TARA KELLY: INTERVIEW


by mariah estran

photo courtesy of tara kelly

photo courtesy of tara kelly

Tara Kelly, the cosmic country/pop songstresses, took the rollercoaster emotions of a past relationship shattered by infidelity and created “The River."  While described as a “stomp and holler break-up anthem," the lyrics depict a stormy night drive as Kelly’s powerful vocals reveal her journey with her new reality.

Earlier this month, the singer released the music video for the track. Collaborating with director Justin Keanu, they drew from southern imagery and found a way to make a storm in a rainless L.A.

The single might reveal one heavy story from her book, but she's still got more lessons to share.

We spoke with the singer to learn more about the creation of “The River,” her genre-bending style, truthful songwriting, and what we can expect from her next.

 

You’ve recently released your break-up anthem, “The River." What was the process like creating this song?

Tara: “I made this song with co-writers who are now two of my favorite collaborators in the world (Stefan PVDS and Alex Wilke.) We’d all never written together before, but I had a really rough break-up story about a guy I dated who was already married and the title ‘The River’ as a general concept. As soon as Stefan started playing this eerie E-minor riff, we knew we had something really special, and the song basically fell out of us. It only took about an hour to finish it. It was one of those rare, magical studio moments that you wish could happen every day, but then they wouldn’t be as precious.”

The visual for this track brings out the feelings of an up-and-down relationship. Tell us more about the inspiration for this music video.

T: “The song is filled with river and nature metaphors, but I didn’t want to take that too literally in the video. I came to the director, Justin Keanu, with the concept of sensual, southern imagery that you might find in an episode of True Detective or Vampire Diaries. I wanted to paint a world with the song, the camera, and the editing where the viewer could feel how quickly love rises and falls, and all of the memories that are so hard to get out of your mind when it ends.

Fun fact: the car shots in the rain were an idea from the director to mirror the thunder sounds at the end of the recording, but we were shooting in LA where it notoriously never rains. Our friend and YouTuber, Louis Cole, helped us by standing on an apple box and holding a garden hose over the car. It legitimately felt like a torrential downpour on the windows!”

photo courtesy of tara kelly

photo courtesy of tara kelly

You have this sound that incorporates country/folk roots with a pop flare. How have you developed your sound over the years?

T: “I LOVE genre-bending, and I appreciate when my fans and friends recognize the nuances because it’s exactly the sound I’ve always wanted to create. I’m deeply inspired by and find myself listening to a lot of traditional folk, country, and blues – where the guitar can take your soul to another place. But as a ‘90s kid, the tenants of pop are in my DNA, and I’ve written a lot of it over the years. I’m a firm believer that all good music – music that really resonates – is pop music at its core. It just feels right when I bring those worlds together. I want my music to feel truly accessible, like you know it already, while at the same time transporting you to a place you’ve never been.”

Who are some of your musical inspirations?

T: “I’m a major Fleetwood Mac fan – I feel like Stevie Nicks in general inspires every move I make. I take a lot of inspiration from Brandi Carlile, Kacey Musgraves, James Bay, and Fleet Foxes – artists that have paved the way for accessible, resonant folk music to transcend it’s traditional fan base. I think the modern country music lover takes many forms and I’m so honored to be creating in this corner of the genre.”

Your singles such as “Ghost Town" and “The River” share raw emotions regarding relationships and life experiences. How has songwriting helped you express your stories to your listeners?

T: “Songwriting is the only path to true expression I’ve ever really known. I’ve become much more open online than I was as a teenager, but even that vulnerability has a bit of a silver lining to it – like ‘I’ll share my struggles with y’all once I’ve figured it all out and put a bow on it.’ I’m trying to get better about sharing more of myself as a work-in-progress, even to my closest friends, but songs are just plain raw. They are that feeling, or that emotion, or that intensity you were feeling at a given moment. Even when there’s a lesson in there, it feels like you’re re-learning it every time you play the record. That’s why I love music this much. It’s your life, encapsulated in time. I feel that when I listen to artists I love and I hope the fans feel it when they listen to my work.”

As for what is next, after these two tracks, will there be an EP or album in the works? If so, what can you tell us about it?

