Talk Like Tigers by E

Catch up with electro-pop band Talk Like Tigers, listen to the band's single "Gunning", and look for them on tour this Summer.

What brought you all together?

We (Charlotte and Stephanie) were looking for a drummer for our band at the time and Mark’s old band had recently broke up and so we met up to discuss Mark possibly joining the band and we clicked instantly. We have a shared passion for music and funnily enough, enjoy the workload that goes with it.

Where does your name, Talk Like Tigers, come from?

Our band name came from when we were in a different band, signed to a record label and we saw first-hand how cut-throat the music industry can be. We realised at that moment we must be fierce. We mustn’t give up on our dreams. We must roar like a lion. In fact better yet, we must Talk Like Tigers.

Which musicians have you been influenced by, individually or as a group?

Stephanie and I (Charlotte) listened to a really wide range of music growing up from Motown to Dance and Grunge to Pop. The vocal harmonies of Motown, TLC, Lauren Hill, All Saints and Destiny's Child have really influenced us! I think our alternative twist comes from listening to artists such as Björk, SIA and Roisin Murphy.

I (Mark) remember being at school and the majority of people listening to chart stuff and embarrassing 90s music and I was introduced to a live Van Morrison album that just completely set me off on the passion to write my own songs. Obviously he does a very different style of music to what we do now however he really influenced me growing up. My love of electronic music came from artists such as Björk, The Prodigy and Viva City.

Who's in your playlist now?

MØ, Haim, Tove Lo, Banks, Justin Bieber… not even ashamed in the slightest.

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

Gritty electro pop!

Could you tell us more about your inspirations behind your new single, "Gunning"?

We wanted to go for a dancier sound with "Gunning". It is about bewitching someone but then the tables turn and you completely lose control of yourself within their mystique. It describes the struggle of self control and power. We feel that the music mirrors the subject. We can't wait for everyone to see the video...

Do you have plans to release an album?

We have just finished a long stint in the studio where we got to immerse ourselves completing two EPs worth of songs. We definitely see ourselves doing an album in the future, but to be honest we tend to feel that the EP route is a better direction for us to go down for now. If our fans ask us to record an album, then we’ll do one :)

I saw you have some live shows coming up, which of your tracks is your favorite to perform live?

Yeah we have been booked to play some great festivals this year already, including Evolution Emerging in May - keep an eye on our website www.talkliketigers.com where we will be announcing all of the dates! In regards to performing live, to be honest we've just got to the stage where we are happy with our material to be showcased in front of an audience and so the shows that we have coming up are going to be some of our first... Isn't that exciting!?

We do have to say our latest single "Gunning" is sounding GREAT in the practice room! :)

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

We want our fans to connect and genuinely enjoy the music that we have created. You know that buzz you get after going to a great gig… we want people to have that!

Is there anything you'd like to add?

It would be stupid of us to not mention our mailing list as it is the first place that we share new material. You can do this now at www.talkliketigers.com and we have been known to give away free downloads of our music alongside some very special treats…

Website             Facebook             Twitter             SoundCloud             YouTube             Instagram

Aeora by E

Catch up with Melbourne‐based electro‐pop artist Aeora and listen to her new single "Medicine" from her forthcoming EP, Alt., due out in July.

What first got you interested in music?

I guess I was surrounded by music when I was very young as my parents like to play the radio or old records around the house. I liked singing along to songs. I guess the first inspiration to write and play music was when I listened to Taylor Swift and watched this doco on her about her starting it all when she was like 12 years old or something. I picked up guitar and piano and started writing.

Why choose the moniker Aeora?

I'm not really sure actually. I think it's because I don't really like the idea of my personal name being out there. So I guess I just wanted to have another name that was simple and stuff. So yeah, Aeora.

Which musicians would you say you've been influenced by?

BANKS, Tay tay, James Blake, Lorde and so many, many more. But they're probably the big ones.

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

I guess it's pretty much just pop-electro. But my lyrics are a bit more pop and I like to tell a story usually. It's also quite dark, so I like to use some heavy beats and bass along with some shouty vocals haha.

What were your inspirations behind your single, "Medicine"?

