Interviews

Russ Macklin & Kyle Reynolds by E

Catch up with DJ/producer Russ Macklin and singer-songwriter Kyle Reynolds and look for their single "Natural" to be released this Friday.

Kyle, what have you been up to since releasing "Hold You Tighter"?

Kyle: I've just been writing so much for this record I'm getting ready to release this year along with other writing I've been doing for TV and film; I've been writing for trailers and TV shows and I've had a couple things on CBS and that's been really fun so I've been focusing on that. I've started to do what this release is with Russ Macklin and I'm starting to collaborate with some DJs and producers and work on more of the feature side of things where I go in and meet up with the producer/artist and we end up writing a song together where we both collaborate on the songwriting part. Either I'll be the person that toplines it - which is just the melody and lyrics - and the person will produce it or how Russ Macklin and I did it, where he had a track start and we ended up writing the song together. I've been focusing on that and I'm leaning into that feature thing this year, along with producing a record. 

What brought you two together to release this new single?

Russ: What did bring us together, Kyle?

Kyle: Well actually, there was a BMI pop showcase thing and Russ' manager was there and I got an email saying, 'hey I heard you play at this BMI pop thing and I like what you do and I think you should write with this artist/producer I manage,' and I listened to this R.LUM.R remix Russ did that was really awesome, he did it really well, and I heard that and so just through his management and through that showcase. Russ and I didn't know each other at all and I kind of just came to his house one day and I was like, 'hey, what's up, I'm Kyle,' [laughs]. We didn't really know much about each other, it was actually really awesome, and we wrote this song and tracked everything that day and that's how that happened, I guess [laughs].

Russ: Yeah, my manager, he just throws people on my calendar. That's my main jam, is producing, so I make a lot of beats and melodies and things and I can sing a little bit, but that's not really my forte, so he likes to just have people over to my little studio that I have in my bedroom, just a little thing I threw together. He'll put somebody on my calendar and I'll check it and be like, "did you put this here?" and that's exactly what happened; Kyle Reynolds blocked off the afternoon and I was like, "alright" [laughs]. I did a little research on Kyle Reynolds, checked out his stuff, and it's almost exactly the kind of stuff I wanna work with; I love making pop music and he makes pop music and, in Nashville, you have to dig a little bit to find the pop corner of the market. We're here, we exist, but we're not at the forefront of the Nashville music scene, we're doing our own thing off in a little dark corner.

Kyle: [Laughs] That is true.

Russ: So my manager, Mark, found him and hooked us up. We clicked, I had maybe 2 or 3 tracks that I played for him like, "you digging this? you digging this?" and there was one that he was pretty much instantly just like, "this is it, this is the one," and just started humming some melodies over top of it and we went from there. In a matter of, probably, 5/6 hours, start to finish.

Kyle: Yeah, I don't think I was there too long. It was like 4/5 hours or something.

Russ: 4/5 hours, got the vocals knocked out, and then I was like, "okay man, this pop stuff is really hot right now," and it just had these vocal chops and weird pitch and we just freestyled some non-words through different melodies and I was like, "alright dude, I'll send you what I get," and later that night or the next day, I just came up with this crazy, distorted - it almost sounds like a guitar - hook part and it's just Kyle's voice.

Are there any new pop acts from Nashville that you're hooked on now?

Kyle: Yeah, there's a few people. My friend, Taylor Mathews, he's about to come out with a new record that is really cool. My friend Carla Cappa, her artist name is CAPPA, she's done some pretty cool stuff. I mentioned R.LUM.R, he's really talented. There's a few people. My friend's in a duo thing called Truitt that's really awesome. There's a cool little thing going on and it's starting to surface more and more; it's a newer thing and it's still growing. This girl named Maggie Chapman who I've written with before, she just came out with a new song, it was on Nick New Music Friday, and she's actually on of my favorite people to write with. That's a few people that I've enjoyed.

Russ: I'll piggyback on that; R.LUM.R, loving his stuff and I think he's coming out with some new stuff pretty soon. He's like the biggest face and name in Nashville for pop R&B, future R&B - I don't even know what I'd call it - his stuff is great. There's also this almost, like, '80s throwback kind of vibe duo called MYZICA and I've been fiddling with a remix of them for a while, but I would say, if I can't make the original song better, then I'll just scrap the remix and that's where I'm at. Definitely check them out, they're awesome if you like '80s sounds and synths.

Russ, how would you describe your sound or style to someone who hadn't heard you before?

