Polaris Rose by E

Look for Los Angeles alt-rock duo Polaris Rose (Peter Anthony & Madelynn Elyse) to release their second full-length album, Ocean Blue, Velvet Skies, this March.

What brought you two together?

Peter Anthony: Michael Jackson. Haha. Seriously, we met and bonded over “Rock with You”. We were at a friend’s show when we met. We started working together on various music projects and I think we just love working together.

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

The energy is like '90s rock. The chords and vocals are jazzy. We sing about a lot of social issues and stars and stuff.

Are there any musicians you've been influenced by, either individually or as a duo?

Maddie and I have much different tastes. I’m more a prog rock guy (Smashing Pumpkins, Failure, Steely Dan), while Maddie likes more radio-friendly artists (Alanis Morrisette, Foo Fighters, Beyonce). Haha.  Polaris Rose - in our minds - sits in between prog and radio.

If you were to make a playlist for your fans, which three tracks - from other artists - would you have to include?

We would include “The Weather” by Paper Pilots, “Revolution” by Young Creatures, and “Passengers” by Dinosaur Parade. All really great LA bands that we love.

What was the inspiration behind your latest release, "TigerBait”?

The song is about clickbait internet culture and two people attempting to have a conversation about it. Think Buzzfeed. Not that we don’t love Buzzfeed but we get stuck clicking and clicking and clicking.

That's off your forthcoming album, Ocean Blue, Velvet Skies, how does this new album compare to your previous releases?

We stepped up the production values this time around. We were lucky enough to get John Spiker (Tenacious D, Beck, Filter) to mix the record, while Eric Boulanger (One Republic, Colbie Caillet) mastered. Musically speaking, we swayed more towards a ‘beach’ feel with this record.

Could you sum up Ocean Blue, Velvet Skies in one sentence?

The lyric from our song “Rose” can do the trick:  “With our arms outstretched, we watch the sunset die until we’re left with ocean blue and velvet skies."

What do you want listeners and fans to be able to take from your music?

We want people to enjoy listening to the songs so much that they listen again, haha.

Website             Facebook             Twitter             YouTube             SoundCloud             Instagram

Drawing North by E

Catch up with Ethan Sharp, Chad Barnier, and Jake Allen of Drawing North to see what's coming next from the Australian five piece and look for their album, El Dorado, to be released later this year.

What brought you all together?

Jake: Drew, our drummer, and I have been best friends since we were three years old and towards the end of school, he decided to start a band with our singer, and he kind of just slowly roped us all into it.

Chad: [Laughs] He's been regretting it ever since.

Jake: No, no, no. So, we've just been old friends.

Why choose the name Drawing North?

Chad: Well, Drawing North just seemed to symbolize a lot of things that we wanted to represent as a way of striving for more and kind of pushing through any struggles. And, it's originally a play on words from our drummer's name, but we kind of thought it encompassed everything that we wanted to represent.

Which artists or bands have you been influenced by?

Ethan: Especially our stuff at the moment, One Republic, I think, is one of the main bands. Maybe bands like Imagine Dragons or The Script, we're kind of delving into that pop scene but we still have the elements of anthemic rock, at the same time. Earlier on, about five years ago, we were doing more kind of pop rock, pop punk stuff, but it's developed into more of an anthemic kind of Coldplay pop band.

Which words would you use to describe your sound?

Chad: Anthemic pop or stadium pop rock, I guess. They're kind of easy lyrics to latch onto, nothing too convoluted. Yeah, anthemic radio pop.

What was the inspiration behind your single "Ars Amatoria"?

Jake: Yeah, so Drew wrote that and he started writing that when he was in London and it is actually about the story of Guinevere and Lancelot. So, Guinevere leaving Arthur for Lancelot and then they find out about it and they try and flee the city and Guinevere gets caught and then Lancelot comes back to save her. So, it's kind of about love and relationships and everything going wrong.

Chad: There's forbidden love inside of that.

Jake: Yeah, kind of forbidden love and it's actually, personally, one of my favorite songs. And, Ars Amatoria is the Latin art of love, a book about courting, so we just thought the name fit the song.

Do you have a favorite track to perform live or a favorite from this forthcoming album?

Chad: I think most of us have a different favorite track from the album, which I think is really cool, it kind of speaks to different people's tastes in music, but they all kind of come together with a pop sensibility. My favorite would either be "Ars Amatoria" or "Carry On". I know some of the guys here will have a different answer to that.

Ethan: Yeah, we just recorded a brand new song that's going to be on the album called "Piece of the Light"; that's up there for me, as well as "Carry On", is my favorite live.

