Matt LeGrand by E

Catch up with pop artist Matt LeGrand and listen to his latest single, "One More Try".

What got you interested in music?

Matt LeGrand: Watching and playing music with my older brother, Alex. We loved all of the old school classic rock bands. The Rolling Stones, The Who, Eric Clapton just to name a few. I got my first electric guitar when I was 11. I loved it so much. It was a bright red fender and I would take care of it like a baby. I literally would clean it every single day and if anyone touched it, I'd turn into a monster. My first concert ever was The Stones and I would credit that show for motivating me to do all of this.

Do you remember what the first song you wrote was about?

It was an extremely sad song. I only wrote about half the song and then I stopped. It was about a teenage romance that ended too soon. The boy was so awful to the girl that she ran away from home to start a new life. Flash forward 10 years: the boy is now a man and painfully figures out that his teenage romance, that he treated so badly, got diagnosed with cancer and passed away a year ago. This shuts him down and all he is left to say is all the things he would do differently in another life.

Which artists or bands have you been influenced by?

Currently I love JB’s new album. I think everyone that was involved in that creative process did an amazing job choosing the new direction of his career. My all time biggest influences are Freddie Mercury and Justin Timberlake.

Is there a current single or artist you'd recommend to your listeners?

I think Zayn Malik’s “Pillow Talk” is fantastic. The video is out of this world. I think it’s a starting point of a different style of artistry.

Which words would you use to describe your sound?

I wouldn't use any words to describe it right now. I'm so early in my career that I haven't even found my sound yet. It's a really exciting process, as I am experiencing it right now, but it does take awhile. Ask me this question after my HIT SONG!!

Where do you draw inspiration from when you are working on new music?

I use a fun process that I call “Current and Old.” I listen to what's lit and super hot right now, then I go to my old school pop songs playlist and I start combining things. It keeps things simple, doing it this way. All pop music is recycled. I heavily rely on personal experience as well. It's the natural way.

"One More Try" has a different sound than your other releases, what inspired that single?

I was dying to have a ballad for myself and I approached B. Howard to see if he had anything. Sure enough, this is what he had just laying around. It's such a wonderful song written by an artist that is genuine, kind, and real. These are the kind of artist that I'm influenced by. Thank you, B.

What do you hope your listeners can take away from your music?

I hope that they can take away the same exact feeling that I have when I'm writing or singing the music. I want my music to help people. If you are down, I want to write you a happy song. If you feel like you have to let emotions out, I'm going to give you an emotional song. If you are already happy, I'm gonna make you extraordinarily happy. What I do is for other people and myself.

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Sabbatical Year by E

Catch up with Sabbatical Year's Nick Margiasso and see what the band has in store on their forthcoming remix EP, SYre, set to be released March 2016.

What brought you all together?

Nick Margiasso: Myself and Drew, who is the pianist and co-writer - me and him write all the songs - we were in a band probably three years ago now. It was this giant band - there were like ten people in the band - and we were just on the periphery; he played as a supportive role because there were a couple guitarists and we had three vocalists because it was some giant, Polyphonic Spree band - without the robes and the religious overtures. We got more involved and as we got more involved some people, stylistically, didn't agree on things with other people and some of us thought we should go in a certain direction and, slowly, the band lost a few people and we were like, 'well, what are we doing here?'. Drew and I had come into an existing band and he was looking to do one thing and I was looking to do another thing and once we met, we were like, 'I think we're doing something else,' and so we followed that.

