Interviews

Josh Taerk by E

Catch up with singer-songwriter Josh Taerk, watch the video for his single "Anywhere Love Took Us", and look for much more to come soon.

What got you interested in songwriting and in music?

Josh: I've always loved music and it's been a pretty big staple in my life ever since I can remember. Both of my parents really loved everything from Bruce Springsteen and Bob Dylan to Joni Mitchell and Edwin McCain and all of these different genres of music. Growing up, that was really how we spent a lot of our family time; they would put on their favorite albums or CDs and we would just hang out and listen to them together. My love for music started at a really young age.

I started listening to some of my own music as I got older. I got into the boy band thing for awhile [laughs] when I was, like, 10 years old and I thought that was going to be the kind of music that I ended up singing or performing because I loved it. I had a friend of mine at the time who looked back then the way that I do now - with the long, kind of rocker hair and black T-shirts and whatnot - and he kept joking around with me like, "man, the pop music you're listening to is fine, but that's not really music, you gotta listen to some other stuff". We'd joke around with each other like that, just back and forth about the kind of music that we were into, and one day he invited me out to see a friend of his perform with their band and they played all kinds of classic rock stuff: AC/DC and some new rock stuff, like Nirvana and Green Day, at the time. I had never really been into that world, as far as music was concerned; again, I thought I was going to be a pop singer. So, I went to this concert and was talking with my friend, the band got onstage, and I honestly can't tell you what the rest of the conversation was about. I was so mesmerized by the sound that all of these guys were getting on stage with the electric guitars and the solos and the bass and the drums and just the cohesion of that sound and the way that all of those moving parts came together and the fun that they were having being up there together, actually playing those instruments, was something really inspiring to see. I switched focus and started to learn how to play guitar and really started to sing, because I quickly found out that if I was playing chords to a song, people wouldn't necessarily know what song I was playing unless I sang the words. So that's really how I got into playing guitar music and singer-songwriter stuff and rock & roll stuff.

From that point, I really got into writing through an English teacher that I had in high school. His name was Mr. DeFranco and Mr. DeFranco was - and still is - the most inspiring teacher/professor I've ever been in class with. He was teaching grade 11 English and he was also teaching grade 12 Writer's Craft and I remember walking into the Writer's Craft class and sitting down not really knowing what we would get into and having this huge textbook in front of me with all of these really long terms and definitions thinking, "oh great, I'm getting into another course full of memorizing and regurgitating terms," and he comes in and he turns on his stereo and he's got "Hotel California" playing on his stereo; he plays probably the first 2 minutes of the song and then says, "okay, what does it mean?". I instantly fell in love with his class. He opened my eyes to this whole other world of taking in information from different kinds of texts; it wasn't just about the novels that everyone talks about or the staples that everybody should know - and there's a place for that stuff, I'm a huge Shakespeare fan and I love all of that writing - but he took everything from Coca-Cola ads to short stories that were written by authors that none of us had ever heard of before to poems to movies and taught us how to read them properly: he taught us how to deconstruct them and then reconstruct them. I fell in love with the idea of what stories can do and how stories can take you outside of your world and your environment and things that you're thinking about at that moment and create a space for you to be able to work out different things that you were thinking about but didn't really know were there, or allow you to experience this whole other environment through somebody else's experience and be able to take something away from that. As soon as I started taking that course, I started writing my own songs; by the time I graduated high school, I wrote my first proper song. I had written stuff before then, but the first song that I really sat back and went, "wow, I'm onto something here, I'm really proud of this". That song was "Smell The Roses" off of my first album, which is called the Josh album, and that was the first real song that I ever wrote and, from there, it just all started to pour out of me.

Which musicians have you been influenced by?

It's funny, I take on the perception that you can never learn enough about what you love to do and there's always more that you can take in and more that you can learn, not only from the people that have come before you, but the people that are your peers and that are working in the same spot that you are at right now. So I'm constantly finding new music, new songs, new ways of telling stories through listening to other music. Everything from watching TV shows, watching movies, reading books, I never know where that inspiration is going to come from, but it's always really exciting when it does come because it's something that I hadn't experienced before.

As far as music goes, I'm still very into the classic rock stuff, because that's what I grew up listening to; that was what my parents played in the house all the time. Everything from The Eagles to Neil Young, John Cougar Mellencamp, all of that stuff plays a really big role in the way that I connected with music, but also the way that I see music from a writing standpoint; the way that they focused on the characters in their stories, the way that they focused on really inhabiting the emotional life of the story that they were telling. It wasn't enough to just tell a story, everything in that song linked back to that story, from the instrumentation to the way that they sang the song, the way that they performed that song live, you could feel how important that story was to that artist and you couldn't help but then take that story in and feel something as it related to your life at the same time.