I wrote "Medicine" about this really intense period in my life and spoke about a few aspects of it. I really wanted it to be quite dark. So the darkness was inspired by a lot of BANKS stuff and then after hearing Owen's (Rabbit) track "Denny's" I really wanted to get him to do the production of it.

Can you tell us more about what we can expect to hear from your forthcoming EP, Alt.?

Well! There's going to be 5 songs (including "Medicine" and another single that will come out earlier than the EP). There are a few more dark songs on there but there's also some sadder ones that have this kind of lush production behind it all. It's very exciting because there's going to be a lot of production that I've never tried before (as I'm working with another producer) and it's all just sounding pretty awesome right now. I'm super excited to release it all :)

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

I like music that you can understand the story and the emotions behind it. I make it pretty important to write about things that matter to me and I really care about getting the vocals and production to match those feelings. So, all I'd want is for listeners to feel those things and understand them. It's cool when you have this mutual connection through music.

Is there anything you'd like to add?

Right now I'm watching Beyoncé's Lemonade video and I'm literally dying. This interview really took longer than it should have for me just because Beyoncé is a beautiful goddess and this is so great. 

Facebook              Twitter             SoundCloud             Instagram

The Singer and The Songwriter by E

Catch up with jazz/folk duo The Singer and The Songwriter (Rachel Garcia and Thu Tran) and watch the video for their single, "Nights & Weekends" taken from their EP, Ballads For Trying Times.

What brought you two together?

Thu: We went to school together in San Francisco. We were in theater school and I played guitar and did open mics and was a singer-songwriter, folky, rock guy [laughs]; Rachel likes to describe me as 'fedora wearing'. We were in theater school together and we met through mutual friends, but the first time we really hung out was at open mic night at The Canvas Gallery - which is now, like, a fish restaurant - and it was this cool, multi-art, space thing, but that's where we met and started to hang out and talk. Rachel was actually scared to sing in front of people when we first met.

Rachel: We just were in school together and we were friends so we started to hang out and he would learn covers of songs that I liked to sing, so it brought me out of my shell, in terms of singing in front of other people. He learned songs I liked and I would quietly sing them and that turned into playing more together. We pursuing theater degrees, so we were doing acting when we first met.

Which musicians have you been influenced by, individually or in what you do now?

Rachel: I grew up with Whitney Houston and Mariah Carey, so I wasn't turned onto women who sounded closer to me until I was in college; I didn't even know who Ella Fitzgerald was until I was in my twenties. I always thought that women singers had to have an incredible pop self and I have a different voice than that, so I never really thought my voice was a valid thing and that I could pursue it professionally because it didn't sound like what I was hearing on the radio or American Idol - that had just started - so I think Fiona Apple was actually the first person that I was like, 'oh, she sings really well and she doesn't sound like any of those other women'. That was really the first person that I really loved as an adult and I would say, now, we listen to everything. Thu and I just listened to Loretta Lynn's entire catalog, we listen to Top 40 radio in the car and know all the pop music, we just watched Lemonade last night [laughs].

Thu: I agree. We consider everything and we try to be open to being influenced by everything. We're really influenced by great hooks and great melodies, so it doesn't matter where it comes from, we just pick and choose the things that we like. In terms of my influence, I had two older sisters growing up and they both listened to '80s and '90s pop and RnB and stuff, so I actually grew up with a lot of Wham! and George Michael - not just like it was around, I really loved Wham!, still love Wham! [laughs] - and also Madonna, Boyz II Men, ABBA, and all this stuff. When I met Rachel in college, I was trying to to get my own musical identity; I listened to a lot more indie pop songwriters like Sufjan Stevens and Rufus Wainwright. What's interesting is that, I'm Vietnamese and my parents are immigrants, so I didn't get the "proper" rock education. I never got the Zeppelins and the Bob Dylans and The Beatles, I never got that because my parents didn't listen to music and my sisters just listened to pop music, so I feel unencumbered by the roots of rock and roll tradition, so it's kind of nice to just like what we like.