T: “New music is coming! The plan right now is to build on the musical world we created with ‘The River’ and take it even further. That may or may not mean a Joshua Tree themed EP… Stay tuned.”

 

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'ARE YOU SURE?' / MAE KRELL: REVIEW


by apollo mighty

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Have you ever had a dream so vivid that when you woke from it you questioned your reality? Confusion lives in the space between absolute certainty of what we believe and the acceptance of what really is. Singer-songwriter Mae Krell paints a portrait of time spent between worlds of love, heartbreak, and inevitability of letting go in their new single “are you sure?”. They ask the question that so many of us wonder to ourselves when things end abruptly. Was that even real? The poetic tone of the lyric blended with raw emotional vocals leads you down a path of trying to understated what just happened. Thought the experience can be jarring this song helps bring things into focus one guitar strum at a time. This talented artist is one to look out for as they continue to bring listeners into an intimate space where emotions and thoughts are free to develop and be explored.

 

Listen to are you sure? on Spotify. Mae Krell · Single · 2021 · 1 songs.


'SUN TO RISE' / ELLINGTON: REVIEW


by abby crabill

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Ellington is a Los Angeles native, with plenty of experience in the music scene. Some fans may recognize him from his time as the drummer of the pop-rock group R5, or from his time touring with alternative band The Driver Era. Ellington has also played several festivals, such as Riptide, Made In America, and Summer Sonic. Ellington's solo career began to kick off after releasing remixes for The Driver Era and Glass Animals.

Ellington's solo release, “Sun To Rise,” is a rock genre leaning tune that resembles the music from his time in The Driver Era. The guitar keeps the audience bobbing their head as they jam along with Ellington. The rock sound also resembles those created by Harry Styles for his self-titled album. 

“Sun To Rise” is so much more than the music it's set to. A closer listen to the lyrics reminds listeners of a message that is all too important, especially during this pandemic. The repetition of the message, "But I keep waiting for that sun to rise," reinforces the sense of positivity while waiting for things to improve, no matter how difficult they may be. Overall, this is a rock tune with an easy sound to get lost in, with feel good lyrics that help remind the listener to keep looking for the positive of the future. No matter what we're going through as individuals, or a society, the sun will rise.

Listen to Sun To Rise! on Spotify. Ellington · Single · 2021 · 1 songs.

 

DYLAN DUNLAP: INTERVIEW


by mariah estran

photo courtesy of dylan dunlap

photo courtesy of dylan dunlap

A film score is a significant piece of any cinematography. It elevates the story, just like the actors who recite each scripted line. Tempos race during action sequences, and they wind down during dismal scenes. It is a necessary element due to its emotion-evoking powers. For singer/songwriter and avid film appreciator Dylan Dunlap, he has taken that concept to heart. He’s found the beauty in embracing his music composition and the power behind the words the sound inspires.

“I start with the music first, always,” the singer explains. “It’s a little backward from a lot of songwriter friends of mine.” Jotting down lyrics at the initial phase of a song’s development is commonplace. However, for Dunlap, rearranging these steps has allowed him to work around creative obstacles while ultimately giving attention to each layer of his art. “I’ve always overanalyzed my vocabulary. It’s been so helpful as an artist to put the music first, let it speak for itself, let it breathe, and then determine ‘what do I want this song to be about.’”

He freely recalls a moment of sitting in his girlfriend's closet, recording vocals, after piecing together chord progressions for his latest single, “Follow My Echo." “Honestly, I get satisfied just from listening to the music I create,” he adds. “I sit with that and figure out how to support it best lyrically.”

“Follow My Echo," the heart-warming four-minute jingle, is notably an excellent example of how his attentiveness to the sound has allowed him to find inspiration in numerous places. The track started from pondering on the last time he has seen the Pixar film, Finding Nemo. A blockbuster movie that left an impression on millions of kids, Dunlap being one of them. “I thought of just how influential that film was for me, and I refused to watch it. It has been six or seven years, and I wanted to write from a clean slate of what I had remembered as a kid.”

