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A selection of articles from all our issues - go to 'The Magazine' to read them all, including exclusive interviews from Aston Barrett Jr., Niko Moon, Serena Ryder, Canaan Smith and many more...
Hi Elliah! Thanks for taking the time to talk today. You were born into a family of political refugees from the Soviet Union, and you’ve spoken in the past about feeling ‘less than American’. Your new album is an examination of identity from the unique perspective of someone who’s both inside and outside the culture at the same time. How easy was it to capture this for the project?
It was easy once the joke had occurred to me that I could make a patriotic Country album, where if you’re not really paying attention to the lyrics, you could think it’s just another honky-tonk record. But if you listen to the lyrics, you think, ‘Wait, what is that guy saying?!’ The joke was to make something with all of Country music’s traditional bona fides, recorded in Nashville with eighteen players, referencing other Country traditions and songs - but to then have the lyrics be a subversion of that, it was like the dominos just fell. When I was starting out, it was about saying ‘I can be just as folksy as people from more stereotypically ‘Country’ parts of America, and that I have just as much of a right to make this kind of music as anyone else. But now, with this album, that approach felt very unsatisfying. So I just had to embrace the imposter syndrome and the fears I’d had about how this would be received. People will either think, ‘This is really stupid’ - or they’ll think, ‘This is really stupid - in a good way’! I think what I love most about the album is how uplifting it is. That’s no mean feat given the weight of the themes you tackle. Was this a conscious decision to make the album a generally joyful record? Definitely. First and foremost because I’m trying to make a record that could really change some people’s minds about this country and the American identity. So I think it would’ve been very bad for anyone to leave this record thinking that I don’t love this country - because I do. While fully recognising how much of a scam the American Dream is for so many people, I am living proof of it. And I really do believe that could only happen here, and criticising this country comes from a place of love. Secondly, some of my biggest heroes musically are John Prine, Willie Nelson, and Bob Dylan when he’s feeling a little more light-hearted - artists whose lyrics kill with humour, kindness and laughter. Artists whose lyrics will crack you up with one line and punch you in the gut with the next. As a listener and as a human, humour is my language and it’s how I wanted to communicate on this album. Some of the most heart-wrenching songs are Country songs. Paradoxically, there is still a reluctance in the genre to put a label on things such as ‘anxiety’ and ‘depression’. People will sing ‘I’m so lonesome I could cry’ to their heart’s content, but we don’t get much discussion about Hank Williams actually having depression. What inspired you to be so open about your struggles with anxiety on this album? It’s part of the Hank Williams and George Jones mythology that they were deeply sick men. In the beginning of Jones’ career there was almost a fetishisation of his depression and alcoholism. Especially because Hank had just died so young, people were like, ‘We have to see George Jones because he might suffer the same fate soon!’ - which is insane! Now you listen to those songs and you can literally hear the devastation in his voice, but that’s morbidly twisted into a sales tactic. You know, I wasn’t hesitant about this song. My journey with talking about anxiety more openly had a lot to do with simply understanding that I was suffering from it, instead of just thinking I had this crippling personality flaw that I couldn’t control. It felt like it was my fault, and that I just sucked for being that way. My anxiety was triggered by a traumatic event when I was nineteen, and for a long time after that I had no idea what was wrong. I look back now and I’m like, ‘Wow, it seems so obvious’. But at the time I’d just think, ‘Wow, what is wrong with me? I’m so hot and bothered today!’ I was resistant to medicine for a while, because I’d heard all these horror stories about how it can cloud your creativity. The song ‘Anxiety’ was written in the depths of the decision to go on medication. As anyone who’s had an anxiety attack can relate to, it wasn’t anything huge - I just moved apartments. I went from a big space to a very small space. That’s the thing about anxiety, it’s not necessarily about crazy, traumatic things causing it, it’s just that your brain is imbalanced. I didn’t like who I was, I felt detached from my relationship - it was a whole mess of things. My journey was about accepting that I had anxiety, and learning how to deal with it. When it came to writing Country music about this, I just felt like it completely made sense. What was harder was feeling comfortable addressing it and talking about it, and treating it like something that’s distant and not ‘me’ so that I could put it into a song. The verses in ‘Anxiety’ are musically sparse, and the more built-out hook then comes in waves, which captures the way that anxiety often presents itself in waves. Absolutely. It’s gradual, which represents how the clouds keep forming and you don’t really clock that the third anxiety attack was worse than the second, and so on. It gets to the point where you’re like, ‘How did the chorus get to be this much?’ How do you use music to help your mental health? Do you find it more therapeutic creating or listening to music? Most of my time with anxiety it’s definitely listening over creating. Until three or four years ago where I hit a really bad low and decided to seek help, I had this attitude of ‘This is not going to affect me, so I don’t need to write about it’. I had the mentality that I’d already won against my anxiety. I definitely listen to more music than is healthy - there was a time when Spotify would limit how many songs you could listen to, and I blew my maximum within two days! There are albums in my life that are like infinite banks for my emotions. Some albums, you listen to a lot and then you get to a point where you think, ‘Okay, that now reminds me too much of that time in my life’. But there are certain albums that are bottomless wells for me to pour my feelings into. The relatable nature of hearing what other artists are going through has been a huge coping mechanism for me - even though, like you said, nobody was naming it as ‘anxiety’ or ‘depression’. I love ‘Living proof’, particularly this lyric about your mother: “Her second tongue was English, but her first was kindness”. It’s such a powerful message about viewing someone in terms of who they are rather than extraneous things like the language they speak. Especially at the moment, the issue of xenophobia unfortunately seems to grow more pressing each year. Having said that, given the hostility that is often shown to migrants, to me this record doesn’t generally have a tone of anger - when it would perhaps be understandable if there was some. Is this a reflection of where you’re at, or would you say this is more about escapism? I would say that sonically, you’re 100% right that not any one song tips into a place that you think, ‘Oh yeah, this is the angry song.’ But lyrically, I feel like I can identify some lines where I’m like ‘Ow!’ There are so many outlets in my life where I have these conversations from a place of anger, and there are many outlets where I feel like I use anger effectively to do what I can to make a difference. But I am not angry when I make music. To make this album angry just felt dishonest to me. I’m upset, I’m depressed, I’m manic - I’m whatever you want to call me. But I’m not ever really angry. When I am, I feel like my music suffers. That’s a huge statement of privilege, because I think there are many people who don’t experience a similar privilege to not be angry when they make music. But that’s just my personal process. It’s the opposite for many artists that talk about how they can’t make music unless they’re going through heartache. For me, I need to be pretty stable to write music. William Wordsworth - and please excuse me for being pretentious, but I did English at University! - he has an essay where he says that poetry is ‘the superfluous overflow of emotion recollected in tranquillity’. I always loved that because it’s not just recollected as in remembered, it’s re-collected. So it’s not emotion as it overflows, but it’s the process of re-collecting it once you’ve processed it. I love ‘Keep the Grass in the Ground’, and the light-hearted metaphor of this. What’s the meaning behind that phrase for you? On the surface, it’s just this picture of a bored kid needing entertainment, and they will just yank grass out of the ground because it feels satisfying. Why not? But just because something is beautiful and there, it does not mean that it’s yours. You know? There are so many ways to get so much out of life without it being at the expense of something else or someone else. That’s the underlying message of this song. It’s like a momentary thing for you because you’re lost or bored or whatever, but it has a long-term negative effect, so why would you do that? Folk and Country music have a strong tradition of storytelling, which is one of the things that draws me to it. As well as on your new album, you’ve brought your storytelling talents to the stage by writing a number of musicals. How do you find this complements your career as a solo artist? In college I was in a band in which I co-wrote the songs, but I hadn’t ever written a song by myself. My friend then asked me if I wanted to write a musical with her and I said, ‘Yes - as long as it could be about Folk music!’ The following summer I was at The New York Musical Theatre Festival, and that built into a few musical theatre jobs. But the whole time I wasn’t listening to musical theatre that much - I was listening to Country and Folk. I was making music inspired by the music I was listening to, but I wasn’t actually making the kind of music I was listening to.I decided to then pursue the singer-songwriter route. Now that I get to do both musical theatre and singer-songwriting, the symbiosis is so obvious to me. I know that songs from a musical are too specific to a particular musical to be truly released on their own, but I know they’re going to be that much more memorable if they could be released as their own thing. On the flip side, writing songs that tell stories in theatre has made me a much more confident storyteller through my songwriting. We ask all our interviewees to name their favourite three songs that have a theme of mental wellbeing. What would be your choices? 1. Blue Umbrella - John Prine 2. So Much To Do - Willie Nelson 3.’Til I Gain Control Again - Rodney Crowell