Russ: I've been making music for a long time. I started when I first moved to Nashville, doing the singer-songwriter thing, and I was singing and I had a couple bands and that was all cool and good and I was pretty anti electronic music until about 2012 when I heard a song by Skrillex that straight up blew my mind [laughs]. And I'm in no means trying to emulate Skrillex with my sound, but the stuff he was doing around then, and still does to this day, just really shocked my ears so much and I was just fascinated, like, what is he doing, how is he doing this, how is he getting this finished product that sounds so good and so huge and he was doing it all on a laptop. So I just dove into thousands of YouTube videos on how to produce electronic music and never really looked back. I really liked the whole idea that him, Diplo and Justin Bieber touched on with that song they had a while back that was pushing the envelope with exactly what I said, manipulating vocals and making something new out of that. I think that is where I see my music going in the future and, obviously, this track has it, the R.LUM.R track I remixed has it, and pretty much everything I've put out recently. I love just making a new sound. Something fresh that your ears have never heard that I might not even be able to identify. More generally, I love pop and I love electronic music and anything that will get stuck in your head, that's the kind of music I love to make. I don't even know if I can say I've found my own sound, so I could keep going, but whatever sounds new and fresh and exciting, that's where I got and that's my launchpad.

Kyle: But still keeping it within the realm of listenable pop music, not only for the club.

Russ: Something you could listen to in your bedroom or at a party or anywhere else other than a club. I'm down with the club, but I feel like most people listening to my music are just chilling at home, listening to Spotify or SoundCloud... Somewhere between the club and Spotify.

Beyoncé or Taylor Swift?

Russ: I would be scared of Beyoncé, she's too powerful.

Kyle: I'm going to have to say Beyoncé.

Russ: I wouldn't know what to do with Beyoncé, I'd be like. "hey, do you want a drink of water or something".

Drake or Kendrick Lamar?

Kyle: I'm a Drake guy.

Russ: I love Drake but I do love Kendrick. I want a lot of Drake and a little bit of Kendrick, but I guess I'm going to go with Drake. I love Drake and his production, this guy 40, his main production dude, I'm sure you've noticed on a lot of his tracks, these muted drums that's low and stumpy, so I use a little bit of that.

Journey or The Eagles?

Russ: I've been to a few Journey concerts and one of the first songs I learned on piano is "Don't Stop Believin'" so... but The Eagles are pretty classic... I'm going to have to go with Journey. 

Kyle: This is the hardest one, I think. I feel like Journey's songs are better - no offense - but you can't touch The Eagles' harmony - unless you're Zac Brown Band. Journey. 

What were your inspirations behind your new single "Natural"?

Kyle: I had this title "Natural" and I haven't gone on a million dates, but I've gone on enough dates to where I feel like it's very obvious when something is natural, as far as chemistry, and it's very obvious when something is not and feels forced and uncomfortable. So I was just about to go to New York for a couple weeks and so, without even thinking of New York, I was already inspired by the trip and I guess I painted a picture of meeting this person and, like it says in the pre chorus, "and I saw your face in a random Brooklyn bar and I thought was lost on a train that took me to where you are". So the idea of thinking back to the first time I ever fell in love with someone and how I just ended up there, it was this random experience that I could not have planned and it was just this thing that was natural and happened. That feeling of just living your life and someone comes through it and you're like, "oh my gosh, I am totally crazy about this person," and it's just very natural. It's funny, now that I've listened to that song more, I think I have a little more reasoning - I haven't even really told this to Russ - but every time I listen to the song - we wrote it a few months back - that's taken on more of that meaning to me. We had the idea of natural, so we kind of together painted this picture. There's a few people who changed the way I write songs and one of them is Andrew McMahon - he was in a band called Jack's Mannequin and now he does another thing - my manager used to work with him and he came over to my house one time and we had this conversation and it's just those very descriptive lyrics; even that song "Closer" by The Chainsmokers which everyone's heard a million times, they have those descriptive things like, "in the backseat of your Rover," and I just love painting those visuals, like, "I saw your face in a random Brooklyn bar," and the song feels like it's Fall/Winter and I wanted to paint this nostalgic feeling of meeting someone in that circumstance in New York City.

Russ: Yeah. Well said, Kyle, love it. From my perspective on my side, I had this track and we pretty much just had it playing on a loop, what we thought would be the chorus. Kyle was humming and words were just slipping out and non-words were coming in there and I was like, "hey, whoa, did you just say natural?" and he was like, "uh, yeah, totally," so I was like, "okay, feels so natural" and that's where we went. We literally went from that title word. We were painting this picture of this Fall vibe and you mentioned you were going to New York soon so we name-dropped Brooklyn and the train and the more that we could see with it, the better. It all stemmed from that word.