It took awhile. If you hear our stuff, it's piano led and it's not ground breakingly different, but it doesn't really sound a lot like stuff other people are doing, and it's always been like that for us, so it's harder to get people on board with that. People are like, 'okay, when does the guitar come in?' and we're like, 'well, there is no guitar'. We asked all these questions when we were trying to get people in the band and they just didn't fit. It took a long time. We changed our name because everyone left the band - except for me and Drew - [laughs]; the band ended up being just the two of us out of ten people, and so we did it just the two of us for awhile and we met a couple other guys named Todd and Justin who were the rhythm section for awhile - we really lucked out with them and they both were on board, immediately. They were great but, eventually, both of those guys fell out. We're all about 30 years old so, for different reasons, careers, moving to different locations, marriage, whatever it might be, those guys dropped out and, luckily, Drew's brother, Devon, produced our first album and he's a drummer and once we made the switch from Todd, it made sense that Drew's brother would be in the band with us. And we just added a guy - we played a lot of shows with a band from Atlanta who had a ton of guitarists - and we sort of saw an opportunity to pilfer one of their members and so Tom plays guitar and bass with us now and, for us, guitar is very soundscape; it's not like Eddie Van Halen out there, it supports whatever the mood is.

So, it's been a long haul. Once we finished our SY2 slbum is when we replaced everybody, so currently, with this EP - and we're going to have another EP after this and then another album hopefully by the end of the year - hopefully, that will all be the current line-up: myself, Drew, his brother Devon, and Tom.

You said Drew was a co-writer and you're all musicians in your own right, how does that collaborative process work when you are working on these new albums?

I say this a lot, when you're writing songs you just try to come up with these examples for people to help people out, and it's like Lennon and McCartney - in no way am I trying to compare ourselves - but it's like me and Drew are very different people, we're from different backgrounds, we don't share a ton of things in common, just like Lennon and McCartney, but when they got in a room there was some sort of a bond between the two of them that was absolutely undeniable and it was just pouring out of them, and that's sort of how we are. We're not best friends in the world, we're very different people, but every time he comes up with something, you'd think we're like the fast food of songwriting: we can churn out a whole song in about five minutes it feels like. It really starts with us and then we've just got very talented guys. Tom plays some things on bass and guitar so he can come up with some ideas once we lay our ground work and then Devon is literally a prodigious kind of guy. He produces all of our stuff and he's super good at it, he's incredible; for a guy that only has a couple production credits to his name, he's really, really good. He built his own studio set-up and he just knocks it out. Those guys come in after me and Drew lay the groundwork, but it's just one of those things. There's a lot of reasons people play music and, one of them, you realize after you've playing for awhile, there's that bond you can share with somebody jamming or coming up with stuff, it's absolutely unparalleled. It just works or it doesn't and, for the two of us, it's just always been the magic touch; you put two of us in the room for 15 minutes and we'll have two song ideas that will eventually be singles on our album. I don't know what it is and I don't mess with it [laughs].

Which bands or artists have you been influenced by, individually or as a band?

I think both of us have a ton of influences and I'm a big fan of Radiohead and bands like Blur and a lot of bands that came from the '90s. One of the most inspiring things to me creatively, by far, is jazz, and nothing we do sounds like jazz and it probably never will, but just something about the freedom and the way they can meander and explore all different avenues of music is something that inspires me. With our band, there's no boundaries, feel free to do anything, come up with anything, and I like the way that jazz musicians can just sit in a room and explore. Especially Miles Davis, he's come out with songs that are standard to things that are completely challenging; you can get him in a room and he just goes on a journey for a little awhile.

I think Drew is very inspired by unique and different sounds, like Muse and Radiohead, people who are mixing guitar and piano and synthesizer and drum machine; all the different kinds of ways bands can incorporate things, I think that's a pretty big influence for him. But, for myself, I just love jazz. I've always liked it, but now, going back to it, and somebody like Miles Davis, he just did very simple songs to groundbreaking jazz work and even beyond the boundaries of that; he never ran out of reasons to explore and he never got tired of it. That's how I feel for us; we started with a piano, bass, and drums, and now we've got synthesizers, guitars, all kinds of things. I think, as we go forward, it's almost like we're adding more of everything and just because we're adding more studio instruments doesn't at all mean we're not going to add more strings and acoustic instruments. It's an exciting time and I think the release of the EP as sort of boundary shift has started that. I think we're going to jump from a couple genres here for a little while and have a very interesting next full length album.