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Often, the best therapy is getting lost in the carefully constructed world of a film or TV series. Here are a selection of songs that remind us of some of our favourite on-screen moments! David & Maxim 10. I'll Be There For You - The Rembrandts (Friends)It's easy to imagine that when they were producing the pilot of their newest sitcom they just plucked the nearest upbeat pop song off of the shelf. With 'I'll Be There For You' they made the perfect choice, whether intentional or not. The song perfectly encapsulates what the show is all about, when things aren't going your way or when times are tough - I'll be there for you. This was mirrored throughout the whole ten seasons of the show as through a range of ups and downs the group supported each other and stuck together. Not only does the song perfectly tie in with the show, it's also really catchy! From the opening guitar riff to the hand clapping the song hooks you in, which alone makes it one of the best theme songs of any show! Nearly 30 years on and all the nostalgia the song, and show, carries has just further cemented it as a timeless classic. 9. I Cross My Heart - George Strait (Pure Country)This is the curveball of my selection, because the film isn’t too well-known, and although a big hit in the States, ‘I Cross My Heart’ didn’t make quite as big a splash across the pond. But as far as soundtracks go, George Strait’s ‘Pure Country’ is stellar from start to finish, and has become one of his best-selling albums of all time. ‘I Cross My Heart’ sounds exactly how the film feels - it’s cheesy, it’s gooey, it’s corny, but it’s also irresistibly charming. The title character, played by Strait, spots his love in the crowd and sings the song in its entirety as if she’s the only person in the arena. Strait himself confessed that they tried to pack as many songs into the film as possible, to minimise the amount of acting he’d have to do! Well I’m just glad this one made the cut. 8. You've Got a Friend in Me - Randy Newman (Toy Story)Toy Story will always be one of the classics from arguably one of the greatest eras of Pixar animations. The imagination behind the film is astounding, and the story of camaraderie and purpose is heartwarming all the way through. The song appears over a montage of Andy playing with his favourite toy Woody, but the song gives it a deeper meaning. Woody may only be a toy (as far as Andy is concerned at least) but he is so much more than that for Andy, and Woody's eagerness to keep Andy happy throughout the film only cements the bond that they share. The song is a simplistic yet beautiful number about the importance of friendship, trust and commitment in a film with a similar message. 7. Club Can't Handle Me - Flo Rida ft. David Guetta (Step Up 3D)I imagine you had one of two possible reactions to this choice - either you’ve never heard of it, or you had a mental ‘Oh yeah!’ moment as you remember this awesome throwback. I forget just how many chart-topping smashes Flo Rida accrued throughout his career, and for me ‘Club Can’t Handle Me’ is one of the best. Do you remember that brief period of time where dance-battle films with awesome soundtracks were a big thing? Well Step Up 3D arrived at the heart of that phase, and while the film perhaps wasn’t too memorable, don’t let that detract from the music. ‘Club Can’t Handle Me’ is a Pop-EDM anthem helmed by legendary DJ David Guetta and purpose-built for the club. But whether you’re out on the town or dancing in your living room, queue up this song and it’ll give you an audio energy boost. 6. Everybody Needs Somebody to Love - The Blues BrothersNow an inclusion from my favourite film of all time. This wacky masterpiece is a lesson in how to mix over the top action and hilarious characters with great music. Containing genuine heavyweights from jazz, funk and soul the cast is one of the most talented of all time, although not always at acting it would seem! The story is that of two unlikely heroes on their 'Mission from God' to save the orphanage they were raised at by putting the old band back together for one big show. Unfortunately what starts as a red light pull over spirals its way to a multi car (and one RV) police chase as the film continues. This song is the first performed by the Blues Brothers themselves at their one time event and shows even the fiercest of cops enjoying the entertainment. It's probably not my favourite song from the film but it comes at such an iconic point in the film that I had to put it in! 5. Stayin' Alive - BeeGees (Saturday Night Fever) From the moment that funky baseline starts, there’s no turning back - you’ll be hooked on this iconic track. Continuing that unmistakable falsetto throughout the song is such a daring move, but one that has ensured this song will be etched into pop’s history books. Like a couple of omissions from our Top 10, such as Whitney’s ‘I Will Always Love You’ and Eminem’s ‘Lose Yourself’, ‘Stayin’ Alive’ is a classic example of the song transcending the film. I’m not entirely sure the lyrics make sense (does anyone really know what “The New York Times’ effect on man” is?) but it doesn’t matter - it still has me singing along every time. ‘How Deep Is Your Love’ is another one of my favourites from an unforgettable soundtrack. 4. Unshaken - D'Angelo (Red Dead Redemption 2) OK so I'm going to cheat a little and throw this in the mix despite it being from a video game. The way I'll get away with it is that it comes from a cinematic moment. RDR2 was a visual masterpiece with a story full of sharp twists and turns. I don't remember a time I've been so engaged in the characters, the whole thing played out like an Oscar worthy Western. There is one particular moment in the story where Arthur returns to America having had to complete some missions on an island overseas. Having been through a more than fair share of adversity already at this point in the story the game drops you back on land with your horse and sets your destination point a fair ride away. Shortly into the journey you are encouraged to enter cinematic mode. Upon doing so a montage ensues of Arthur riding through the stunning landscapes on the map backed with this beautiful song. The song's main line 'May I Stand Unshaken?' Is a testament to the resiliency of the character. The beauty of the story, this song and the scene it comes in means I just had to include it. 3. How Far I'll Go - Auli'i Cravalho (Moana)Anyone that knows me knows that this is probably my favourite film of all time. Yes, I’m aware it’s a Pixar film that’s aimed at children - but hey, maybe that just says something about my mental age…Aside from the magical storytelling and inspiring character arcs (just let me gush, okay), the songs are perfectly selected and accentuate all of the key emotional moments. Although ‘You’re Welcome’ gets all the attention, ’How Far I’ll Go’ is definitely my favourite. The way it begins in such a vulnerable and tender way, and then just builds to reach this emphatic, anthemic crescendo in the chorus. It’s a celebration of following your heart and venturing into the unknown, rather than taking the safe option and falling in with the crowd. It’s an inspirational lesson that can be applied to all situations in life - you do you, no matter what other people say. No wonder this film always makes me cry. 2. Take Me Home, Country Roads - Dwight & Andy (The Office US)The American version of The Office is my all time favourite TV show and this scene is one of the best moments. In an attempt to woo new receptionist Erin, Andy on his banjo and Dwight on his guitar both perform snippets of this classic song. In an attempt to come out on top both are overly critical of each other and try using banjo solos and German singing to come out on top. In a classic enemies become friends TV moment Andy and Dwight begin performing simultaneously, and ultimately find brotherhood in the music. It's such a great moment that demonstrates the pure joy music can bring to even the two fiercest of rivals. It is also a great listen and you find yourself really enjoying this musical interlude, that is until stupid Toby ruins the whole thing by telling them to stop. Jerk. 1. A Million Dreams - Ziv Zaifman, Hugh Jackman & Michelle Williams (The Greatest Showman)If Moana takes my top movie spot, then The Greatest Showman is probably my second favourite film of all time. This completely shifted the goalposts for musical-films, incorporating more traditional elements while also making it feel unquestionably contemporary. The soundtrack represents this perfectly - you get the classic ballads (‘This is Me’, ‘Never Enough’) alongside the uptempo dance-pop of ‘Rewrite the Stars’ and ‘The Greatest Show’). But for me, the jewel in the crown is ‘A Million Dreams’, which finds a young PT Barnum singing about all of his fantastical hopes and aspirations. The special moment comes when the song transitions into a grown-up PT Barnum - he sings the same lyrics and it still carries that same sense of childhood wonder and innocence. I think that’s why I love the film so much - it’s essentially a tribute to the importance of always holding onto that sense of childhood wonder, no matter now many trials and tribulations life throws your way.