Classic rock definitely holds that very special place in my heart but modern country music, to me, has a lot of those kind of classic rock elements. It almost feels like they took up the baton where classic rock left off. Rock & roll music blended into all of these different genres and different sub genres; you have hard rock, metal, alternative rock that are still very big communities, but rock & roll, as far as the classic rock sound goes, reminds me a lot of what guys like Eric Church, Keith Urban, Zac Brown are doing in country these days and I absolutely devour those albums; I love those guys.

Is there anyone you're hooked on now?

I really like Eric Church. I liked him from the time that he released Chief, but his newer album, Mr. Misunderstood, I know it's been out for awhile, but the songs on that album are really cool. Especially because, to me, it feels like he's telling his story with that song, in particular, "Mr. Misunderstood". There were so many things that, as a young musician growing up and trying to carve out a space in this industry for myself, trying to figure out who I was as opposed to who people saw me being as an artist; as a young artist, you're exposed to a lot of different music, you see a lot of people coming up in different genres, and there are always going to be people that tell you, "oh, you know if you did this, then you'd be an overnight success. If you cut your hair, if you change the way that you were singing, if you used smaller words in your writing, you'd be an overnight success," and they're always trying to help when they give you that kind of advice - especially a greener artist - but, at the end of the day, you've got to stay true to who you are and the things that you believe in. The sound that makes you excited to play, the words that inspire emotions when you write them down and when you sing them to other people, that's when you know that you're in the right place and you're doing the right thing. So, when I heard his song, "Mr. Misunderstood", he talks about growing up and he has one line, "they tried to soften my points and sand my edges so I just grew out my hair"; I loved that. I thought it was great, it felt very honest, it felt very earnest, and the sound of the record too had that raw quality, as well. I really liked how everything from the story to the emotion to the way that they were telling the story all fit together.

How would you describe your own sound?

That's a really good question. I usually let other people tell me what they think my music is. It was funny, for a long time when I was just starting out and I was a little younger, I was adamant, "no, my music is 'x'," or, "no, this song is a 'y' kind of song," but going through university, I studied English Literature and I had a course that talked about the more technical sides of reading text - it was all theory-based and described the different ways that people interact with stories - and there was one theory called Reader-Response theory. One gentleman named Wolfgang Iser, his whole theory was that, to make a text really good, in order to say that that text is amazing, there has to be a level of communication between the writer in the text and the reader in the text; meaning the writer will lay down blueprints or a map in their song or story and it's then up to the reader to go through and pick up on those little pieces of evidence that will lead them to a certain understanding, emotion, or conclusion. A great text allows that reader/listener to then be able to go back through that story and, knowing the path that they took the first time, be able to pick up on different triggers and different things in that text that will lead them to a completely different conclusion. When I read that and started to figure out what that meant, as far as my relationship to what I was doing writing songs and the relationship of the listener and myself in that creative process, I realized I can say whatever music means to me and I can describe it however I feel it should be for me; but I know that I'm onto something really good and I know that I've done something really good when somebody else listens to my songs and goes, "man, I love that track 'Anywhere Love Took Us', that is so Top 40 country". They categorize it and the audience will relate it to something that they love and that they appreciate and feel is important to them. I really try not to define it as anything other than, I'm a singer-songwriter. My focus is on telling the story in the best way that I can and however anybody else wants to categorize it, I think that's great because, to me, that means that they're connecting to something in it and it's speaking to them and they want to relate it to the genre that speaks to them.

Could you tell us more about your inspirations behind your single "Anywhere Love Took Us"?