Which words would you use to describe your sound?

For me, emotion is a very big one. It's very emotional, melancholy in a way, and we're just an indie rock band, like so many other bands, we're just trying to do our thing and write the best songs we can. All of our songs very overtly wear their emotions on their sleeves and a lot of that has to do with myself being the singer and writing the lyrics, but also Drew, as a piano player, he's got big, sweeping, epic chords and lines and riffs he puts together and it's hard to get away from that sort of sound once you've got two people who are into that thing. Emotional music has turned to emo at some point, but that's not what we do, I almost feel like we might be a better description of that [laughs] but we're not crying or anything [laughs].

Where does your name, Sabbatical Year, come from?

You know, it's funny, it was really hard. I feel like naming your band is probably even harder than getting people to be in it [laughs]. We had a name before when we were in that giant band and then it got torn down to just the two of us and we were like, 'okay, we're kind of our own thing now,' and, honestly, I just started to go through dictionaries and thesaurus' [laughs] and just started to put phrases together and two words I like together and this and that. Going through the 'S' section and sabbatical year is, I think, Judaic in origin and the meaning is basically taking a year to do whatever it is that you need, spiritually, and it sounded good - Sabbatical Year - and it just sort of made sense to me. Our music is an escape, nothing about our music sounds like the rigmarole of the day to day. When you listen to it, it's like light in spaces and it can be positive or, like I said, melancholy, but it's big and it's grandiose and it's always a break. The band itself, the sound, it's like we're a break from the monotony of day to day life and that resonated, so that fits us very well, I think.

What was the inspiration behind your last single, "Dd"?

The last single is from the EP, which is SYre, which is funny because our first album was SY1, and then we were SY2, and this isn't quite SY3, but it's SYre, the remix. SY2 was a huge step for us and was a great album and we put everything we had into it and it got us a lot of fans and a lot of recognition and when we were starting out with SY1, our first album, it was just us trying to get going. We wanted to get on the road and play it for people, and so we quickly put seven or eight songs together that we had and tried to record them in a short amount of time, and what we found at the end of touring for SY2, is that a lot of people's favorite songs are off of our first album. If you're in a band, you want to share your music with as many people as possible if you're getting good reception and feedback, and I think SY1 was not introduced to enough people, so instead of re-releasing it, we wanted to go back and rebuild all of the music into something different. We're moving on in many ways as we're writing our new stuff from that album, and so it seemed like a good time to reintroduce ourselves and be like, 'we're still going to be writing good songs, but they're definitely going to come in a lot of different formats, as electronic, acoustic, and different things, to try to just see how far we can stretch the creative bounds of our songs'. We thought it would be cool to make a total departure and go to electronic first, it just seemed like a fun thing to do. When you record a full length, it's so much work and so it was fun to have a little bit of that and then play - like kids out for recess in a studio just playing around - and the new album is mostly Drew and Devon, because they're just in the studio and we would try to guide him, but Drew just started to play. It was like one kid that was really good playing with the ball and we sort of waited to get him off the bench and we got this really fun, modern, forward sounding album. This song, in particular, this is a fan favorite and we used to close our shows with this all the time - and we still do sometimes - but now it's in such a different form it's really fun and really interesting and it was like a blank palate using some old paint that you had in the cabinet [laughs].

Could you sum up SYre in one sentence?

Sabbatical Year goes to space [laughs].

We've always been very much into piano and bass and this and that and this is we're going to go from that to jumping through a wormhole in the universe, just a lot of synthesizers and all kinds of stuff. It seems like it's a mile away from where we were and it's like space exploration [laughs]. You've got a guy who is an astronaut and at home he's comfortable mowing the yard and having some beers with his friends, but you put him in a spaceship and send him to the moon and he's still this certain kind of person, but he's interplanetary. Now, he's seen new things and experienced new things that he's never seen before, but he's still the same guy. That's sort of what we are, our band in a NASA rocket going to the moon.