Maxim MowerHi Ernest! Thank you for taking the time to chat today! Country music has a great track record for producing some of the most emotionally vulnerable songs, and you new single epitomises this. I believe you drew inspiration for ‘Flower Shops’ from one of the greats, George Jones - how did the idea for the song come about?
I was on a sad song kick - well, I still am, and I might always be! It is the DNA of Country music. I went to the George Jones Essentials Playlist on Apple Music, and I picked Ben Burgess up at his house, we headed out to Mark Holman’s and we were listening to that playlist - just catching a vibe for the ride. ‘A Good Year for the Roses’ came on, and we were like, ‘Wow!’ We’d heard it before, but it just hit different that day. So Ben was like, ‘What if we write a title like, ‘It’s a good day for flower shops’? And I was like, ‘Hell yes!’ We started developing the main character, and by the time we got to Mark Holman’s the melodies were already pouring out. We had the song written in 45 minutes. It felt very honest for both of us, we’d both been in that guy’s shoes, and I think the sonics of it are really refreshing. It’s not like it’s never been done before, but it’s been a while since we’ve had some steel guitar in Country and I just think it’s a nice tip of the hat to our forefathers. I think it might be time to have something other than just party feel-good songs, because, let’s be honest, it’s been a sucky couple of years! The list of hit songs you've written spans across genres, having penned tracks for the likes of Diplo, ZAYN and Florida Georgia Line. You originally leant more towards rap than Country. Equally, your recent releases in particular are testaments to all that’s great about Country music. Where do you stand in terms of the genre-fluidity versus the Country traditionalists debate? I think modern generations grow up on multiple genres. You can stubbornly not listen to other genres, but if you’re born in 1990 or later, then you’re going to have grown up with a lot of different music. Now, with streaming platforms, you put on a playlist and you’re going to have Morgan Wallen, DaBaby, Drake, George Strait - it’s all coming at you in one go. For me, I stand where I’ve always stood. I know that I can be my most honest self with my version of Country music, which leans more towards the traditional. I’m not breaking down walls with my music. It’s more a case of ‘I’m comfortable here and I want to make stuff I want to listen to'. I love the Locals Only project that you put out in 2019. The tropical Country atmosphere that you bring to that is so relaxing. What drew you to this sound in particular, and what's your favourite song off that record? Well, that sound was another thing that happened organically. [My wife] Delaney’s dad has a house in St. Thomas and that’s where a lot of her art is inspired from too. The Virgin Islands are like a home away from home. I cut my teeth doing bar gigs in St. Thomas for years - Friday-Saturday shows for a meal and a couple hundred bucks. So that album was primarily written during the island phase, and it’s all about young love and me and Delaney’s journey, the bubblegum side of it. ‘Locals Only' is probably my favourite song on the album. If I had to pick a second, I’d say ‘Brain On Love’. What would you say is the main way in which Flower Shops: The Album differs from Locals Only? I think it’s more of a mature sound. The story on the new album is the guy from Locals Only writing a series of love songs, and then being an idiot and almost losing it. It’s still a love story, only the character has grown up and been through a lot more. You feature on fellow Country singer HARDY's HIXTAPE Vol. 2, and a lot of people consider your track ‘Red Dirt Clouds’ to be one of the best on the project - it’s an anthem for small town living. What’s your favourite thing about ‘the Country’, and what’s your least favourite? My favourite thing about the countryside is definitely the driving atmosphere. The cliche is so real - a two-lane road on a brisk Autumn day with the windows down, that’s what Country roads are made for. Then you’ve got bonfires at night, another cliche in a Country song, but when you’re at a bonfire nobody’s like ‘Oh, this is so cliche!’ - you’re having the best time ever! All of the cliches we write about in Country songs are literally the greatest things about ‘the Country’. How many different ways can we say, ‘This rocks!’ My least favourite would be how far away it is from anything else - which is also the great thing about it at the same time. On your podcast, you sometimes talk about ‘redneck culture’, and I think there’s sometimes the stereotype of Country guys being macho and tough. Have you ever feared that being emotional and vulnerable through your songwriting might make people think you’re not ‘Country’ enough? That’s a good question. The answer would probably be ‘no’. However, some things are more marketable than others. Nobody’s ever told me not to go anywhere as far as writing, but there are just some things that the public are going to consume more readily than others. That has shaped me as I’ve grown and experimented with a lot of different sounds, I think I’ve consciously started to stay in a more marketable lane. But I still crank rap instrumentals on my way to the studio and freestyle for fun, I’ve got to do that, no matter what! But if I’m going to sit down and spend six hours away from my family writing, I’m going to make it count. Earlier this year, you made your Grand Ole Opry debut. What was that experience like? It was just surreal. The last time I was backstage in that building, I was probably ten years old. I was with one of the basketball players that my dad coached, because the player’s dad was a steel guitar player in the Opry band. He knew that I had just gotten a banjo and was super into it. He took me backstage and in-between set changes I got to stand in the circle, and I was like, ‘Man, I want to do that when I grow up!’ Fast forward and I’m backstage getting ready to perform. It was probably twenty years later, so it was incredible. To got to play 'Flower Shops' and have my whole family there, and it was beautiful. It was a dream-come-true night for me. How has becoming a father influenced your approach to songwriting - and to life? In every way, he’s been the coolest thing. Obviously, having a baby is hard, and words can’t describe that. But he’s just a ball of joy. I love him and he’s made me grow up twenty years in about six weeks. All the maturing I hadn’t done yet, I had to do. He’s crawling now and he’s waving - it’s all happening so fast. It’s incredible. He doesn’t have a song yet, but lifestyle-wise, I’m not drinking anymore - and I thought nothing would get me to stop drinking! I’m in my podcast room right now, and my bottle of Jack hasn’t been touched since the last set - it’s just a prop now! We previously featured Delaney, your wife, who’s a brilliant artist. One of the questions I asked her was that, given the fact that Delaney’s married to a Country artist and she works with other Country singers too, to what extent does she find that being surrounded by this musical energy has an influence on her artistic process? So I’d like to switch that around and ask you, to what extent do you find that being surround by Delaney’s artistic energy has an influence on your music? She’s definitely my muse - not just musically, but visually too. Today, we were literally making a vision-board, cutting out all of the aesthetics we’re aiming for from old magazines. We always dream up the way everything looks every time the visual starts coming together for my albums. She’s a huge influence - it wouldn’t look like it matches the sound unless Delaney’s touch was on it. And the flamingo motif - that’s so her! It was her before it was me, and she’s like, ‘You stole my thing!’ And I’m like, ‘No, you influenced my thing, it different - it’s our thing now…!’ Her fingerprints are all over Flower Shops. Finally, we ask all our interviews to name their favourite three songs that have a theme of mental health and wellbeing. What would be your choices? 1. Just Don’t Give a F*** - Eminem 2. Who Says I Can’t Get Stoned - John Mayer 3. Miss Otis Regrets (She’s Unable to Lunch Today) - Ella Fitzgerald Bonus. Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain - Willie Nelson Flower Shops: The Album is out now! David DawsonSpring has sprung and in the typical generosity of UK weather we have already been treated to countless days of sunshine (by countless I mean too depressed to count because there's been like four realistically). In Issue 10 our top ten songs was for songs containing nature and one of my inclusions was Bob Marley and the Wailers' 'Sun is Shining' - an ode to how sweet life feels when the sun is out.
I have to say at around this time every year I always get caught off guard by this. I actually do love winter but when March hits, the daffodils come out and the sun is shining I just feel happier for some reason. I just seem to have a smile on my face and everything seems to be better with the world, but why is that? Well an obvious and more boring answer would be vitamin D, it's literally like happy juice that comes from the sun. Every spring we leave our houses as sad creatures and photosynthesise literal happiness from the sun. It's a strange concept really but the boost and balance that can be given to us with a little kick of vitamin D really is a phenomenon. OK, so I'm not silly enough to actually think that the moment we step out into the sun we are surged with vitamin D and that melts all of our problems away. The other more simplistic reason is that it just puts a better view on everything. When I think back to sunny days I think of walks outside and packed beer gardens. When I look back on good memories, even just as simple as playing football with some mates, they all seem to take me back to a sunny day. I also think especially in spring a big part of it is just our natural grass is greener complex. In the heights of summer I often find myself dreaming of dark winter nights curled up in front of an open fire, or seasonal cheer and snow, and don't get me wrong these moments can be just as beautiful as a day in the summer heat, but when spring arrives, having spent the last four months in the cold dreaming of the sun, shorts, holidays and just heat in general it always comes as the most welcome of surprises when we start to experiences our first glimpses of warmth. Quite frankly by September I'm usually a little fed up of sweating, overheating and mowing the lawn once a week but after months of separation I really do realise what a good thing I had when it was gone. In fact in early March I was actually excited to dust off the mower and get back to cutting the grass. Our most loyal of readers may remember I often see it as a form of home therapy, putting my music on and admiring a fresh and neat lawn when I'm finished. Of course give it until June when the grass grows so quickly that I can't keep up with it and I'll once again be cursing it, but for now it's a joyous treat of a job on a hot day after months without it. I really do think that the simple and natural wonder of sunshine is some of the best therapy you can get. Just the thought of it brings a smile to my face and there's not much better than just going out and spending some time in the heat, whether just walking the dog or sloshing back cold beers outside the pub (I said that to sound cool I don't even do it that often). There's just something about spring's ability to cheer us up and bring us together. This magical period of summer anticipation and relief at seeing the back end of winter really is beautiful. In fact the best way to sum it up is Bob Marley and the Wailers 'Sun is Shining', so make sure to give it a listen! David DawsonAndy Franks knows the industry inside out having worked as a sound engineer, monitor engineer, stage manager, production manager, tour manager and tour director. His life in the fast lane working with the likes of Depeche Mode, Coldplay, Robbie Williams and The Rolling Stones (to name a few) has seen him at the pinnacle of the industry. After developing an addiction to alcohol that ultimately saw him getting fired from a tour Andy decided in 2016 to set up charity ‘Music Support’ to help others within the music industry who struggle with mental health or addiction. Hi Andy! Thanks so much for talking to me today! You founded the brilliant charity ‘Music Support’ back in 2016 – What was it that inspired you to take action in this way?