Kyle: 'Cause I remember we were resting for the first 30 minutes/hour and we were just like, "I don't know!" and I think, once we found that hook, it just all happened from there. There's always this time where you're figuring out what you want and then we had that breakthrough moment and it was just smooth sailing.

Do you have plans to release more tracks together or even to release separate albums this year?

Kyle: I'm sure we'll work together again, whether it's on the remix side of things or my own artist stuff or doing a song together; I love what Russ does. For sure on my end, I'm releasing a single at the end of this year and then an EP, so I'm just working towards that; and I have a couple other featured things coming out this year. On my end, that's what I've got going on.

Russ: Ditto. I don't want to say I'm primarily a remix guy, but that's how I learned how to produce and really finish a song, electronically anyway, and grab somebody else's vocals and make a new song around it. I've got a couple of remixes in the works, I've got a couple of other features and tracks in the works. I've got one with this guy, Rayvon Owen - he was on American Idol a couple years ago - no idea when that's coming out 'cause these things kind of roll real slow. I think the era of albums and EPs is dying, and I've wrestled with that myself - I'm sure Kyle has too, 'cause he's released singles as well - but we're just living in an era of singles. Nobody really takes the time to just sit down and listen to an album anymore, it's basically just like, put your song out and, by the time everybody's sick of that, you better have another song ready to go. It's just the way that it is and it's where I see myself - and it sounds like Kyle, as well - just one song at a time, pumping it out. I think it's easier that way too, other than finishing a song and then a year later it finally comes out on the album. That's how it is for me, anyways, I like to just get it out ASAP. Remixes, be on the lookout.

What do you hope listeners are able to take away from your music?

Kyle: For me, I just hope they feel something. Whether it's happy, sad, nostalgic, I just want someone to feel something and feel connected to it. I guess that's my whole goal. It also depends on the content of the song, like, for this, I feel like this is a nighttime driving type of song vibe, I could see it in a few different scenarios, but I would love for someone to feel something, regardless. With any song, if I can make someone feel emotions then I feel like my job is done. If I can connect with someone and someone hears something and is like, "oh my gosh, I'm not alone, someone else does feel like this," then that is an awesome thing and I feel like my job has been done if I'm capable of doing that.

Russ: Totally. We're going to take over New York City with this one.

[Laughter]

Russ: Everybody in Brooklyn is going to relate to this one. Just to add onto that, I think what Kyle brought to the track is just the emotion and the lyrics are relatable and understandable and simple and I think my half of the track was the 'get you moving' half. I think that's what I want people to do. Obviously relate to it, that's fantastic and you can't even really describe that type of thing, but it's a visual thing for me; I DJ and I'm going to play this song out and I want people moving.

Kyle: Yeah, heads bobbing, feet moving.

Is there anything you want to add?

Russ: If there's any other musicians or kids or whatever it is you're doing and you think you don't have the right tools or the right equipment or you're not experienced enough, just ignore all those thoughts and remember that anything you want to do, you can do; especially make music from your freaking bedroom if you want. There's nothing stopping you but your own conscience. Me and Kyle did it in a day with a laptop and two speakers and a microphone. It sounds good enough and, at the end of the day, it's a song. Go for it, don't let your fears stop you.

Kyle: I started playing music at 17 and now I'm 24 so it's been a decent amount of time but, I believe the same thing. If you feel something, you should go do it.

Russ: Especially in the time of YouTube. Honestly, if I wanted to build a house right now - I probably wouldn't recommend anyone move in - but I could build a house and it's the same way with music. People need to go build the house they want to build.

Kyle: That's beautiful.

Kyle Reynolds             Facebook             Twitter             SoundCloud

Russ Macklin             Facebook             Twitter             SoundCloud

MILCK by E

Photo Credit Jen Rosenstein

Catch up with singer-songwriter MILCK, watch the video for her single "Quiet", and join her and The Pussyhat Project at the Women's March in Washington, DC on January 21st to see her perform the new single with 25 other female singers.

What first got you interested in music and in songwriting?