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

I think they're really going to like it. Between us playing live and the different things we've written about and different kinds of songs, I think people have been very happy to accept different things from our band. I think they know, even though we don't bend people's minds with some avante garde music, if you come see us live, there are different parts and different jams and I'm changing lyrics and adding people's names into the songs and we're just trying to have fun and this is a new way to do it. It's a very modern sound; it's like a 35 year old woman was listening to our music and it was bringing back old memories and it was something she could settle into and have a glass of wine and be this very mellow and introspective experience, well, now her 16 year old boy or daughter can dance to our music now, too. It's still us, but it's like we've eaten a whole bag of Skittles [laughs], so it's very modern and musical forward. We're messing around with different things electronically that we hadn't heard before; we're mixing very solemn vocals with these very hardcore beats and electronics and synthesizers which is not always happening, so it's a fun new thing for us.

Is there anything you'd like to add?

After this album, we're going to go in the complete opposite direction. It looks like we're going to release an EP that's going to be all acoustic, so it's going to be nothing like what you hear on this album [laughs]. On the next one, it's going to be all acoustic, completely stripped down, ukuleles and mandolins, so that will be also fun. That will be the regular guy I mentioned mowing the lawn and drinking beer with his friends, well now he's going to go churn butter in Amish country [laughs]. Unplugging everything and going back to just strings only, recording it in a live room, nothing plugged in, so that's going to be our next thing.

2016, for us, is just going to be a lot about new experiences. If you go to our website - we're not touring because we want to do something different and we played Atlanta Braves' stadium, tiny places, breweries, festivals, and we wanted to see if we could do something different - we have something going on right now called Sing Out for Sabbatical Year is the name of our tour and, basically, it's fans submitting, like, 'hey, come play in our town'. If we get enough submissions, we're going to start our next tour just because a bunch of people wanted to hear us in their town and we're probably going to go to their Dairy Queen or something and play a show [laughs] and that's going to be the start of our tour. We tried living room shows and that's fun too, but I think this is just keeping it very simple. Instead of trying to get the specifics nailed down, we just want people to say, 'hey, man, we love you and there are ten people at my college that really like you, too,' and they'll send us stuff and so we'll go to Boise. I think that's the idea for our next tour, which is going to be really cool because I guarantee it's going to end us up somewhere like Boise or New Zealand - as a modern band, music is universal now, so we will get stuff from Mexico, New Zealand, Portugal; I would love to hear what people think about Sabbatical Year playing at 4:30 in a Portugese bar [laughs]. There are no boundaries and everyone who participates and sends stuff in to our site, we're going to send them some stuff to thank them for reaching out to us and the winner is going to end up having us playing outside their Walmart or something [laughs].

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Bizzythowed by E

Catch urban hard rocker Bizzythowed at The Viper Room in LA next Tuesday and look for his debut full-length, Blank Check, Volume 1, to be released later this year.

What got you started in music?

Initially, I went to a music and science academy when I was in elementary school and, in second grade, they make you take general music and they teach you how to keep time and tempo and things like that and you pick your instrument and so I picked the trombone and I excelled at it; it came naturally, I was good at it, and that started my love for playing music. I really enjoyed concert band, I enjoyed competition and all the things that came along with it and I was first chair.

Now, as far as guitar goes, my dad was a rocker. I grew up listening to a lot of classic rock with my father and when he passed away I was 12 and my mom put me in all kinds of extracurricular things to keep my mind off of that, so everyday after school I had gymnastics, I was playing football, I was in band, all these things. Out of a tribute for my dad, 'cause he loved rock, I was like, 'hey mom, I wanna learn guitar'. I always thought, watching MTV and watching the music videos in the late '80s and '90s, guitar always looked cool to me and I just thought, 'hey, I wanna take guitar lessons'. So, my mom bought me a guitar and I started taking lessons every Saturday on the weekends and, same thing, it just came to me naturally. There was even a part in my life where my mom - my mom is an attorney and my mom was in law school at the time - she couldn't afford guitar lessons and she told my guitar teacher, you know, 'I might not be able to have him come this month,' and my guitar teacher offered to teach me for free because I was his best student; from that point on he would pick me up from school, he'd help me with my math homework, all these things because he believed in me, and I guess that's kind of how I started. 