Well I had been working in the music business for 40 years and was a tour manager for about 30 of them. I finally got fired for my alcoholism and I really struggled to try and find a way to get help. I didn’t know who to turn to and kind of felt that it was my own problem and when I got sacked they said you need to sort yourself out, and I thought ‘well how do I do that?’ When I got sober I thought that I needed to try and help other people who were in a similar position and as luck would have it I bumped into Matt Thomas. We were just chatting about what we were up to and I told him I was thinking about setting up a charity and he said he was thinking of doing the same! We joined forces with a couple of other people and very quickly realised we wanted to get something up and running so we launched and away we went! I’ve read that in the early days of the charity you were manning the helplines yourselves – were you shocked at the type, and quantity, of calls that you were receiving? Yeah, I think when we first started, as with all these things, we were making it up very much as we went along so we didn’t know how many calls we were going to get. I’m not trained in any way but at that time it’s what we had to do! We found out very quickly that just having somebody on the end of the phone that understood the pressures and the problems that people have to go through cut through so much. It took away all of that disbelief and scepticism and trying to convince people; in the music industry you’re touring around the world with multinational acts and staying in five star hotels and flying on private jets, people think ‘what’s not to love about that?’ Of course, it’s absolutely true, what’s not to like? It’s great when it’s great but when it’s not it’s not. Being able to speak to people was a great thing, and luckily we also had access to therapists and people that we knew that understood about the music business so it was kind of a snowball effect really; we could put people in touch and then we got more people that wanted to help. I started going to festivals in the first year of ‘Music Support’ and people were so desperate for something like this; you could see that there was a momentum and a need for it, so from that point of view it was a no brainer. The actual running of it and how we were going to finance it and deal with phone calls in the middle of the night was another thing. Now we are six years down the line, who would’ve thought! Not only does the charity run helplines, you also provide Mental Health First Aid Training and Addiction and Recovery workshops. How crucial do you think it is that people are able to educate themselves so that they are able to offer more support to those around them, and themselves? I think it’s really important. We’ve got Norman Beecher and Hannah Brinley who do all of our mental health first aid training and are absolutely amazing. If anybody is thinking about going on the course it’s four sessions over a couple of days or weeks and they’re both such brilliant practitioners that make you feel welcome and understood. When you think of first aid you see St Johns Ambulance people at gigs, you see medical people with a red cross at every concert now. When I first started there weren’t things like that. Our stuff is very much for the people working there and touring, not that I’m sure there aren’t people in the audience with mental health problems and addiction, but we want to be more specific and help people in our industry to get to a point where most tours will have mental health first aid training. Within the next few years it will probably become the norm in any big organisation in the same way that you have to have medical first aiders, for the mind as well as the body because it’s just as important. So much productivity is lost because of people having mental health or addiction issues. It's accepted that people think ‘they’ll just get over it’ or not wanting to deal with it. In our industry it’s difficult to be off sick but if you work at a record company or a management company and don’t want to come into work because you’ve got issues at home, if you had someone you could talk to in the office 1 on 1 it would help, so I think it will become more of the norm. When we started it was a very different thing but now with the mental health first aid training there’s an awareness and people want to get involved. Younger people coming in kind of expect to have those things and people looking out for them. The music industry seems to have a reputation for mental health struggles that surpasses any other. From your experience within the industry, and now with the charity, what do you think it is about this particular industry that sees so many struggle? I think the pressure that you are under to produce. There’s so much riding on it. When you go to a gig to watch a band you want it to be their best show they’ve ever done but for people working if you’ve had a horrendous day or you’ve got marital problems you have to try and forget all of that and put a brave face on. All the technicians backstage have to create this unbelievable spectacle and it has to happen on time. You’re dealing with all the latest technology and all this new equipment and you don’t know if it will work and there’s all these kinds of things that could potentially go wrong and if it does go wrong you’ve got to fix it so the audience doesn’t know. You go through this entire thing and then go somewhere else and do it again – what idiot would do that! You know, you’re constantly under pressure and at some point if you’ve got an issue or can’t deal with it you’ll end up thinking about how you can relax; you get on the bus or go to the hotel and have a few drinks or do some drugs trying to get through it. How can you work out that kind of stuff when your brain is fried? If there’s a problem with a light you may go and try and fix it and if you can’t you’d get someone else to have a look but when there’s something going on in your head what do you do? You get drunk or off your face, then you sober up and wake up the next day with a hangover and feel awful and still have to do your job, and lo and behold the problem hasn’t gone away. You need to have support out there that can help and that you feel confident that you can speak to someone and they have your back. You’re moving around the world in this little travelling group of people that hasn’t got a base – like going away with the circus. It’s like a psychosis; you have to be out on the road then when you come back you don’t know how to deal with your normal life. The pandemic has been extremely tough on people’s mental health. Have you seen an impact on the amount of people seeking your support? Initially the call rate went down a little bit because people were at home and they didn’t really have the opportunity to make calls because their family were around or they weren’t sure how to deal with it. If you’ve got mental health problems and you’re at home all the time you’re under the spotlight and it’s hard to hide so that became a pressure. Then people started to worry about money and the business and whether it would ever come back. A lot of people left the business. The music industry is a fantastic thing of putting on these spectacles and shows but no one looks after the people working on them. People who work for companies were being furloughed but in the music industry there wasn’t any guarantee of furlough, you had to apply for it and some people would get it and others didn’t. It was a very difficult thing and people decided to leave the industry, earn less money but be home in the evenings. Now the pandemic is getting less suddenly there’s a dilemma as to whether to go back and go through all of that again or just to stay away from it, and some people are going back and then aren’t sure if they can handle it, wondering if they would be able to do it. With the loss of touring for a while there’s also so many going on this year and next year, people may have two of their clients out touring at the same time and they feel ‘I have to look after both of them otherwise they may not want me’. There’s pressure left right and centre and it never goes away. When you struggle to think clearly you can’t deal with that pressure. When you set up the charity in 2016 did you imagine that six years later it would be where it is now, and what would you expect, and hope to see another six years into the future? If we’d have known how difficult it was to set the whole thing up I’m not sure we would have! It was three or four years of really hard work! People maybe think ‘you’re in the charity because you’re getting some money’ or that it’s some great side gig or something! I mean I got paid back for some printing I did in the first two or three months and that’s the only money I’ve ever received from this charity after six years! It’s a difficult thing to get going and a complicated thing because when you start dealing with people’s mental health there are so many hoops to jump through, and quite rightly! You’re taking care of people so you need to make sure you have all the safeguards in place and again we had no idea of all that stuff. Now we have three full time members of staff and loads of helpers. We’ve got fantastic support and we’ve got people who donate money. In 6 or 7 years time I’d like to have proper funding! For any of our readers who want to help out ‘Music Support’ – what is the best way for them to do it? People can get involved with volunteering to help out at our “festival Safe hubs” backstage places for Band, crew or whoever works at the festival, to have a safe space. People can also help us to fundraise, donate to us or by attending, and/or spreading the word about our Mental Health First Aid and Addiction Awareness Courses Finally, one thing we ask all of our interviewees is to name a top three songs that relate to mental health. What would be your top three? You’re Not Alone – Cathal Smyth Between Dark and Dawn – Nick Lowe Almost Blue – Chet Baker Hardy On his hopes for Hixtape Vol 2 and being Country as hell!Hi Hardy! Thanks so much for talking to me today! You recently released ‘Hixtape Vol 2’ - what was the inspiration behind a second instalment of this project? For lack of a better term, I just really wanted to do it again - you know, bigger and better! The first one resonated really well with everybody. It’s a cool thing that no-one had ever done before and I just wanted to do another one. We had a batch of songs and a lot of people that wanted to be on it and we just shot to the moon! ‘Hixtape Vol 2’ is different from Volume One in that you don’t actually feature on all of the songs. As the visionary behind the project, what influenced this decision? I had talked to my label and we thought how cool it would be if ‘Hixtape’ kind of became its own artist – its own collaborative thing. There will be times in the future where I might not be on a single song and that’s fine. The goal is to create a collaborative record that gives people the opportunity to hear collabs that they probably would never hear. I just think it’s something different and something cool and I would love to see the fans fall in love with it even if I’m not on a single song, that’s the goal. I was a little worried that fans would be a bit confused this time around that I wasn’t on every single song but they really weren’t, it’s been resonating really well and they completely get it, which is exciting because in the future we can push it even further. Having released your album ‘A Rock’ in 2020, is there a big difference in the process for producing a solo album and a big group project like this? And if you could pick one – which would you say you enjoy making the most? My own record is more fun. It’s my passion and my vision and what I want to say as opposed to ‘Hixtape’, which, in theory, is more fun, it sounds more fun, it’s full of lifestyle songs and partying. But I would definitely choose my record. ‘Hixtape’ songs are fun, they’re about drinking and smoking weed; my record is deeper, it gets into love and storytelling like in ‘One Beer’ with a guy and a girl and getting pregnant at a young age. It’s got more depth and there’s more thought gone into it ‘Beer with my Buddies’ is relatable for a lot of people with the message that we work Monday to Friday, then spend the weekends doing things we didn’t have time to do during the week, and that all we see on the TV is bad news when really we just want to be relaxing with a cold beer and good company! In a life that can feel so hectic and overbearing, how important do you think it is that we make time to go and get a cold one and chill out?