Absolutely! It was a really fun song to write. It was the first time that I had written with my producer and good friend, Teddy Morgan, and his really good friend, Jack Williams. Teddy and I had just finished writing a song and we were waiting for Jack to come over to the studio and I had this guitar exercise that I would do just to keep my fingers loose and it was just something I would play in my spare time and not really think about; I started playing it and Teddy stopped me and went, "that was really cool, play that again," so I played this little riff again and he said, "ah, man, you gotta play that for Jack when he comes in". A couple minutes later, Jack walks in, we say hi, and he says, "did you guys have any ideas," and I said, "well, I played this for Teddy and he really liked it, it's just kind of a guitar exercise, but if you like it we can start writing something around that," and that guitar exercise became the main guitar riff for the track. It was the first time that I had really written a song around a riff. I had written songs before that I'd come up with the melody beforehand or I'll come up with the chords beforehand or I'll hear a really lovely piece of music that my songwriting partner at the time is playing and that'll inspire words, but never before had I taken it from a lead guitar part and branched out from there. It was really exciting and that guitar part really set the tone for the rest of the song; the way that the words sound, the way that we sang them, and also the story that we all wanted to tell in the process. That guitar riff had this really light, forward motion to it that made me feel like people could dance to this and I want people to feel that fun, danceable energy. But there was this very retrospective feel to it as well, almost like you were looking back in order to move forward, and that really inspired me to think about love as a journey. Love is a commitment between two people and a relationship is ever changing and ever growing and you gotta be up for the ride, for the adventure, the detours and the little things that will happen along the way; but if you remember what made you fall in love in the first place and you remember the roots of where that relationship started, then you're going to have a pretty amazing journey ahead of you and you're going to be able to face whatever comes up in the meantime.

Are you planning on releasing an album with this new single?

Yeah, after we did the music video we were playing around with, okay, do we release a full-length album, do we release an EP, do we go with another single? So, we're in the beginning stages of figuring that out at this point, but I can guarantee that Spring/Summer of 2017, there's going to be some new music. Whether it's a full-length album or an EP or even another single, I don't know yet, but I can guarantee there will be some new music to go along with "Anywhere Love Took Us". In the meantime, the video is up there and we also have a behind the scenes video that we shot during the filming process and that's a lot of fun. We had a really great time shooting that music video and being on set with those guys was fantastic. The feel of shooting the video was the exact same feel that I wanted to get in the video; light, fun, just kind of traveling and taking these shots and finding these really cool places and going, "we should do something here," or, "we should get a couple shots of you guys in the car, driving around," or, "oh, wow, this is a really nice wooded area, we should get a couple shots of you guys in here doing stuff". It felt like the making of the music video was very much like the message that we were trying to do justice to in the song.

Do you have a favorite song to perform live?

That's like asking to pick a favorite child! [Laughs] Favorite track? There are a whole bunch of them that I find people really love live and really get into and that makes the experience so much more fun for me on stage and for the band, because live music is a lot like stand-up comedy in the way that I see it; you get that instant gratification and you know right away when your audience is connecting with a song and you know right away when they're not and so, to get that feeling - to not only know that they're connecting with it but, at the same time, see them getting up and dancing - it's fantastic. We have this one song that we play, "Learning To Let Go", and we do a kind of sing-along in the middle of the song and it blows me away every time we play it how into it and how much fun the audience has doing that with us.

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

It's always been a dream of mine to be the kind of artist that my heroes were for me meaning, whenever I was thinking about something, whenever I was going through something, I could listen to a song by Springsteen or Tim McGraw or John Cougar and it felt like, not only were they describing the way that I was feeling at that moment, but it felt like, "okay, there's somebody else out there that understands this, there's somebody else out there that gets where my head's at right now," and that always inspired me to do something constructive with that; with feeling that way with knowing that somebody else out there is thinking about this stuff, has gone through this stuff, and it's worked out for them. It's a way to almost start lines of communication between people, is how I really see my job as an artist and as a writer, is to start a conversation. My dream is to have people listen to my music and know, like I did listening to my heroes, that somebody else out there has gone through this stuff, has thought about this stuff, has felt this way, and inspire them to make changes in their lives; inspire them to keep moving forward and, if nothing else, let them know that that line of communication is there, that there's someone that gets where they're at at that moment.

Is there anything you want to add?

I love that instant back and forth that social media allows because, no matter where that audience member or that fan is in the world, I can get that message as soon as they send it and send them something back. To all of the readers and all of the fans reading this, thank you so much for being a part of the journey and make sure you tweet me, Facebook me, send me a message on Snapchat or Instagram, and I'll be sure to respond.

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Mouths of Babes by E

Catch up with Americana/folk duo Mouths of Babes and listen to their single "The Red Carpet" off their new album, Brighter In The Dark, out now.

What got you interested in starting Mouths of Babes after leaving your last two bands?

Ingrid: Yeah, well, as you said, we met because our two bands were touring together and kind of serendipitously both bands went off the road for different reasons around the same time. It gave us an opportunity to take a little time off the road and, during that time, we both got asked to participate in a songwriting project called 'Real Women Real Songs' and during that we each wrote one song a week for the entire year, back in 2014. It was a really great artistic/creative challenge for both of us, but it also gave us both all these new songs. Totally new material, not related to our old bands at all, and we were living together so we started playing those songs just around the house with each other and thought, "huh, well, that's pretty cool, this sounds kinda good, maybe we'll form a duo". We never really had planned on ever being a duo, but we had all this music and it sounded good so we thought, why not?