Then, when it came time to say, 'okay, what are you going to do with your life?' I just wanted to move to LA and become a rock star at 17 [laughs], but my mom, being a lawyer, was like, 'you gotta go to school and do something,' so, for me in order to stick it to her, I majored in guitar, but I got into Berklee College of Music; I auditioned, I got in, and my last guitar teacher was a Berklee alum so he helped me get in and helped me with my recommendation letters and all that stuff.

Which musicians have you been influenced by?

In the beginning, it was Metallica - James Hetfield and Kirk Hammett - Kurt Cobain, Jerry Cantrell of Alice In Chains, Dave Mustaine, and just a lot of hard rock musicians, early on. Then, as I got older, I went through my Bob Marley phase, discovered him; I discovered my Jimi Hendrix phase and I was deep into his vibe; then I went through Prince and Lenny Kravitz. I'd say, nowadays, now that I make music and I've been making music and getting placements for over a decade, same thing, I still pull from my older influences. Bowie's a huge influence, obviously; Bowie was huge growing up, my dad liked a lot of Bowie. Led Zeppelin, Robert Plant - all the older guys. David Gilmour from Pink Floyd was huge, love his stuff. I pull from everything, everybody. I could go on and on for hours about people who influence me [laughs].

Any current artists you would recommend to your listeners?

I love Kanye West and what he's doing; I think he's a genius and, obviously, people either love him or hate him [laughs] and I think that comes with genius. Some people don't respect or get what he does, so I think, Kanye West, his stuff is good right now. I love The Internet, they're young, they're good. I like Rae Sremmurd, they're really good. As far as rock goes, I've always liked Sevendust, their new album Kill The Flaw is really, really good, I'm feeling that, a lot.

How would you describe your own sound?

I mean, I just call it urban hard rock. I grew up in the streets and I grew up with that dual life; my dad was a street dude, my mom was a bookworm, became a lawyer, so I got the best of both things. It's the same thing, growing up listening to gangster rap and growing up listening to heavy metal, hardcore, different types of music; it's just my way of combining those things, something I've always done. I guess I could say urban hard rock, urban alternative rock, ghetto metal [laughs], hood rock. [Laughs] But, politically correct, urban hard rock.

What inspired your single, "Nothing You Can Do About It"?

The song "Nothing You Can Do About It" is one of those songs about letting go. It's being in a situation you maybe know is not healthy for you or maybe it's no longer beneficial to you, whatever reason, this is you taking that stand. If it's a bad, toxic relationship, a bad job that you're not going anywhere in, things like that, it's like, okay, my mind's made up, my bags are packed up, I'm going away [laughs]. The first part is, you realize life is crazy and, if you get caught up in it, you'll become a slave and you'll always be unhappy unless you take that chance, that one choice, and you remove yourself from what it is that's holding you back or what you feel is deterring you. That's kind of what "Nothing You Can Do About It" is, because it's like, once my mind's made up and I know this is wrong and I'm making a difference, I don't care what you say.

That's the first single from your forthcoming album, Blank Check, Volume 1, could you tell us more about that album?

Well, Blank Check, Volume 1 is a culmination of all my experiences from living in Houston, Miami, and LA and being in the music industry for the last decade, behind the scenes, [laughs] the good things and the bad things that come along with it; the debauchery, the drug use, the experimentation, the relationships with friends that come and go, the people who you can and can't trust: these are all issues that I cover, as far as Blank Check, Volume 1. It's autobiographical for me. It's basically my life, the last ten years, summed up. It's good music, it's real good music too, because the whole point of Blank Check is, it's about freedom, no restraints. When you're with me or you're listening to my music, I don't want you to think about rules, I don't want you to think about what society thinks of you, I just want you to be completely free to do whatever the fuck you wanna do [laughs] and that's the same thing when you come to my show. When you come to my show I want you to laugh, I want you to cry, I want you to get your frustrations out, I want you to grab that girl next to you and tell her you wanna be with her [laughs].