MILCK: I started singing when I was really young, maybe 3 or so, and my dad - even though he wanted me to pursue something more traditional like medicine or law - he thought, "if she's going to be singing all the time, she should sing correctly". So he put me in these classical voice lessons and classical piano lessons, which was amazing because I learned a lot of foundational techniques there and then I started joining choirs; the only things in school that I felt I could really excel in were stuff with singing and I just had this natural inclination towards it. And then I started getting into dance team and, while I was on dance team, there's so much attention on how we look and I was dancing in front of a mirror with my team all the time so I developed anorexia. It was also just a crazy time. I was 14, you know, [laughs] when you're 14, there's so many hormones. I fell into an abusive relationship with a boyfriend - I think he was almost 18 at the time - and I just really felt like my world was spinning out of control and the only thing that really helped me was writing music. I started sitting at the piano in high school and approaching it with more pop and writing; rather than reading music, I was just making music from my mind and that's how it all started. I think, once I wrote my first pop song at 16 or so, things just changed and that became my love and I remember I would tell myself, "this is my thing". But I was really afraid, because I wasn't supposed to have that as my thing, I was supposed to go to a really good school and follow my father and my sister's footsteps and be a doctor. I ended up going to UC Berkeley, studying pre-med and pre-law - 'pre' every Asian American immigrant appropriate major - and eventually just graduated and decided to do music. During my senior year, I remember calling my dad and breaking the news to him and I had known for a year already, I was just trying to figure out how to tell him, so that was its own upheaval and a lot of tension in the family. [Music] was the only place where I felt like I could say what I wanted to say without getting punished or in trouble for it. I grew up in this American culture and my mind understands the ways of how a progressive culture is and I always clashed with my family; no matter how much we love each other, even today, we work with it a lot better now, but there's still moments of tension. I realized that, from age 16 to age 25, I was using music to say what I really thought because, in real life, I didn't have my voice yet. It wasn't until age 25 where I started searching for my voice because I think not having a voice also inhibited me from writing music that I felt was free. So, music's been a big part of my life and a big source of comfort and energy for a long time.

Do you remember what that pop song you wrote at 16 was about?

[Laughs] Yeah, it was called "Every Breath" and it was about being suffocated. And it's kind of interesting because it's almost like the same concept as "Quiet". I think the chorus was like, "the thought that's staying with you, it creeps" [laughs] and it was basically singing about my parents, like, 'I need to be free and every breath just seems so difficult to take'. I remember performing that at high school, super shy, and I was a big student council nerd and I wasn't known to sing original songs but I remember that being a big moment because it felt like my body was electrified and I was like, "oh, this is, I think, what it feels like to be doing something that's bigger than oneself," so I'm always chasing that feeling.

Which musicians have you been influenced by?

For classical music, when I was playing piano and singing, the one composer that I just gravitated towards was Chopin. His music is very, very emotional and his lines aren't necessarily complicated, but his melodies are just very emotive and to the point; his songs rely on dynamics, playing really softly or really loudly at certain points, and I could just feel his spirit and I felt comforted by it. He just made sense to me above all the other composers. Growing up, I was exposed to Jewel and Sarah McLachlan and my sister had CDs and I would listen to those and then, once I heard the Garden State soundtrack, I heard Imogen Heap, I heard Sia, and I was just such a Sia fan since then; I've been following her trajectory because she's really allowed herself to grow. Even Bill Withers and Marvin Gaye, a lot of that soulful music was really influential to me; Marvin Gaye's songwriting was amazing and he was saying important things. Jack Johnson, too; really simple music, in a sense, but his lyrics and his messages are all very powerful. I think he's the first time, when I heard his song "Taylor", that's when I was like, "oh, this is how I can write music"; you can mask really, really intense concepts and deliver that through story and that was really cool to me, so that song, specifically, made me want to write more. Now, man, there's so many different artists, but I hold onto Massive Attack and Portishead, the trip hop music, I hold onto that pretty dearly. The Matrix soundtrack [laughs] I love that movie and their music is really cinematic and energizing and that's the sound I want to explore and meld it with the pop influence that I have with the singer-songwriter influence and just having those come together, that's the journey I'm on right now. Sleeping At Last is a band that I really love, it's actually just one guy, but I'm really gravitating towards cinematic music and so there's a lot of drama and a lot of emotion in it - and I'm very emotional - so it's a nice outlet.

If you were to pick one female artist to add to a playlist for female empowerment, who would it be?

The first one that comes to mind is Regina Spektor, she has this one song called "Eet" and I used to play that song on repeat. I eat up all of Tori Amos' stuff. Oh, you know who's really great, Emeli Sandé; I really love her and her music, it's very strong and she's done a duet with Labrinth and, all across the board, all her work is really, really great.

How would you describe your sound to someone who had never heard your music?

The more that I strive for, and I think what I'm starting to get across, is empowering and healing. I think that it's definitely cinematic and dramatic, as well. There's dark textures but there's a hopeful tone with it, so there's a good mix of dark and light in there. The other word that keeps ringing in my head lately is deep; I've tried to write non-deep songs and I don't write that really well. Songs that are more frivolous or fun, I feel like my strength doesn't lie there [laughs], my stuff is a little more in-depth and emotional.

