes, but not the Instagram-ready kind. This is vulnerability as process: awkward, layered, occasionally contradictory. NiCKY doesn’t ask for empathy, they construct situations where empathy becomes unavoidable. The result is an EP that feels less like a statement and more like an invitation. Not to watch, not to applaud, but to sit nearby, listen closely, and stay a little longer than planned.