The song is no story of a fish finding its way back home. It tackles the process of letting someone go while also learning how to support from afar. You could say it is the grown-up interpretation that looks further than two adorable clownfish swimming in the deep blue. Dunlap dove into his memories — the feelings the movie conjured, without re-watching it before completing the song. “It was a grueling process; it was nothing like any of the other songs. It took two to three weeks of just writing a line a day – something that could work in the pop realm, work for my brand (Dylan Dunlap), it could also work for the plot of the film,” the singer shares.

Lyricism might come second in Dunlap’s operation, but it holds high importance. “I have such an obsession with chord progressions and music theory, but that’s not what makes me, me,” he describes. “As much as I like talking about starting music first, I still must take the necessary time to figure out what it is I want to accomplish with this piece of music.” Now realizing those conversations with his family, friends, and girlfriend could find a home in a new track. “I just stopped caring what would sound cool, what would sound like something that would be doing well on the radio. I try to focus on myself.” 

Listen to Soldier On on Spotify. Dylan Dunlap · Single · 2021 · 6 songs.

When our lives came to a sudden halt due to the pandemic, Dunlap emphasized understanding himself. The restrictively isolating times had the potential to hinder creativity, but the singer could not stop working. “I’m lucky and blessed to keep finding inspiration,” Dunlap confides. “I guess I’ve looked more inward, and I’ve tried to unpack what makes me an individual.” He has now released his EP, Soldier On, which lays out genuine experiences. The love in his life, making it worthwhile in “Soldier On" to “What We Had,” uncovering the distant relationship with his father. “It’s a lot of maturing," Dunlap says when asked about the EP. “But with Soldier On, and more importantly, with the pandemic. I feel like we fast-forwarded years into the future mentally. I’m thankful I can write about it and make it a pop song.”

Soldier On might be a time capsule of sorts as Dunlap says: “they’re like little diary entries.” Yet, with all this candidness, he's found it’s better to find a balance between sad stories and overly positive ones. His right wrist with “Persevere” tattooed as a reminder, but his music is another. “There have been a lot of experiences that have traumatized me, and there are just a lot of internal struggles that I was born with," he says. “That cocktail of emotions makes it easy to write sad music, but that’s just not how I’ve ever chosen to live.”

Dylan Dunlap has found a way to remind his listeners that having an array of emotions is okay. He’s reminded them through each pop tune. “I want to make music that helps,” Dunlap states. “I’m excited to maintain a sense of realist mentality moving forward. I don’t need to be an optimist or pessimist. I can be real.”

photo courtesy of dylan dunlap

photo courtesy of dylan dunlap

Allowing people to join his journey – as he unwraps his mental snags – simultaneously chips away the stigma surrounding this topic. “Transparency is key – if there’s ever a song that sounds like advice, I make sure to put in there ‘I’m telling myself this too,'" he says. “If I can make a welcoming environment of music that creates a safe space, regardless of the color of your skin or sexuality – it’s important to me to spread the message: ‘you’re more than enough as you are.' I think I can make a difference by doing that because I like that I’m showing that I’m telling myself that along the way.”

The attention to each detail in Dunlap’s process goes without notice. It’s finding the perfect chord that leads to a few lines of meaningful storytelling. It is what paints the bigger picture, almost like a movie. Each ingredient in the concoction he’s created aids the impactfulness, and he hopes it will continue to aid someone else who decides to listen. “I’m just trying to make music, I would have loved to have discovered myself at 14, and that’s it.”

 

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'JOHN HUGHES MOVIE' / MAISIE PETERS: REVIEW


by danielle holian

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From realizing the person you want doesn’t want you back, let alone doesn’t acknowledge your existence, “John Hughes Movie” starts strong with electrifying production alongside Maisie Peters’ beautifully toned vocals.

The upbeat and lively track has emotive lyrics that give off main character energy as the songstress shows her evolution from sad girl pop to bad girl pop with this storm-like release of excellence.

The storyline in the track will attract a lot of people that will resonate with the heart-wrenching mood becoming an anthem to sing the chorus loud, “This ain’t no John Hughes movie where the girl gets the guy, you look right through me every time you walk by,” then confidently sing on the final line, “then you’re not the one,” with proudness.

There’s a sense of heartbreak mixed with carefree vibes that makes it an encouraging track. The “John Hughes Movie” single release is a promising new era for the songstress with her sense of misunderstanding to find clarity that she will be okay without them.