What were your inspirations behind the single and new video for "Quiet"?

I went through some violence in my youth and I still have nightmares about it. I was scheduled to do a writing session and the night before the writing session I had this nightmare that I was getting hit and I was on the floor and the person was hitting me and it was very theatrical; there was a spotlight and there were two people on each side of me, and the abuser. They were standing and watching me being hit and they were looking down and I was looking up at them and I said, "you should do something, you should say something, this isn't right," and one of the observers was like, "just be quiet, it'll be over soon," and then I said, "well I can't keep quiet anymore". I remember telling my producer that - because I was haunted by the dream - and I told her the story and she was like, "oh, that's your chorus," and I got these goosebumps and I was like, "yeah, I think you're right," so then we started writing from there. My goal has been to write a song that I can play right after a situation where somebody judges me for being this docile, obedient, Asian American who doesn't know what she wants; in the industry, I feel like there's a lot of judgement when that happens and I'm really smart - which is not a bad thing - but they're like, "oh you're really smart, you might not know what you want, you're very influenced by your parents," or something like that. There's a lot of eliminating stereotypes. I wanted a song that I could play after those situations and feel release, I wanted to play it after my nightmares, and I wanted to play it in those moments of my childhood when I wanted to speak up and was punished for it. For a few years I was trying to write this song and I had different concepts, like, my dad used to say "don't cry, don't cry," not to hurt me, but because it's hard for him to watch me cry but, at that time when I was younger it was really stifling because I just needed to cry and I was always told not to do what I needed to do. I tried to write a song like "Let Me Cry" and all these different titles and we finally came up with it that day.

The video is an interesting concept because I was about to commit to another director and then last minute I thought to reach out to this one director, Sammi Cohen, who ended up doing the video. Last minute I was like, "I'm just going to see what she thinks about the song and if she has any ideas," and I was going to go with the director that my management at the time had recommended, but it didn't feel 100% right. I talked to Sammi, I sent her the song, and she called me back and her voice was cracking and she had her own personal story for the video from her childhood so she pitched me some ideas and one of her ideas was the idea that we ended up using. Coincidentally, two days before, I had been asking the director that I was going to work with, "hey, can we have me in a box, like, what if I scream and this glass box shatters?" and he was like, "no, that's not possible, it's too expensive and too dangerous," but then Sammi came up with this idea of water and glass and the glass breaking and I was like, "oh, you think we can do this?" and she was like, "oh definitely". Her attitude is amazing and I just felt like, this is it, this is the idea that feels 100% right. There's such a difference between an idea that's 95% right and an idea that's fully true. A lot of people pitched ideas of doing dance with the video and I think dance is beautiful but for this video, I really wanted it to be very raw and focused on that feeling and not about movement but just about that feeling of being suffocated and feeling trapped when we're not able to voice ourselves, so this concept felt right to me. That's how it was born and I think this song and this video are products of following intuition and my heart and not compromising at all. I could have committed to that first director - 'cause he's very talented - but the concept just wasn't right and there was this little voice in me that said, "uhh, you should keep looking". In my younger artist days, sometimes I would not acknowledge that voice and I'd be like, "let's just make it work," but I think we are rewarded when we believe in abundance in the world and know that the right thing is out there. It's easy for me to just be like, "this is what I have so I have to work with this," but I think expecting more from the world and the people around me has rewarded me with stuff that is bigger than myself. The video I couldn't have done without Sammi and her passion, so everything was meant to be.

Would you mind telling our readers more about your #ICANTKEEPQUIET campaign?

Yeah, I was brainstorming with Krista Suh - she started the Pussyhat movement - and we were just talking about how we can make an impact at the march and I was like, "well, I can make an a cappella version of the song and bring it to the march and perform it," and then, as we brainstormed and riffed off each other we were like, "okay, let's flash mobs," and then she was like, "you should have a huge choir," and I was like, "okay, well, I'll try". At first it was 14 girls and then last minute it became 25 girls, so the choir did happen. So what I thought was, I can make the music sheet for the a cappella version public for people - and I have every part recorded separately - and what I'd like to do is have anybody and any organizations that sing, they can download this material and they can make it their own and perform it in their own cities; there's an effort to organize an Olympia choir and they're trying to get permission. My hope is that people can use the music to give themselves a literal and figurative voice and I'm thinking of starting a Los Angeles choir once I'm done with the DC one and continuing with it 'cause it's really fun and I think it's a powerful way to meet other people who believe in this type of positive message, so it would be healing for people to meet, as well. The logo is designed by this guy named Henry Ammaan and it's really simple but it has the female symbol with the Q and I'm so proud of it. I'm developing merchandise so that the proceeds will go to this organization called Step Up that provides mentorship and after school programs for girls, ages 13-18, who are at risk of becoming pregnant earlier or they have to work outside of school or their parents aren't around, and I thought it was such a cool program that empowers young girls to continue their education, go to college if they want, and pursue whatever they want in a healthy context. I really craved that when I was younger so I want to give that back. Right now, #ICANTKEEPQUIET is going to be three forks, it's going to be 1) merchandise, 2) the different choirs that pop up wherever they decide to pop up, and 3) I'm basically interviewing a bunch of inspirational women who have spoken up against something that was oppressing them or something that felt really scary and I'm going to collect those stories, write about them, and post them on the site. My project with that is taking those stories and writing new music from those stories, so it'll kind of keep cycling within itself. From there, I have no idea. Maybe that will be the project or it could grow, I'm not quite sure yet, but we'll just feel it out.

