Nemo's 'Arthouse' Album Marks Post-Eurovision Career Evolution
Swiss Eurovision winner launches ambitious debut album blending mainstream pop with experimental sounds, showcasing artistic growth beyond competition success.
Swiss Eurovision winner launches ambitious debut album blending mainstream pop with experimental sounds, showcasing artistic growth beyond competition success.

"Thereâs only one first album. It had to reflect everything I wanted to say."
"I see the album as a house. And this song is the garden, the last room."
A full 18 months after seizing the crystal microphone in MalmĂś, Nemo has finally broken the anticipation with a definitive artistic statement. While many Eurovision winners rush to capitalize on fleeting viral fame with hasty releases, the Swiss sensation took a calculated step back. "Thereâs only one first album," Nemo declared to Keystone-SDA, emphasizing that this project required absolute fidelity to their vision rather than a quick cash-grab.
The delay was not a pause; it was a strategic recalibration. Nemo admits that the sheer energy required to promote the winning track, The Code, forced a necessary postponement of the wider project. However, the resultâArthouseâproves the wait was critical. This is not merely a collection of songs; it is a deliberate evolution that distances the artist from the competition circuit and cements their status as a serious musical force. By placing The Code as the final track, Nemo effectively closes the chapter on the contest, treating the hit not as the anchor, but as the "garden"âa point of exit from the media storm and entry into a new era of autonomy.
Nemo has built Arthouse quite literally from the ground up, utilizing a striking architectural metaphor that transforms the listening experience into a physical journey. The album is conceived as a house, where every single track unlocks a specific room, creating a spatial narrative that is rare in today's streaming-focused landscape. Listeners are not just hearing a playlist; they are walking through Nemo's psyche.
The precision of this concept is staggering. The track "Casanova" inhabits a grand ballroom, evoking elegance and performance, while the pulse-pounding "Godâs a Raver" is confined to the claustrophobic intensity of a club bathroom. "Unexplainable" resides in the attic, a space for memory and dust. This "interior place" serves as a refuge, a constructed universe where the artist feels at ease. By framing the album as a physical structure, Nemo invites the audience to inhabit these spaces, turning the abstract nature of music into something tangible and immersive.
Borrowing the term "Arthouse" from independent cinema, Nemo boldly rejects the sanitized polish of standard pop music. The artist explicitly states an intention to create a "space between the mainstream and the experimental," a dangerous middle ground that few Eurovision alumni dare to tread. The album is a study in stark contrasts, oscillating violently between danceable hooks and darker, more abrasive sounds.
"Music doesnât always have to be pleasant," Nemo asserts with striking confidence. "Like in the cinema, it can be uncomfortable. Thatâs what makes art alive." This refusal to cater to the listener's comfort is a radical departure from the industry norm. By embracing dissonance and tension, Nemo challenges the Swiss and international audience to engage with the music actively rather than passively consuming it. The album stands as a testament that true artistic vitality often lies in the uncomfortable friction between the expected and the avant-garde.
Arthouse functions as a powerful queer manifesto, positioned deliberately at the crossroads of genres and societal expectations. The album explores the friction between Nemo's safe, constructed interior world and a "harsher, more standardised world outside." This project is deeply personal and undeniably political, confronting the irritation that the unexpected often provokes in the general public.
Nemo embraces this friction, noting that while their staging and identity may irritate some, that very irritation is a catalyst for questioning norms. "Iâm on the border. This album is about that," the artist states. It captures the contemporary queer experienceâa constant negotiation between finding sanctuary and confronting a rigid reality. By asserting a position on the fringes, Nemo transforms personal vulnerability into a public stronghold, ensuring that Arthouse resonates not just as music, but as a cultural document for a community navigating similar tensions.
With the album launched, the focus now shifts to the visceral experience of the live performance. Nemo is set to bring this architectural concept to life on tour starting this autumn, promising a show that translates the album's "rooms" into a stage reality. Fans can expect a visual feast that mirrors the sonic diversity of the record.
Crucially, the visual signature that captivated millions in MalmĂś remains intact. The pink hat with rabbit earsâdescribed by Nemo as "like a wig that embellishes my head"âwill make its triumphant return. This commitment to a distinct visual identity signals that while the music has evolved into experimental territories, the iconic persona that Switzerland fell in love with is still very much present. As Nemo prepares to take Arthouse on the road, the Swiss music scene braces for a tour that promises to be as theatrical and uncompromising as the album itself.