Which musicians were you influenced by?

Ty: We have really different influences. My influences come from the folk, singer-songwriter background and Ingrid's are really from more of a Motown, soul, R&B background. I'll just speak for myself [laughs]. My dad actually has been in a lot of bands but, most recently, he's been playing with a group called The Chad Mitchell Trio and they are one of the original folk harmony groups - like the Peter, Paul & Mary era - so that's the kind of music I grew up listening to, a lot of very early folk stuff. When I got a little older, I learned about The Beatles and more classic rock. And then, as an adult, my influences have largely been other singer-songwriters, mostly female singer-songwriters, and a lot of them not very well known, just my peers that have been touring the same circuits that I have for years. Just great songwriters. It's the lyrical content that really grabs me before anything else, so people like Leonard Cohen and Joni Mitchell, Lennon, McCartney, Paul Simon, those were my heroes growing up.

Ingrid: For me, like Ty said, I was very influenced by Motown and R&B and soul music and my family history is very instrumental in that. My uncle was the person who wrote the Broadway play Dreamgirls, which is all about Motown in the '60s and it came out the same year I was born, so my whole life has been influenced from day one by that musical and all the songs from it and especially the women, but also the men, who sang in the play. My whole family knows all of that music and so it was just always playing around the house and my parents really love Motown and, same thing with The Beatles, I grew up with a lot of The Beatles playing around the house too. Also, country music was pretty big for me too; I grew up in the Midwest in Ohio, so it's very prevalent in the culture there. Just a funky mix of Broadway and Motown and country and somehow that all finds its way into my songwriting. I'd say, when we came together to do this project, we really wanted to do something that was different than our last bands and really true to this new batch of songs and where that inspiration was coming from and what we found, especially in recording this new album, is a lot of those influences coming through; especially our shared influences, there's a lot of Beatles hat tips here and there and also classic rock/Southern rock like The Allman Brothers. Trying to think of some other ones, but those are the ones that come to my head, 'cause being in the studio we would be like, "oh, that sounds a lot like-

Ty: Simon & Garfunkel.

Ingrid: Yeah, Simon & Garfunkel!

Do you remember the first song you two wrote together?

Ingrid: Funny enough, we actually have never wrote a song together. We've written all of our songs individually, but we do a lot of arranging together. So, Ty will write a song or I'll write a song and then we'll bring it to the table and then anything can happen to the song. Sometimes lyrics will change, but they often stay the same. A lot of musical arrangements are very collaborative. I'd say that's the most collaborating that we do in the creative process, is arranging the songs.

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

Ingrid: We definitely tend to use the word soulful in whatever we say [laughs]. That can sometimes make a direct reference to soul music, but really it's just very passionate music, it's very much - I hesitate to use the word spiritual because I think it scares people off - deeply meaningful; but also, we hope that the groove is just as deep as the lyrics.

Ty: In terms of genre, I would say lyric-driven, soulful, Americana is something that starts to approach what we're doing. It's not exactly pure singer-songwriter genre and it's not exactly Americana either, but it's something in there.

Ingrid: I think that the reason it's so hard to give a very simple answer to that is because our songwriting styles are very different, so part of the challenge that we faced was marrying those two styles. 

Ty: It seems like the umbrella that really can cover it all ends up being Americana, musically speaking, and then, content-wise, singer-songwriter.

What were your inspirations behind your single "The Red Carpet"?

Ty: I wrote that one around a year after my last band split up and so I was at an impasse about whether I was going to continue doing music full time and touring and all of that and that song is really about that. There's kind of like a dual pull, I think, once you hit a certain age [laughs], where you can either settle down or you can just keep going; at least as the kind of independent musicians that we have been. I was feeling those dual pulls and I think that song is really about just going, just continuing to travel, continuing to do what we've done. It ended up being the last song on the album which felt really appropriate, because that album, the making of it and all the touring that's gone with it, has really drawn us more deeply into that decision and wherever it takes us.

Could you tell us more about Brighter In The Dark and what listeners can expect to hear?