Jake: I think "Save Your Love" is one of my favorite songs to play; it's definitely our danciest, catchiest big song, and it's our next single coming up for the Australian Summer, so we will be releasing that in the next few weeks. And, also, "Ars Amatoria" is one of my favorite songs on the album, I honestly have to give credit to Drew, it's one of my favorites, just hands down - or period, as you guys say - yeah, it's one of my favorite, favorite songs.

"Ars Amatoria" is off your forthcoming album El Dorado; how would you describe this album?

Jake: Our new album is very relatable, even if you don't like pop or don't like that genre of music, there are so many different styles of songs you're probably going to like something about it.

Chad: I think, in terms of storytelling, it is incredibly representative of the last three or four years of us as a band with everything we've been through and different relationships we've had, but the lyrics are not too specific enough that no one can latch onto them, so I think that people can put their own stories and interpretations into the songs.

Ethan: Yeah, definitely. There's some very folk like guitar influence in some songs, it's very diverse. I guess there's similarities in, obviously, the vocal style, but we've just changed the production a lot, which is kind of refreshing and a lot of artists seem to be doing that these days, as well.

What do you want your fans or listeners to be able to take away from your music?

Jake: I think one of the biggest things, as a band, that we kind of strive for is to really affect people, like one of the most rewarding things is when a fan messages you or the band and tells us how much our music has affected their lives or changed them or helped them in a way. So, that's probably one of the biggest things we aim to do with our music, is really just impact people. Over the past years we've been a band, we've had a lot of people come out and say how we've helped them with our music and that's probably the biggest thing we want to give to our fans, is like a piece of us in this album.

Chad: I think it represents a lot of what we want in life and the freedom to express that and it hopefully rings true in the album and helps people to not be afraid to express themselves in bad times or in great times.  

Ethan: That's definitely one of the cool things in the album.

Is there anything you'd like to add?

Chad: We just found out that we'll be performing at SXSW. We'll be coming back to America, after a short trip home, in March, so we'll be doing a few shows over there in Austin.

Jake: And we'll definitely be promoting our new single "Fire Eyes" and also "Save Your Love" should be coming out in Australia as a Summer single.

Chad: Which will be pushed by Universal who we're signed with in Australia.

Ethan: Also, just our sessions in America have been amazing so far and I just want to say thanks to everyone who's been with us since arriving here and everyone who's come to a show.

Jake: Yeah, we actually love coming to America and playing. We're so well received and everyone is very welcoming and it's very refreshing. [Laughs] It's very different from Australia; we love playing for you guys.

Website             Facebook             Twitter             SoundCloud             YouTube             Instagram

Jack Berry by E

Catch up with Nashville based rocker Jack Berry and look for his forthcoming LP, Mean Machine, to be released Spring 2016.

What got you started in music?

Jack Berry: That's hard. I grew up in a religious family that sang in church, so I guess that's where it started, singing with my grandma in church, but that didn't necessarily get me interested then; I guess it took a lot longer than that. The Beatles, I guess, and Rage Against The Machine were my first loves in music and that kind of actually started an infatuation.

Which other musicians have you been influenced by?

I'd say everyone from Elvis to Ben Harper. I'm a really big fan of funk music - Monophonics, Parliament, Funkadelic. I love Queens of the Stone Age and The Arcs' newest records. Jack White's whole neighborhood of sound is killer. The Dead Weather, Raconteurs, Allison Mosshart. Then the opposite end, I love classical piano or even old Elvis gospel.

You said you collect records, do you remember the first record you got?

I don't know what the first one that I got was, but I was raised by my grandparents on a horse ranch and they had a huge, armoire sized record player in their basement, but they only had three records: it was Elvis, The Jungle Book, and then some random church gospel compilation record, and those were the only three records that they had. So, when I would be in the basement playing around or doing whatever, we'd put on the records and it'd usually be one of those first three.

I read you were part of a duo, why decide to go solo?

It wasn't a duo necessarily. I wanted a bass player at the same time but I couldn't find anybody - so after we recorded that first record, the guy who played drums on it, Shawn Holman, him and I got along pretty well and wanted to play out. And so it started - Loaded Loot is what we called it. Guitar and drums. Bare minimals.

Which words would you use to describe your sound?

[Laughs] Ruckus; convictions; onslaught.

What was the inspiration behind your single and the single art for "The Bull"?