I think it’s very important, man, life is truly short and those moments are moments that everyone needs, we need a psychological release whether it’s at the end of the week or the end of the day. Spending time with friends over alcohol - or not - but just having a good time. ‘One of Y’all’ is an expression of your pride in being country to the core – and really connects you to your fans. How important was it for you to do this? I think that it’s very important to let your fans know you’re one of them. I come from the same type of town that they come from and I still to this day think that you could drop me off in any of those towns and I could blend in. Me singing that song and telling them, I think they appreciate that and like you more knowing you’re one of them. ‘Goin’ Nowhere’ is a great song and a classic country anthem. Lots of people can drown themselves in worries about the future, careers or over-complicated life decisions. Whilst being happy with what we’ve got is a staple of country music it’s something a lot of people struggle with. What advice would you give to people who are so busy over-complicating things that they can’t appreciate the simple things in front of them? Appreciate it, because it could always be worse! Your living situation or whatever it is, in most cases it could always be worse. If you didn’t have a country upbringing and you want to get out there and experience that a bit, go do it, man! Rural and country life is very slow and simple but I like to think that people are a lot happier when they live that kind of life. If that’s something that you’re interested in then someway, somehow, get out there and try to live it a bit, it’s good for you! The fine lines between musical genres today is becoming ever finer and in the past you’ve spoken about your love for rap and hip hop and your previous work with Nelly. In the future could you see yourself doing more hip hop collaborations, and who would be the dream to work on a project with? I would love that man! I love hip hop, I even feel like there are small parts of my music that have a bit of a hip hop aspect, especially some of the songs I’m writing now. I would love to collab with - everybody says this answer - Post Malone. That would be amazing. I’m a big fan of Jack Harlow, he’s actually become kind of a buddy of mine. Machine Gun Kelly is doing this really cool rock and roll thing now, and I truly feel like I’m doing a very similar thing. A lot of hip hop right now is very rock and roll, I think that’s really cool. If anything, a collab like that would be very fitting. I hope it happens one day. Maybe something to look forward to on ‘Hixtape Volume Three'! Finally, one thing we ask all of our interviewees is to name their top three songs that relate to mental health. What would be your top three? 1. Hurt – Nine Inch Nails 2. Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For – U2 3. Humble and Kind – Tim McGraw David Dawson
Often, we feel like so much of our lives depends on successes and failures – where we work, where we live, how much money we have and so on. It is easy to forget to stay true to what really matters to us the most – and nothing is more of a champion of this than the 2021 film ‘Tick, Tick… Boom!’ Based on the musical of the same name by Jonathan Larson, the plot itself is somewhat meta, and the only musical of its kind that I have seen. The plot of ‘Tick, Tick… Boom!’ as a musical and a film is actually the story of Larson writing the musical he wrote before ‘Tick, Tick… Boom!’ It isn’t acted out with props and scenery but instead takes place with Jonathan and a piano, accompanied by a few other musicians and singers, delivered as if some sort of speech; only intertwined by Larson’s brilliant songs. I could spend a long time talking about the performances of the actors - and Andrew Garfield is brilliant in this - but for me the standout thing was more the message. The main thing I love about the musical is that it is so honest – there is no glamourisation of what is happening and we are just presented with the raw and emotional truths. I have often written in the past about how being in your twenties is supposed to be fun but is actually filled with pressure and angst and no other story I have seen portrays it better than this one. In spite of failing relationships and a lack of money, Larson is clinging on to his dream with every last fibre of his being, determined to make it as a writer. During this time he has seen his group of talented and creative friends give up on their hopes, opting for stable jobs to try and save up some money having become frustrated with a life of small apartments and living week to week. The most prominent two are Larson’s long time actor friend, Michael, and dancer girlfriend, Susan, who choose to take a corporate advertising job and a teaching job respectively. Amongst this, Jonathan finds himself weighing up his own motives. The film is laced with Jonathan’s repeated mantra that others had already hit huge success by the time that they were his age, and as the days pass by to his 30th birthday he feels as if it may be all too late. Whilst seeing people his age buy homes, get married and have kids we see Jonathan begin to question whether maybe it is time to pull the plug, and he comes close, even attending a focus group at his friend's advertising company. The title; ‘Tick, Tick… Boom!’ is the perfect commentary on Jonathan’s position in more ways than one. The first of which is his 30th birthday. Having constantly reminded himself of people who are successful in their twenties it seems that this day on the horizon is almost a deadline for Larson, a finishing point decided in his head whereby if he wasn’t successful then he never would be. The second is the writing of the final song. The musical Larson is working on is the labour of nearly a decade and is one song from being completed. Having agreed to do a presentation of the finished project Larson has little time to complete this song. Despite this, he finds himself in a block of sorts and as the presentation gets closer and closer and he is still unable to write, the pressure mounting in his head becomes destructive as he lets relationships fall by the wayside in desperate search of inspiration. The third is really the overview of the whole story - the ticks of inspiration before the explosion. This can apply to a couple of parts of the musical – for example, Jonathan’s desperate search for the final song before it suddenly hits him during a swimming session he took to calm down; or perhaps the wider view of the plot overall. The ticks representing the impending doom whilst Jonathan slaves away at his musical, before the boom signals the ultimate failure of his project, despite its appreciation by the audience at the presentation. Of course, Larson does go on to be a success (hence this musical) but just focusing on the arc of this particular project, the title fits perfectly. Although a very different situation, I found myself throughout the whole film relating to Jonathan and his dilemmas. After all, it would be easy for him to quit and pursue a boring corporate life, get himself a nice apartment and live sensibly ever after, but this isn’t what he loves. His passion is writing musicals and despite the pain, poverty and heartbreak it seems to bring him, he just can’t bring himself to let it slip. Knowing who Larson is I knew he would write more plays, but even so, the musical still had me doubting. After the failure of his first project, I really found myself believing he may just quit, even though I know it not to be reality. Aside from the sensational music, I think that’s what I loved so much about this musical and film. It isn’t costumes, sets, make-up and high drama. It’s just honesty. A situation that is quite unique, but a feeling that many of us have been through or will go through. The persisting dilemma between passion and predictability, love and labour. The pressure of seeing people younger than yourself succeed, feeling like time is running out when really it isn’t. Of course, the real tragedy of this musical is that for Jonathan and his friend it was. Having tragically passed before ever getting to see the opening night of his huge success, and the musical after this one, ‘Rent’, I found myself wondering at the end. Jonathan never got to see his own victory, live in the glory or finally be able to live comfortably from the fruits of his labour; but if he were able to live his short 35 years the same way again – pursuing his dream and devoting himself to his passion – I’d say that he probably would. Michael presents another side to the story; a talented actor who spent his best years working in a corporate job he didn’t like to make ends meet. Neither is better or worse than the other, and some people’s dream is to be in a corporate environment, but the fact that it was clear that this was not the case for Michael is what makes it more tragic. With this in mind, and with the start of yet another new year, maybe our resolutions should be to chase that goal, pursue that dream or take a few more risks. We all have different dreams but it’s important for all of us that we give them a chance. This is a guest post by Vytautas Vaitkevicius, a regular writer for Mindful Souls You’ve felt it before – music can provide all kinds of incredible experiences. A favourite song lifts your spirit. A violin concerto makes you shed a tear. A swoosh of wind through a stretch of the forest brings comfort to your worried mind.