Ingrid: Yeah, sure, Ty and I have both, with various projects, released many albums over the last 15+ years and I think, thus far, we can both safely say it's the best thing we've ever done. We're really proud of this album and I think part of that is because it's so eclectic. We really got a chance to stretch our creative muscles in so many new and fun directions and different ways. Part of that is because we self-produced the album; we really got to have full creative control over it and we made the brave decision that is creatively gratifying but not very easy to just slap a label on, as far as what type of music it is - it's a little bit of everything - but that's really what we wanted to do. There's really beautiful slow ballads that have meandering electric guitar and string sections; there's rock and blues tunes; there's acoustic back porch break downs; there's just a little bit of everything on it and that's what we love and that is what our fans tend to love as well, so we're really excited to have it all on one action packed album where, hopefully, no two songs sound the same, at all; that's definitely a plus.

Do you have a song off the album you'd call your favorite?

Ingrid: That's such a hard question. They're all so great, but they're all very different.

Ty: In the process of making the album, I think we fell in love with every song at different times for different reasons. "Brighter In The Dark", for me, is the really central song of the album and I'm really proud of how that came out. The string section on that, every time I hear it I'm still moved by it. I'm glad that that's what we called the album too, because I feel like we're heading into sort of dark times and it's important to be able to find the brightness in the dark.

Ingrid: I think, for me, like Ty said, every song has been really exciting and feeling like it's reaching its full potential is really captivating, probably my current favorite right now is "Spring". That's one that I wrote quite a while ago and I always had this vision for it, but I never really thought that an album that I would make would do it justice. Any artist probably feels that way, like, "oh, this story in my head is not going to come out" or "the movie that I see" or "the painting that I see in my brain and I don't think I can actually do it justice, but I'm going to try," that's how I felt about this song. I didn't really know that it could actually sound exactly like it did in my best mind's eye, but it really came to fruition in exactly that way and I'm so grateful and so proud of it. So, yeah, that one's probably my pick of the day.

How would you sum up Brighter In The Dark in one sentence?

Ty: I think I should take that, because I don't know that you're capable of one sentence.

Ingrid: She is correct about that.

[Laughter]

Ty: We're both pretty verbose, but I think Ingrid might take the cake in that department.

Ingrid: True story. One sentence. Go for it.

Ty: Now that I've said that I'm like, I can't do that... I don't know if I can do that...

Ingrid: Alright, I'm going to steal the mic from Ty and just-

Ty: Prove me wrong, as she usually does.

[Laughter]

Ingrid: Our band motto is, all the feelings all the time, and that is what I would say for this; musically and lyrically, all the feelings, all the time.

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

Ty: It's harder and harder to access really genuinely good music, it's sort of this cycle of 'what's the next single?' and then the single is out and then, two days later, it's 'what's the next thing?' or making a video that's going to go viral and there's just a lot of trying to compete for space within the onslaught of the top ten that's out there. And this album was a long process, it took us about a year to make it, the songs were written with a lot of care and reach because we recorded this over a long time, the instruments are layered, and we just put a lot into it in a way that I don't know that it's done that much anymore. My hope is that, when people hear it, all of that work pays off and all of the care that we put into it allows people to have an experience that's nuanced and gratifying on a deeper level. That's how we insist on making music, even though it's probably not very cool to do it that way [laughs]. We're probably not reaching as many people because we don't have the latest, cool content, social media delivery system [laughs], but that's definitely my hope, is that there will be some type of deeper benefit that people get from hearing the music that's really been poured over.

Ingrid: I would also add to that, it's quality over quantity in where we're putting our energy into this album. Just to piggyback on what Ty was saying, I really hope that everyone who buys this album will invest in some really good headphones or stereo system [laughs] because, in this day and age of the standard issue earbuds that come with your smartphone, those only give you a sliver of what is actually in the sound - for anyone's music - but definitely ours, as well. I hope everybody out there maybe will consider investing in some really good earbuds or headphones, for this album and for all their music, to make their lives a better place.

Ty: And one last thing I'll say about that is that, music is really good medicine and I just hope that people find it healing to listen to this album during this time. I just think it's really important.

Is there anything you want to add?

Ty: Well, the album is available through our website, which is mouthsofbabesmusic.com, and please stay in touch with us on our social media on Facebook and Twitter and Instagram and all that stuff. 

Ingrid: We are doing quite a few CD release shows this year and we're going to be playing all over the country and we're always adding new dates to our website, so if people want to come see us live and in concert, we're going to be touring around and we're going to have a lot of musical special guests on these shows. So, hopefully we'll get to meet people in person and give hugs and high fives and chat with people, we really love that.