You'll be joining The Pussyhat Project for Saturday's march but, for our readers who can't make it to DC, how can they help or donate to #ICANTKEEPQUIET or The Pussyhat Project?

They can make their own hats! If they go to pussyhatproject.com there's a template to make hats and I think, even after the march, it still would be wonderful to have an exchange of hats between women and I think it brings people together. In terms of the #ICANTKEEPQUIET movement, if they want to share stories and post the #icantkeepquiet, I just would love to see the hashtag organically grow and have people share whatever they want. We just had a female football player post with #icantkeepquiet because she was one of the first female football players on a varsity team in California and, for many years before she got on the team, everyone was saying she couldn't play football. Different stories like that are so inspiring and uplifting, especially when our news is addicted to negativity, I think the internet is a great place for people to start restructuring our story and frame of mind so we can think in abundance and love and positivity. That's my effort in doing that and I know a lot of other people are starting to do that as well, so it's really inspiring. It's a scary time, but I also think it's a very helpful time.

Do you have plans to release an album?

Yeah, I'm thinking what I'm going to do is release a few more singles separately, and then have them culminate into an album. I'm thinking of letting "Quiet" grow for a little bit and, while it's growing, prep for the next single, which I'm thinking of releasing in Spring or Summer, depending on the movement of "Quiet", and then I have a song planned for Fall and Winter, two separate songs. We'll see how everything works out but I could even be releasing an EP at the end of this year or the beginning of next year just depending on what happens.

What do you hope listeners are able to take away from your music?

I just hope that it makes them feel less alone and it makes them feel like they're heard and seen. That's my goal, because music did that for me. It really healed me and comforted me and made me feel like I could move forward despite whatever obstacles I had. I wanted to empower people to feel like they can step out of stereotypes of these constrictions promoted by mass media and to just speak up for whatever they want, even on both sides. I have a couple of fans who are more on the conservative side and they're like, "well, are you not wanting women who are against abortion to play this song," and I'm like, well, no, I think it's just about allowing everyone to freely be who they want to be, so my response to her was, "I want those women too to feel safe and to feel heard". It's not about being divisive, it's just saying "this is my story," so if I amplify my story, I hope other people will amplify their stories because that's how the world becomes a healthier space. When people restrict themselves and force themselves to live behind someone else's story, that's when fear happens and that's when pain doesn't heal and people start blaming things. I just want a healthy processing so people can be kind to one another. 

Photo Credit Jen Rosenstein

Website             #ICANTKEEPQUIET             Pussyhat Project             Facebook             Twitter             SoundCloud             YouTube             Instagram

Corina Corina by E

Photo Credit Dan Gensel

Catch up with Oakland/Brooklyn-based R&B soul singer-songwriter Corina Corina and watch the video for her single "Disappointment" off her latest EP, Run The Blues, out now.

What first got you interested in music and songwriting?

Corina Corina: It's always a hard question to answer because I just wanted to do it since before I can remember. It sounds cliché, but I was, like, chosen or born to do it. I've always been singing and songwriting came a little bit later; I used to write poetry and stuff in high school, but I was always too shy about it. And then, as I got older, I moved to New York and started my own band and they all encouraged me to start writing my own music and I was really shy about it, but they were so supportive and then I started doing it and it became just as important to me as singing, so now I think they're pretty equal.

What was the first song you wrote that you were really happy with?

I don't remember what the first rendition of the song was called, but it ended up being called "Cost of Living" and it was on my first album, The Eargasm. I started writing that after a really bad job interview and I sat down on a park bench and I wrote this song and I knew I had something 'cause it was just so honest and authentic and I wrote it in one sitting.

Which musicians were you influenced by?