Do you have a favorite song to play live?

I think one of my favorite songs to play live is, definitely, "Life Is Here", which is a song which will be included on the album, but that song is very powerful to play live. I like playing "Nothing You Can Do About It", too, it's a good song live; I like to end my shows with that song.

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

I just hope they're able to get something out of it, emotionally. I want music to make people feel and make people come away thinking about whatever thought that song invoked and that's what I want, I want people to hear the honesty and the rawness in it. I want people to hear the truthfulness in it.

Is there anything you want to add?

I have a show next Tuesday at The Viper Room out here in LA and if you wanna come check me out live, I'll be there playing at 10.

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Sheldon Clark by E

Catch up with Nashville based Americana artist Sheldon Clark and look for his forthcoming EP, Word & Sound, to be released March 2016.

What got you interested in music?

Sheldon Clark: It was a lot of different things. I grew up doing choir with my mom in church and that's my first experience in music, but I started playing music and writing music in middle school and high school and, at first, it was because all the cool kids were doing it, that kind of thing, playing the guitar, but then I started to really dive into it and I think I just fell in love with it over time. It's something that became this positive addiction for me [laughs] as I grew up. I was also kind of an angsty teenager, so I think the expression of emotion in music really drew me in to starting to write it. I wrote my first song when I was in my freshman English class in high school and I had to do a book report on Romeo and Juliet and it was the first time I'd tried to write a song and I approached my teacher about it and she said she thought it was a great idea, so that was the first kind of instance. Then, I did another one about Of Mice and Men, so it was a love of literature and a love of music that merged that got me into writing and into music.

Where do you draw inspiration from when you are working on music; is there a lot of literary influence?

I feel like a lot of my music is really inspired by personal experiences more than anything else. I am a huge fan of literature and, especially, John Green is my favorite author, I would say, but there's a lot of books, like Into The Wild. There's probably a lot of plays too; I did theater in high school and we got to read and be around a lot of shows, a lot of lesser known shows, and just the theater, the drama to it, the storytelling aspect of literature, was an influence; but, most of my songs, especially my new music, is drawn from personal experiences and I think that, for me, makes the best writing because it's just the pure emotion that I'm feeling at the time that I'm having that experience. I think people can relate to it better when you've actually lived something, not that it's bad to write about something else, but I find it's my strongest writing when it's coming from my life or relationships or my own personal conflicts, that kind of thing. That comes up on the record a lot, on the new EP that's coming out.

Which musicians have you been influenced by?

Oh man, I love a lot of different types of music and I have kind of shifted throughout my musical journey. I used to listen to punk and metal music in middle school and high school and, then, getting into college, I started discovering the classic songwriters, like The Beatles and Tom Petty and Bruce Springsteen and I think that made a huge impact on my sound, that basis of classic rock. My biggest influences right now and over the past couple years, have been Wilco, Ryan Adams, Jason Isbell, but I definitely feel like even those writers are influenced by all these artists I've said. I think it's a mash-up of a lot of things. I try not to be snobby with music; I like artists from Taylor Swift to electronic music like Skrillex to Tom Petty, like I said. I'm all over the place but, for my music that I put out, I think my influences are more the Americana artists, like Wilco and Ryan Adams; those are the two big influences for this record.

Could you describe your own sound?