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Victor Perry by E

Catch up with singer-songwriter Victor Perry, listen to his single "Rainbows" off his debut EP, 4 A.M. Nostalgia (out now) and look for much more to come soon.

What got you interested in music?

Victor: I'm actually interested in both the business side and the creative side of music. I went to school at Morehouse College and I majored in English and while I was there, I was blessed with the opportunity to work for Sony Music as a College Marketing Representative so, basically, what that means is that we acted as a liaison for the record labels in our markets. Being in Atlanta, Atlanta's a great market for music and so I helped bring in cool initiatives: I helped bring in J. Cole - he came to my school and spoke to us - we'd go to concerts, we'd pass out flyers, posters, stickers, pencils, any cool buttons; anything like that that can raise awareness for an album release, single release, or artist. After that, I interned with Aaron Reid, L.A. Reid's son, in A&R. I was his assistant and it was really fun and really cool. I worked in the studios and it was my first time working in an actual recording studio - like a professional one - so that was really cool seeing artists, meeting artists, looking at contracts, and figuring out, if you don't get those creative vibes in the studio, you've got to divvy up who did what and so on and so forth. And then, I also interned at Epic Records where I worked in sales - which is, like, my number one passion in the music industry - and also promo.

I've been singing since I was a kid, as cliché as that sounds. Both my parents are musicians and are both ministers of music for their churches, so I've always been a gospel singer and I've sung everywhere: talent shows, I did the whole American Idol thing, The Voice thing, X Factor thing. I've always just wanted to sing and I never knew it could be a career until my senior year of high school. I had to do a project for bullying and I rewrote Eminem and Rihanna's "Love The Way You Lie" and I turned it into a song called "Not Gonna Bully Anymore" and that was when I first realized, "hmm, I can write" or at least I could rewrite someone's song. Then, in college, I just really jumped on that and became a writer. I started performing on campus as an actual artist, not just doing gospel songs and covers of Maroon 5 and Coldplay, and here I am now today, about four years later!

What was the first song you wrote in college?

"Found My Way". It was written my second semester freshman year. Mikky Ekko is definitely one of my number one inspirations for music - I've actually met him, we're friends and he's really cool - and it was "Stay". It was funny, I found out he was doing a collaboration with Rihanna, who I love, and I was like, "whoa, this is huge," because Mikky Ekko is an alternative/indie artist, he's not a major label artist, and he got a record on one of the top artists' albums in the country - or in the world for that matter. After listening to "Stay" and really vibing to it I was like, "you know what, I want to be a writer," and so I wrote "Found My Way". That just came from, I'm a small town guy, I've always been sheltered, it's always been the four of us - my parents and my twin brother - so being away from home was really difficult and I felt lost at times. I wasn't happy, kind of depressed, but I made it out of that rut, and so "Found My Way" was basically my journal, my diary, my expression of how I felt during that time in my life.

Which musicians have you been influenced by?

Vocally, Whitney Houston all the way, hands down, love her to death; she actually inspired me to sing - outside of my mom. Then, we have Michael Bolton, of course; people say I sound like Michael Jackson and I love MJ; and Luther Vandross, as far as his vocals. Those are the people that inspire me the most when I think of singing.

When I think of the artist side, definitely Mikky Ekko, Angus and Julia, Rihanna, Coldplay and, as of lately, I've really grown to be a huge fan of Daughter; I love Daughter. And London Grammar, I love, love, love.

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

In the past, I've described it as bedroom confessional pop, but it's definitely evolved since then. It's raw, it's very endearing, and it's also true to the human experience. Everything that you will hear from me is very much something that we all can relate to and I try to always keep it positive, even if it is a negative topic, such as depression or isolation and feeling lonely; I try to keep it as positive as possible because I'm a positive person. 

What were your inspirations behind your single "Rainbows"?

Wow, so, [laughs] that was actually the third song I wrote, ever, in my life - I'd written another song called "Hurt" that no one's ever heard, no one will ever hear it, I don't like it - but "Rainbows" came my sophomore year in college. I was actually listening to Kodaline's "In A Perfect World" and I just connected with that song and it just came, it just flowed. I was with my roommate and I asked him, he had a bass guitar, and I was like, "can you just play something in the vein of this and then I'll just write to it?" and he was like, "yeah, sure," so I was like, "you used to tuck in your knees in the passenger seat," and so on and so forth and here we are. A full song, like, 3 years later called "Rainbows" [laughs].