Ray Charles was my dad's favorite, so I kind of grew up with him. The first person who made me want to be a singer was Aretha Franklin, for sure. Stevie Wonder. Bonnie Raitt was big for me - and this was all as a kid before I discovered my own music. Mariah Carey, Madonna, Janet Jackson, people like that when I was younger. And then in high school, I became really, really into hip hop and R&B, so that was Mary J. Blige, Jodeci, and then Dr. Dre too, all that. I started middle school in '91, so a lot of really good music was happening then in the mainstream. I could keep going [laughs].

Is there anyone you're hooked on now?

I'm really into Run the Jewels because, obviously, my mixtape right now is based on them. I listen to Kendrick Lamar, I like people like A$AP Rocky - more independent-type stuff. But when it comes to singers, I'm into Beyoncé and Solange and people like that. I really like Anderson .Paak, I really like him, I follow everything he does.

What words would you use to describe your own sound?

I've been told by multiple people that I don't sound like anyone else, just tonally and vocally I don't. I definitely have a lot of soul influence. My music's very lyrically driven and I think that's what sets me apart from other modern R&B/pop singers. I write like a rapper, in terms of the content and the variety of content in my music, so it's very blues and hip hop and very '90s inspired.

What were your inspirations behind your single and the video for "Disappointment"?

The whole project in itself is very much just based on tour life. I wrote it all while I was touring a lot and I wrote it with the idea of songs that I would want to perform live in mind, so it had a very 'live' feel to it, I think. The song "Disappointment" is basically just based on the feeling of wanting someone to support me or come to my show and them not. I feel like it's kind of universal for any artist or anyone who's really trying to push something and just, no matter what I do, it's never going to be good enough, you're never going to show up, no matter what I do. I think it's healthy to express anger sometimes and it feels really cathartic to just be really, really pissed off; people seem to appreciate it. And the video was, my younger sister is the head sound person at the Gilman - which is a legendary punk rock venue in my hometown - and I always just thought that would be a great setting for a video and I think it worked out perfectly. The guy that I worked with - Bleev Promo - it was my first time working with him and he made it so easy; I don't love shooting videos, so he made it pretty painless.

Could you tell us more about Run The Blues and what new listeners can expect to hear?

Okay, well, the easiest way to explain it is just Run the Jewels - El-P and Killer Mike - are basically my favorite act out right now. They've both been around for a really long time and I've been following their careers for decades and listening to them. I guess I started this project right when Run the Jewels 2 came out and, like I said, I was touring a lot, I listened to their music a lot while on tour and it helped me get through stuff; I hadn't put out a new project in a while and I was getting really tired of singing the same songs over and over again every night and I was like, "well, until I do another full length album, I'm going to just make something for fun in the interim that I want to perform". Coincidentally, my younger sister had just graduated from audio engineering school, so it was something we could work on together. It's kind of like a collaboration between Run the Jewels inspiration, me just talking about tour stories, and then having this project that I got to work on with my family.

Do you have a favorite track to perform live?

"Disappointment" is definitely one of them. I have a song called "Toothbrush" from my third album that hasn't come out yet but I do it as a closer for every show and it always works; it's really nice to have a song where you know it's always going to get everyone. I think "Disappointment" and "Toothbrush" are probably my two favorite ones to perform. I really like the high intensity, heavy, emotional songs that really get peoples' attention, that's totally my thing.

In one sentence, how would you sum up the Run The Blues EP?

An honest and unapologetic tribute to my favorite rap group in the world.

What do you hope listeners are able to take away from your music?

My message is really like having a different voice for a woman that people don't hear in the mainstream very often whether it be as a queer woman, or as a woman who is single in her 30s, or who just kind of does whatever she wants, but I think it's more universal than that. It's just giving people permission to be whoever and whatever they are and to feel however they want to feel. I think my main message is just honesty and owning your truth. The people I think who gravitate towards me are people where stuff like that really resonates with them and it's refreshing to hear an artist who is so honest about everything. That's what I hope the takeaway is.

Is there anything you want to add?

Just that it's really important - not just for myself - but when people discover a new independent artist that they're really into, it's really important to spread the word. We rely so heavily on that and it's also a gift for everybody; whoever you tell, you could be really changing something for the person you tell because they could be discovering their new favorite artist or their new favorite song. It's also a huge service to the artist, because we don't have labels and PR and that sort of thing and our PR really is word of mouth.

Photo Credit Bryon Malik

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Cody Jay by E

Catch up with LA-based singer-songwriter Cody Jay and listen to his single "Beautiful" off his latest acoustic album, Off The Vine.

What got you interested in music and in songwriting?