Yeah, moving away from those artists, my sound has a mash of rock and folk in a sense that, lyrically, I think I have a unique perspective that I haven't seen in songwriting before. My musical sound is just a crashing together of all these influences and I think I'm not scared to experiment with instruments and sounds that I'm not familiar with; on the record, we have a song, "Our Last Morning", which is based all on the Wurlitzer and I don't play piano, but I work with a great band and my piano player, we worked together to make that happen. I think staying away from just doing the acoustic guitar as the basis of everything and having that mix where it's not all about me as the songwriter, but more about the songs and the arrangement of it, people have told me that they think my music's a little more complex than the normal singer-songwriter stuff that's out there and I think that's where I differentiate from the current singer-songwriters that are out there.

What was the inspiration for your single, "Our Last Morning"?

The original inspiration was - I don't know how I came across the video - I'm a big fan of the songwriter Dan Wilson and he had this songwriting challenge where he posted a little Vine video saying, 'write a song worthy of playing at a friend's wedding'. I immediately just felt that because I've had a lot of friends in the past year either get engaged or married - actually my best friend just got engaged this past weekend - so I really was inspired by this so I based the song off of Pachebel’s Canon in D major - it's the wedding song that a lot of people use for the bridal march - and, at first, it just had a verse and I was really writing the song about my then girlfriend at the time and just the beauty that she had, but I wanted to describe it without describing her physically, so I wanted to leave out what we normally describe as a beautiful person and so I did that in the verses. The chorus is sort of a vow to say, 'I'm going to love you until our last morning,' and being with someone until death do you part. There's also influences of John Green's The Fault in Our Stars which I was reading at the time and I just loved the way he showed love in the face of death almost, or in the face of such difficulty; he actually uses this phrase a lot - I'm a big fan of him just as a person - and in the book it's 'I fell in love the way you fall asleep: slowly and then all at once'. That's a quote I use in the chorus that really just stuck with me because that's just a feeling of how you fall in love with someone.

That's off your forthcoming EP, Word & Sound, could you tell us more about that album?

The theme is dealing with self-reflection - besides "Our Last Morning" - and the internal struggle; there's songs about anxiety, songs about questioning originality, and just different feelings that I had over the year I wrote it. The way it differentiated was, with the last record, I co-wrote a lot of the songs and I felt like I was more writing for people to like the songs, instead of writing what I really felt and, for this record, I really wrote about how I was feeling and just these raw emotions that were going on in my life at the time.

I wrote about 12 or 14 songs and only picked the ones that I felt were the best and we also had a limited budget, so I did a funding campaign and raised a good size of the money and we went into Welcome to 1979 Studios here in Nashville and we just had three days. This was me and my band - which are all incredible local musicians here in Nashville - and my wonderful engineer Jeremy, we all got together and went into the studio and we had three days to record this, so we decided to do it almost completely live and there's no editing on the record, it's straight to analog tape, so recorded in kind of a very vintage style, and we just wanted it to be really raw, like the emotions of the songs. We really tackled it in that way and we were all exhausted on the third day [laughs], but it was really a cool experience to go in and play it almost like you're playing it live; everyone knowing what they're doing - although we came up with stuff while we were sitting in there, too - it was really cool. Chris Mara, the owner of Welcome to 1979, mixed it and there's no tuning on the vocals or any editing, it's just what we did and that's really cool. It's honest and that's the biggest difference from the last record, it's just a very honest and raw record overall.

What do you hope listeners can take away from your music?

I hope my music helps people like music helped me growing up. I struggled with anxiety and depression through a lot of middle school and high school and, really, I just clung to music through all of that and I've always just wanted people to be able to connect and to feel alright through music. It's a good almost sense of release from a lot of the struggles that we have and to know that someone else has those same struggles. I think, just to take away that honesty, I hope people appreciate that the most out of everything; I want people to be like, 'oh, he's not holding anything back, he's really being vulnerable,' and I hope that people like that and understand that and can relate to it. That would be my biggest hope of a take away for people.

Is there anything you would to add?

I'm really excited about the EP. We've got a couple shows coming up, trying to do more, and those will be announced on my website, sheldonclark.com. But, yeah, we're working on a lot of cool things, trying to get this record out to everyone and I just really hope that people get that feeling from it and I just really appreciate the ability to do this interview with you.

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