Before I joined Sony, there was a rep on my college campus who I was introduced to and I wanted to shadow him and get an idea as to what it's like to be a Sony rep before I joined, so one of his shows that he had to go to was Kodaline - they had just signed to the label over at Sony and he was promoting them - so I got to go front row and see them live. Luckily, he'd given me the CD a week in advance and I had learned every single song off that album and so I was singing my heart out to Kodaline. That was my first concert I'd been to in Atlanta.

Could you tell us more about your EP 4 A.M. Nostalgia?

4 A.M. Nostalgia is my first project ever. It took forever; it's like having a baby and it takes forever to get it and then when it's finally here it's like "yay!" - I don't know if that's a good analogy [laughs] but to me, that's what it felt like. It's a classic sound, its very bare bones, there's not a lot of production. I wanted to keep everything focused on me; this was my introduction to the music industry and I wanted people to hear my voice, hear my lyrics, and hear Victor. 'Cause I'm a small town guy, it has the rural influence, if you listen to it, in the guitar melodies and the rhythm and the cadence in my voice, but it's very much a mainstream project that is centered around the ideas, the thoughts, the pain, the hurt, the joy, the satisfaction of everything that we go through in life and the things that we tend to keep within ourselves. I came up with the title, 4 A.M. Nostalgia, because during the time in which most of the songs came to me, I would wake up at 4 o'clock in the morning - it was weird - and I would just write in my journal; it wouldn't even be too much of any songs, it would just be like ideas and things of how I felt and I couldn't sleep. It was just this 4 A.M. recollection of all the things that were going on in my life and this nostalgia, because it always reminds me of those things every time I go back and read my journal or go back and listen to these songs. 

Is there a track off the EP you were most excited to release?

Yes. I had two of them, "Rainbows" and "Nostalgia". "Rainbows" was, like I said, the song that took the most work and went through the most changes; there's probably 17 versions on my dad's Pro Tools of that song [laughs] where we just couldn't get it. It really started out as an acoustic song, it sounded something like a country folk song - and if you listen to Kodaline, you hear those vibes - and it just took forever and we weren't going to put it on the EP so I was devastated and I was like, "I can't figure it out!". Finally, it just came to us one day in July and it was beautiful and we were like, "yes, yes, yes, yes!". "Nostalgia" was the last song that I did for the EP and it actually came, literally, on the spot. We were working on the EP and my dad was mixing beats and I was in the studio writing - I was just on my computer and I was writing and I don't know why I was writing, I never write when we're mixing because I'm always focused on the mixing - and I wrote "Nostalgia". There was a piano loop originally that my dad had from this session that we didn't use and I was like, "wait, pause, stop, can you play that loop again for me?" and then he played it for me and I was like, "okay, let's stop this, put me in a booth, I got a song I want to record". We recorded "Nostalgia" in 30 minutes. It was literally 30 minutes where we just really worked on the song and finished it and it's my favorite song on the project.

In one sentence, how would you sum up 4 A.M. Nostalgia?

4 A.M. Nostalgia is a project based on love, the loss of love, and the moving on from love and being able to look back at love.

That was tough! [Laughs] I had to rely on my English major background.

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

I want them to feel inspired. Love is a difficult subject and I want them to feel hope. We've all fallen in love, that's something that's inevitable, and you don't have to be afraid of it - that's something that I'm still working on, trying not to be afraid of it and just to embrace it - and that love can be something that is in every facet of life, whether it's friends, family members, or someone that you're actually connected to intimately. I just want them to feel hope and feel like, at the end of every tunnel, there is light. Or at the end of every storm there is a rainbow [laughs].

Is there anything you want to add?

Just follow me on my social media 'cause I have a lot of cool things being worked on and being released every week now, it seems. So, I just want you to follow my journey and, hopefully, you'll see me at the top one day.

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M I K L O by E

Catch up with MIKLO's Kyle Setter and listen to the Los Angeles-based alt-rock band's single "P.E.O.P.L.E." off their EP, Note to Self, out now.

What brought you all together?

Kyle: What happened was, I moved out to Nashville and I moved out there knowing nobody; I left my job at the fire department, I sold my home, packed up a trailer behind my truck and took my dog and went to Nashville. I started meeting some really great people out there and doing a lot writing and Chris eventually moved out there to meet me and we were writing and doing the whole Nashville music scene and then we came to the point where we wanted to create something that we felt we could represent it and that we felt was organic and something we could back. We started doing some writes and MIKLO just came about. We took it to a studio and ended up recording our EP there in Nashville.

Where does your name MIKLO come from?