Cody Jay: I've been involved in music my entire life. Both my parents are really into music - my mom's a singer and my dad plays guitar - but they never really made it a career of theirs, they just enjoyed music. So they showed me music from when I was a little kid, exposed me to all different types, and I just decided - [laughs] before I really knew what was involved in all of it - that that's what I wanted to do. I didn't know how, I didn't know what field or what genre of music I would want. I did musicals growing up, I was that musical theater kid, and then I went to college and I studied music in college too, but that was classical music and I enjoyed it but it just didn't feel right; I was still searching for that one thing that resonated with me, and I think I found it.

Do you remember the first song you wrote that helped you to find your genre?

Yeah, it was the single off of the album Off The Vine. It was "Animal" and that was the first music video I came out with and it just springboarded everything into that genre. I think, even from that track, my sound is continuing to evolve. I have a lot of tracks that are coming out pretty soon that I'm really, really excited for so I don't want any spoilers but, the more that I produce in this genre, the more I'm finding my voice and I'm able to express myself as a person too, rather than just a producer in that genre.

Which musicians were you influenced by?

The people I listened to growing up were a wide variety of different genres but the ones that influenced me the most actually were Michael Jackson, Usher, Justin Timberlake, and some of the acoustic people like James Taylor and Gordon Lightfoot. I listened to rappers too growing up, I listened to a lot of Lil Wayne [laughs]. All different types of music have been a part of my life and I just finally picked a genre but, subtly, if you listen to my tracks you can hear some of those influences in there.

How would you describe your sound to someone who had never heard your music before?

Urban pop and R&B. That's what I decided worked for my music 'cause, you know, it's like, well, the long answer is acoustic pop, R&B, rap, urban.

What were your inspirations behind your single "Beautiful"?

I did release the "Beautiful" acoustic single, which is a cover of the original track off of the first album. It's a story and I'm speaking directly to one person about everything that we have and it's like, don't keep score of all of the little petty things that you'll argue about everyday, there's a bigger picture and that bigger picture is that what we have is beautiful: forget about all the little things. In the lyrics I say, "tell me when you'll stop pretending that you're not keeping score/we can mend this if you're open, it doesn't matter if it's broken/reach out your feelings to me or I can't be the things that I know that you need/but above all the only thing I can ask of you is that you believe that what we have is true". The inspiration was to show a different side of my artistry through acoustic music and show that I'm not just producing this slow, down-tempo R&B-type jams. I do believe the things that I'm saying, so it's a different way to hear the song, even though it's the same song.

Could you tell us more about your debut album Off The Vine and what people can expect to hear?

They can hear a throwback feel with a modern take. When people hear it, they say that it feels like there's some '90s R&B influence in there with modern, urban R&B stylings. I guess it could be a perfect blend between Usher's Confessions and Justin Bieber's Journals album.

Why did you decide to release this acoustic version of Off The Vine?

I kind of stumbled into it, it wasn't a plan and I didn't plan to do it. A very good friend of mine, Todd McCool - he's the one who's playing guitar on all of the tracks - he came over and we were hanging out one day and he decided to play along to some of my songs on the album, just with a guitar, and I started singing along and I said, "wow, this is really cool, I think I'd like to release an acoustic version of the album because it just has such a different feel". They almost feel like different songs. I just stumbled into it, but then I realized how cool it would be for me to release acoustic music when I never really saw myself being that artist, I never really saw myself being the acoustic guy. I had a really good time making it and I'd like to do more in the future.

You said each track sounds different, is there a song off the first album you'd call your favorite versus a favorite on the acoustic album?

Ooh, yeah. I think I chose "Beautiful" as the single because that one really just sounds so different between the different versions. On the first album, "One Day" has always been one of my favorite tracks and there's a music video out for that one too which is really cool. I would say, on the original album, my favorite track would be "One Day" but, on the acoustic album, my favorite track would be "Beautiful".

How would you sum up Off The Vine in one sentence?

A familiar yet unique album that expresses just the beginning of what Cody Jay has to offer.

What do you hope listeners are able to take away from your music?

I hope that they see a little bit into who I am, both as a person and as an artist. I give so much of myself and it's how I express myself, I express myself through my music and through my voice, and I hope that I speak to people and, when they listen to it, they each have their own interpretation of it and it means something different to everyone. I don't want everyone to just hear what I heard or I thought, I think the beauty about music is that it speaks to everyone differently and as long as they feel something from it, then I think I did my job.

Is there anything you want to add?

I have videos for the acoustic songs coming out soon. The release dates are probably in about a month or so, but they're all going to be on my official YouTube channel, so be sure to look out for those.

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