As it turns out, specific sounds can have properties of healing and restoration. That means, if you’re looking to explore a new wellness modality, you came to the right place. Noise Pollution Can you remember what song they just played in the supermarket? Did you pay attention to a car alarm in the distance? We are constantly surrounded by sounds so often that we turn our brains on autopilot and choose to ignore the sonic environment. Yet even unconscious noise build-up can have a range of unwanted mental health effects. In a study published in BMC Public Health, researchers found that residents of Danish townhouses experienced ‘an adverse impact on a broad range of physical and mental health symptoms.’ The factor that triggered the stress response was simple exposure to a loud neighbour’s noise. Perhaps this story can serve as a hint about the source of your anxiety, stress, and fatigue. Is There a Way To Escape It? Yes! And even better! By connecting to nature and exposing ourselves to natural sounds, we can go beyond offsetting the negative influence of noise pollution. A healthful alternative goes a long way in battling “learned helplessness” and healing the brain. Certain sounds with specific tones, frequencies, and vibrations can relieve stress and anxiety, promote a sense of calmness and create a joyful attitude towards life. A study published in the Journal of Evidence-Based Integrative Medicine showed that an hour-long sound meditation could reduce tension, fatigue, anger, anxiety and depression. At the same time, it can strengthen one’s sense of spiritual well-being. Who is Sound Healing For? Sound healing can be practiced by anyone. We are slowing down the breath and heart rate on a physical level, allowing the mind to enter a safe, quiet state. On a spiritual level, the more relaxed we are in body and mind, the better we can connect to ourselves, others, and a higher power. Until recently, sound healing was regarded as something you could only experience at a particular studio in an expensive neighbourhood. However, today it is widely used at home with the help of a range of tools. Now, this revolutionary new self-care practice can be an option for everyone! What Does Sound Healing Look Like? Sound can be used in a variety of ways to promote healing. Sound therapy typically integrates solfeggio frequencies, tuning forks, singing bowls and gongs into practice. Here are some standard techniques: Listening Meditation: As we practice meditation, sounds are bound to be part of the experience. Instead of focusing on sensations or mantras, we bring our awareness to sounds in listening meditation. You may find it pleasurable and rewarding to settle into the present moment while paying close attention to nature's soundtrack, especially if you go outside and experience these sounds firsthand! For meditation, the goal is to notice sounds without getting caught up in identifying or assessing them. You’re not trying to discern whether that birdsong belongs to a robin or a downy woodpecker. Instead, relax and let go, noticing the sounds of nature and allowing them to act as your allies. Gong: The Gong is one of man’s oldest therapeutic instruments. This holistic vehicle powerfully impacts your mental health by bringing peace and relaxation to your otherwise overwhelmed mind. It is hard to say what it looks like for everyone since each person’s spiritual odyssey is unique. Still, gong users can have a range of experiences from visions to creative solutions, epiphanies, and even psychedelic journeys. The healing sound re-tunes any spiritual disharmony within us. You may experience a range of emotional reactions such as laughing, crying, feeling scared or angry, and anything in between. However, most people feel a sense of bliss and peace afterwards. Singing Bowls: Singing bowls are instruments that produce different healing and relaxing tones, depending on their size and material. You play them by striking them or swirling their perimeter using a wooden mallet, taking care not to get too close to the instrument. Using singing bowls requires a degree of mindfulness, intentionality and consistency. Your goal is to better understand the sounds you and your instrument can produce together. The sound of singing bowls harmonises and allows deep relaxation of both sides of the brain. It encourages stress relief on all levels and the elimination of toxins from the body. After sound therapy, the mind is clearer, and our emotions are calmer. Tuning Forks: Tuning forks stand on the principle that everything in the universe is made up of vibrations. Sound healing is possible because our bodies are not solid. They have their own rhythms, vibrations, and harmony - illness signals discord in the body’s natural frequencies and tune rate. Using tuning forks allows us to synchronise natural cycles, which helps us to find our balance and homeostasis. Homeostasis is fundamental when healing the body, mind, and spirit. The sound-waves of tuning forks caused by the vibrations travel deep into the body and its energy, affecting human physiology. The forks stimulate the physical energy field of the body and promote healing and inner harmony, helping to connect the body, mind and spirit. Solfeggio Frequencies: Solfeggio frequencies use specific sound patterns to stimulate the brain. These special vibrations help your brain waves reach a frequency with many benefits. This form of music is often used for transformational purposes and can help one deal with fear and change and awaken one’s intuition. The 5 commonly used Solfeggio Frequencies: 396 Hz – Liberating Guilt and Fear 417 Hz – Undoing Situations and Facilitating Change 528 Hz – Transformation and Miracles 639 Hz – Connecting Relationships 741 Hz – Awakening Intuition Conclusion Our bodies, minds, and souls naturally strive towards balance and contentment. But instead of surrendering to our inner needs, we let external stimuli and noise take over. Sound healing is a relatively simple way to achieve a better state of harmony and make your life more enjoyable. There is little risk to listening to music, so why not begin searching for the sounds that work for you? Find out more about Mindful Souls at eu.mindfulsouls.com Rising star Tebey on going global with his exciting New Country soundMaxim Mower
Hey Tebey, thanks so much for taking the time out to chat today! As well as being a Country music fan, I’m also a keen golfer, so I’m excited to ask you about your annual Tebey Golf Classic fundraiser, which raises money for mental health charities. What inspired you to start this? I’ve been pretty open about my struggles with mental health - probably more than I should! I feel that, in whatever position of ‘celebrity’ I might have, it’s important to raise awareness for something that’s near and dear to my heart. Depression and anxiety are things that I live with every single day. This golf tournament also benefits a local shelter for people who need it, and a lot of the times it’s single mothers with children, who’ve left an abusive relationship. The money goes to a lot of different places in my home town. Did you have any reservations about speaking up about mental wellbeing because Country has not historically been comfortable with this, despite being a genre that often revolves around heartbreak and pain? Not really, because in Canada we have 'Bell Let’s Talk Day’, which is massive. This hashtag gets created and then for every retweet they donate a dollar, or something crazy like that. It ends up being millions of dollars that they give to bespoke mental health awareness organisations. It’s such a big deal in Canada, everyone knows about it and everyone talks about it. That was one of the reasons why I didn’t feel any reservations about being honest about my mental health struggles. This yearly event has done such a great job of normalising mental health issues, because it used to be very taboo, and in some cultures it still is. Back home, it wasn’t nearly as hard for me because we’ve been rallying around that cause for such a long time. When you moved from Canada to Nashville at a young age, did you find there was a different culture surrounding mental health, or did you find it was still a comfortable space to open up? My personal struggles with mental health didn’t really surface until my early twenties, so when I moved to Nashville at sixteen I wasn’t really suffering from any type of condition that I knew about. Obviously, there are huge cultural differences between Canada and the Southern US, so that adjustment was one of the hardest things. The music business is very hard on mental health, regardless of who you are and how successful you are. It’s pretty ruthless, and I think that’s why you see a lot of actors