It comes from the movie Blood In Blood Out. It's an old classic movie. It's awesome. It definitely has a cult following. In today's day and age for music, it's so hard to find a name that's original, that's cool, and this and that and we just stumbled upon it and were like, "this is so cool, we have to use this name, it's awesome".

Which musicians have you been influenced by?

That's a hard question because I listen to everything and maybe that's why we sound a bit different. Chris and I listen to everything. Growing up, The Eagles were always a big influence and Pink Floyd. But also, at the same time growing up, Tupac was an influence. It's difficult. I guess I just take interest in things we get from all around, from everywhere.

Is there anyone that you're hooked on now?

I guess for me, I like Sigur Rós a lot, Depeche Mode, The Eagles, obviously, Pink Floyd. It's a hard question to answer.

Which words would you use to describe your sound?

We've been getting a lot of reviews and a lot of press and we're so thankful for that and I've seen some very interesting phrases with people trying to describe our music. I just call it alternative. I think the music industry right now doesn't really know what's going on at all and it's just so scattered and there's so many different influences and blends, neo this and that. I don't know, I just call it alternative.

What were your inspirations behind your single "P.E.O.P.L.E."?

It's actually a funny story. At the end of 2015, we found ourselves in a situation where we were just starting to record and we were really stoked on meeting this producer, Christian Fiore, and our lease was heading up and we weren't so stoked on living in Nashville, so we were going to move back but then, after meeting Christian, we were like, "you know what, let's stay two more months, let's finish this EP out, this is someone really good". Through a friend I worked with, we were promised a place to stay for 2 months while we record so that I wouldn't have to drive home, drop all my stuff off in California, and then fly back and just couch surf for 2 months so that was cool of him. And then, about 2 days prior to us doing that, that person bailed out on us and it left us in this situation of, it's either we move back home and we're done with music for awhile or we just stick through it for the next 2 or 3 months. At that time, I had a van I used for music and we put all our stuff in storage, built beds in the van, and we just lived in the van for 2 months, sleeping in Walmart parking lots. It came to the point too where it would snow and it was an old van, we couldn't leave it on, so I would park next to bars and we would just get super wasted just to stay warm at night.

That song "P.E.O.P.L.E." comes from, we had a so-called friend let us stay at their place for the weekend and another person in the house, I guess, found out and didn't know we were supposed to be there or whatever, but she ended up just flipping out for no reason and it was just a really shitty situation; and with being homeless for 2 months pursuing this dream and just all these things, it was just a crazy roller coaster. We came up with this song "P.E.O.P.L.E." because sometimes people just don't have a heart for others. They're selfish and it's a shitty situation sometimes, so that's where the song came from [laughs]. It comes from real talk, it's not just like, we got in this writing room and decided, "oh, let's write a song that says 'fuck people'", it came from a real place of hardship.

Could you tell us more about your EP, Note to Self?

"Note to Self" - that's the title song on the EP - sometimes people cross you, sometimes you gotta learn your lesson, sometimes you'll do something and you just make that mental note in your head like, 'alright, note to self, I'm not going to trust you again,' that's what that song's about, in a sense; and I just feel like that record, in general, if you just look at yourself, as far as the song itself and trusting people. Another song, "Losing My Mind", where it's the feeling of you're going crazy and just giving yourself a check. It's just life and it's real talk. It's music with actual substance to it. There's real lyrics, there's real issues, and it's what we wanted to convey to the listener, not just something fake, plastic, or something they can't relate to, what would be the point?

Is there a track off the EP you were most excited to share?

I like "P.E.O.P.L.E." because it's pretty straight to the point and I think everyone has that feeling sometimes, even if you're sitting in traffic [laughs] or you just look at your Facebook feed and you see all those crazy messages and feeds and stories and you're just like, man - like this election brought out the worst in a lot of people. But also, during the holidays when people were just buying stuff and buying stuff and you see homeless people with barely a newspaper over them when it's freezing out: the selfishness. I like that song, it's pretty cool. I think "Dope Girl" is a pretty cool song. It's pretty pop-y, but I think if someone's in love they can relate to that song pretty well.

How would you sum up Note to Self in one sentence?

That record talks from the subject of suicide to humanity to falling in love; it's just life.

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

To be able to relate. That they're not alone, that maybe feeling empty or depressed or frustrated with civilization or even those brief encounters of having a romantic relationship or whatever, they're normal and they can relate to us; there's something that they can lean against.

Is there anything you want to add?

We put a lot of effort into this EP, we sacrificed a lot, and I just hope that the person reading this article just gives the record a chance, gives it a listen and, if they like it, to share it and listen to it as much as they can.

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