So, like I said, I grew up outside of Reno, so a lot of things that are around that town are very based around the cowboy lifestyle, so to speak, and the Reno Rodeo is called the richest rodeo in the West and that was like a huge event. My grandpa would take me to Reno Rodeo each year and I'm terrified of clowns - like a freakish amount of terror will strike me when I see a clown, even to this day - but, anyways, we were at a rodeo and the bull riding would take place Friday or Saturday and those are the days we'd go and I just remember being tripped out by these clowns that were running around inside the arena and they were always mic'd up and they'd talk to the announcers and stuff and I remember the announcer had one of these jokes that were along the lines of this clown had a gambling problem and I thought that was really funny and it kind of stuck with me, obviously, for a long time. Then, when I was going to write a song, just with the chords that I had and the music I had, that's the first thing that came to mind. I thought it'd be interesting to have a different take on my rodeos, I guess. And, of course, the cover art, that's all it was - I thought it'd be funny to put on some rodeo clown make-up.

That's off your forthcoming album, Mean Machine; what can you tell us about that?

The reason I named it 'mean machine' is because I feel like I'm a working cog between this battle of mind and heart, as most people are. You kind of display it one way or the other but one side has more control so it's if I was to separate myself from my heart and my mind, all of these songs are either an argument with myself or an argument against some relationship in the world, whether it be with someone I love or someone I hate or some idea of what's going on in the world or in my immediate world. It's kind of just this constant journey of figuring this back and forth out and so a lot of these songs are pretty much that exactly: more of a protest against certain things and then a kind of testament to other things.

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

I feel like there's a difference between music being catchy and then music that sticks to you. I just really hope that this music is the latter.

Facebook             Twitter             SoundCloud             Instagram

Jackie Venson by E

Catch up with Austin based artist Jackie Venson and look for her forthcoming live album, Jackie Venson Live, to be released Fall 2016.

What got you started in music?

Jackie Venson: My parents actually got me into music. My dad's a professional musician, but my mom signed me up for music lessons on the piano when I was 6 years old and she told me that if I hated it I could quit and I didn't like my teacher at all so I quit. Then two years later I ran into another teacher who was a substitute at my elementary school and I guess he was asking all of us if we had a piano teacher and I brought his card back home to my mom and my mom called him up and set it all up; I took piano lessons from him for 12 years after that.

Which musicians have you been influenced by?

Biggest influences for me would be Stevie Wonder for songwriting and overall musicianship and I really love Amy Winehouse and Whitney Houston, how they sing; they're so free when they sing, they just open their mouths and let it out. That's always been inspirational to me, any musician that can just free themselves on stage.

Is there anyone you're hooked on right now?

I've been listening to Buddy Guy's new album and I love it. He's always been a good guitar influence for me and he just came out with an album the last couple of years and I've just been listening to it and I love it. I've been kind of hooked on that.

How would you describe your own sound?

I don't really like describing my songwriting but, as far as the performance goes, I always tell people it's Amy Winehouse meets Buddy Guy, that's kind of the best way I can describe it and, as for my songwriting, I just kind of let people put their own interpretation on it, it's hard to pin it down.

What was the inspiration behind "Back To Earth"?

I changed my guitar down to Drop D for the first time and I was just kind of messing around in Drop D and that chord progression and those riffs and that rhythm kind of came from that. The song topic actually came from a rather tragic death of a friend, so I wrote a song about questioning life and purpose, so the song topic is about that. The music is just kind of a product of me practicing and just playing the guitar.

That track's off your forthcoming live album, Jackie Venson Live, could you tell us more about that?

Well the live album is exciting because, ever since the last album, I've changed up the instrumentation of my band and I've changed up the players in my band, so we've played songs like "Back To Earth" and other songs that are going to be on the album and the players are totally new, the sound of the songs are completely different, the arrangements are different. The video for "Back To Earth" is a solo performance of it and I just can't wait to record and capture and share the band arrangement of some of these songs that we're doing. It's almost like it's a different song.

Is there a track that you're most excited for your fans to hear?

Yes, I'm excited for them to hear the live arrangement of "Always Free". I'm going to include that on the live album and I'm super pumped to show people that, because this band has just taken that song and done something completely different with it.

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

I hope that they're able to take away how passionate I am about creating and performing and growing with music in my life. I hope that people can maybe take away the main thing, that I love this, that I don't have some ulterior motive; I'm playing music because I honestly love playing music, and I write for the same reason, and I just wish that that would be more common place in the world, that people would do things just because they loved doing them, not because they think that they should or they want to be cool or whatever. I think a lot of things would have more depth with that.

Is there anything you would like to add?

I just want to thank you for the opportunity to be interviewed and thanks for sharing my music. Of course, thank you to anyone who's been following me and listening, I really appreciate any love you've sent, and check me out.

Website             Facebook             Twitter             SoundCloud             YouTube