and songwriters speaking up about mental health issues - there’s something about the arts and mental health that kind of go hand in hand. You’ve written for some very high-profile artists, such as One Direction, Cher and Flo Rida. Was it nerve-wracking making the leap from songwriter to solo artist, or did it feel like a natural transition? I’ve always written songs in different genres of music since I started. When you’re writing Country music it’s very different to writing Pop music, so you kind of have to put on two different hats. In the beginning, I would go over to the UK or to Sweden and I’d be writing Pop songs, and every once in a while the melody that I threw out in the room was probably a little more Country than it should’ve been. You incorporate some really refreshing pop and dance influences throughout last year’s The Good Ones EP. Have you experienced any pushback from Country traditionalists about challenging the genre’s boundaries in this way? Yeah, absolutely - I definitely get flack every once in a while from trolls on the internet! It used to bother me, but it doesn’t bother me much anymore. People are entitled to their opinions. I’ve always just done whatever I’ve always wanted to do - I don’t like being put inside a box, and you can definitely hear that on the EP. I just want to make great music. Sometimes we have songs that have a little bit of an EDM vibe, sometimes we make more urban-leaning Country music, but I think now more than ever that’s acceptable. A couple of years ago, you founded your own record label. What motivated you to take this step, and what do you hope to achieve with Jayward Artist Group? It just felt like a natural progression. I’ve been in the game a long time and I’ve learned a lot over the years, and I just wanted to put some of that knowledge to use. I love developing artists. There’s nothing better than hearing an artist for the first time and getting excited, it’s like finding a diamond in the rough. We had a great launch with Matt Lang, who’s done some things in the UK, and he’s really taken off in Canada. It just felt like the right time. You performed some great shows and songwriters rounds at C2C Festival earlier this year. Do you have plans to return to the UK soon - Covid-permitting, of course? Breaking into the UK market in particular is one of the highest things on my list, I know there’s a market there for Country music. You’ve had success with The Shires and Ward Thomas and artists like that, but that still is a very British type of Country music, in my opinion. What I do is very, very different. When we played the Buckle and Boots Festival, which we headlined last summer, our show was just so different to everything there, because we’re bringing that Nashville style of Pop-Country to the UK. You recently dropped your new single, ‘What Was I Drinking’ - will this be part of a larger project? Yeah, that’s going to be the first single off a new EP! Who are your main musical influences? That’s a tough one! When I say I have the most eclectic taste in music, it’s true. I really do love everything, and I always have. On the Country side of things, definitely Kenny Chesney, Rascal Flatts, and even back in the day when I was growing up it was George Strait and Garth Brooks - those are living legends! But I was also influenced by artists like Boyz II Men and Maroon 5 - I’m a huge Adam Levine fan, he’s a hell of a singer, and a great songwriter. You can stream Tebey’s latest single, ‘What Was I Drinking’ on all platforms now, and watch him live at C2C in March! Maxim Mower Released early last year, The Sonic Ranch acts as the soundtrack to the accompanying CMT documentary that explores Midland’s very first studio sessions as a band. Formed off the back of a chance meeting at a wedding, Jess Carson sent a few songs to Mark Wystrach, and they decided to head to Texas’ famous ‘Sonic Ranch’ studios to record them. Cameron Duddy went with them primarily as a videographer, but soon found himself playing bass on the tracks - and the rest, as they say, is history. Midland are now a household name in Country music on both sides of the Atlantic, having performed fairly regularly in the UK as well as in the States, so watching their genesis unfurl before your very eyes in the Sonic Ranch documentary makes for fascinating viewing. So often, we only see the finished product - even when we’re presented with a ‘new’ artist with their first radio single, this is very rarely their actual first single. By this point, they’ll have already spent years honing their sound and ironing out any creases through local gigging and trial-run releases (hey, that rhymes…). In the Midland documentary, it’s surprising hearing a pre-moustachioed Mark Wystrach - the band’s lead vocalist and resident heartthrob - talking about how he’d given up on music in order to pursue a more ‘realistic’ career path. Or catching a glimpse of Cameron Duddy fishing in some dusty overalls, as he shrugs and talks about how the trio don’t really know where this new venture is heading and whether it’ll work out. As ridiculous as it sounds, I often find myself falling into the trap of thinking stars have always been stars. But this documentary does a great job of highlighting both the buzz and anxiety of uncertainty, and it’s actually quite inspiring to watch, because you can’t help but watch these regular guys kick ideas around, and think that whatever dream it is that you’re striving for in life, it’s achievable. The divide between the successful and the less successful isn’t as wide as it sometimes appears. Aside from offering this refreshing insight into the early formations of the band, it showcases a new side to their music. Prior to The Sonic Ranch, Midland’s albums have been heavily polished, full of swagger and inevitably guided by the demands of mainstream Country radio. And don’t get me wrong, they’re great projects - but on The Sonic Ranch, there’s a stripped-back tenderness and rugged authenticity that we haven’t seen before.
For most of the twelve tracks, there’s a continuous, almost hypnotic, backing track that meanders along steadily like a Texas highway, with Wystrach’s languid drawl drifting in and out like landmarks passing by the window. This is particularly true of the opening two tracks, beginning with the truckers’ anthem, 'Fourteen Gears', followed by the rodeo ballad, 'Cowgirl Blues’, and on both of these the distinctive beats meld perfectly with the lead vocals. We also get a version of ‘Cowgirl Blues’ sung by Jess Carson rather than Wystrach - while Wystrach’s vocals are inevitably stronger, this nonetheless makes for an interesting addition, and contributes to the overall ‘demo-esque’ feel of the project. We see Folk and Bluegrass influences introduced on the catchy euphoria of ‘Worn Out Boots’ and the energetic levity of ‘Texas Is The Last Stop’. These juxtapose the warm melancholy of songs like ‘Fool’s Luck’, a quietly hopeful track that again cruises peacefully along over an uninterrupted guitar loop. ‘Whiskey’ follows in the same vein, featuring an understated but irresistible hook, and a lighter feel than ‘Fool’s Luck’, despite the comparative heaviness of the forlorn lyrics. The album closer, ‘This Town’, is another downtempo jewel, and acts as a despairing rebuke of the classic Country line (“There ain’t nothin’ in this place, worth pullin’ off the highway to see”). I’d love to see the band giving more album-time to slower tracks like these in future, which benefit from there being no overseeing producer trying to artificially jazz them up. I generally subscribe to the view that if it’s a struggle to think of my favourite song from a particular album, then it either means the album is quite terrible, or it means it’s quite brilliant - The Sonic Ranch is certainly the latter, in my book. ‘Will This Life Be As Grand’, which again finds Carson taking on the lead vocals, began as a song that I’d skip past, but over time has blossomed into one of my favourites. It’s an easy, kind-hearted song that could happily sneak onto a 70’s playlist and no-one would bat an eyelid. The Sonic Ranch is an album to lose yourself in, with each track staying true to the endearingly untreated feel of the project. Aside from being an escapist dream, when coupled with the documentary of Midland’s humble beginnings, it acts as a gentle but effective nudge of motivation to mentally check into your own ‘Sonic Ranch’, and chase whatever hopes and aspirations you might be harbouring. As far as Midland’s own journey is concerned, with The Sonic Ranch and the smooth brilliance of their more recent The Last Resort EP, they seem to be getting better and better with time. Watch this space. |
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