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

Rachel: We struggle with that endlessly. Now, we're saying folk/jazz and people are a little bit confused with that and then they hear it and they're like, 'oh, yeah, folk/jazz,' but it's a little bit indie, a tiny bit old-timey sounding, and a tiny bit pop; it's a little bit hard to describe, if you have any ideas we're open to it [laughs]. Folk/jazz is what we've been sticking with now 'cause it's a little bit jazzy and whenever you get someone just being accompanied by guitar, often, it's folk, so that seems to be working right now.

Your single speaks for itself, but could you tell us more about your inspiration behind "Nights & Weekends"?

Rachel: When we're playing it onstage, we often say that it's a song about people who aren't artists who give advice to people who are artists. The song's really just about how the arts aren't really valued that much and that, to make art, you have to have this full other career to support it; there's only this top tier of people in music and theater and movies that make a living wage and everyone else has to have a day job to support themselves and you end up being relegated to do your art after you get home from work or on the weekends and that that's really frustrating and feels not fair because it feels like two jobs.

Thu: And that's the way that we operated for our entire adult careers [laughs]. The last six or seven years that we've had this band, we've always had full time jobs, so we know what it's like to only play music on nights and weekends and for free and in-between: we would have a full eight hour day of work, go home, and then have another full eight hours of whatever that is. We just recently quit our jobs to go on tour full time because we thought, it's worth that commitment, that full time energy, and it should be given that full respect and attention.

How would you sum up your EP, Ballads For Trying Times, in one sentence?

Thu: Ballads For Trying Times is about a bunch of big questions that we have as modern day adults. 

If that sounds too general or vague, I think the trying times that we are in - for many reasons but just for our personal life right now - we struggle with a bunch of things that are just choices, they're crossroads. We're at an age where all our friends are having children, buying houses, excelling in their careers, but then we have a bunch of artist friends who are at crossroads thinking should I keep doing this, is this worth it; I'm in my 30's, am I still cut out to play open mic night? That is what I mean by being an adult. It's struggling with these traditional ideas of what these benchmarks are in growing up and having a career, having an income, having a house, having a mortgage, and then what are all the alternative choices and the emotional toll that it takes to make either choice and the emotional toll it takes to watch the other lives that live pass you by.

You're heading out on tour, do you have a favorite song from this EP to perform live?

Rachel: "Impractical Art" - I think that's track 2 - that's really fun to play, because it's really slow and it has the joke right at the top, so it's sort of fun to sing it and hear the audience chuckle when they hear the joke of, 'I just want a dog'. That one's really fun just to do live and, also, we're writing new stuff too and it's always really fun to play the super new things.

What would you say is the best part about performing?

Rachel: We've only done one tour. We did it two years ago and we just did it up the coast and it was great; we did ten days and it was so fun and we got to meet a lot of people that we wouldn't usually meet or get to play for. Last time when we were on tour, we stumbled upon this - I think we were in Oregon at Cave Junction - tiny little town and we went to this pizza restaurant for dinner and it happened to be their open mic night at this pizza place, which was actually a big deal in the town, like everyone was at it. We had our guitar in the car, so we signed up to play and we sang a couple originals and then I sang "I Fall To Pieces" and "Happy Times" and everyone started singing along with that song. All these little old people were at the open mic and they started quietly singing and then really singing along and it was really moving and it was a really special moment that you wouldn't get in your own town. In LA, that probably wouldn't occur. So, just these little moments that are really unusual and spontaneous that I don't even think we're prepared for or know will happen. Just being out of our little bubble of our home.

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

Thu: I think the hope is always that they connect with the stories that we're telling in our songs. Our songs are all generally pretty personal, they have some autobiographical qualities to them, but I think, when we write, we don't try to pour our diary out onto the page, we go through a pretty intense writing process for each song and so we try to make the stories clear and make the melodies beautiful and perform them with care and specificity. All of that work on the back-end for us, we would really like for the audience to let it wash over them and for them to be able to feel and think about things without having to work hard at it; they can just enjoy it and it can take them to a place that makes them feel whatever they want to feel and they can just have a good time.

Website             Facebook             Twitter             SoundCloud             YouTube             Instagram

Whitney Tai by E

Catch up with dream pop singer-songwriter Whitney Tai, listen to her single "Falling", and look for her Forever EP to be released in May.

What first got you interested in music?

Whitney Tai: Since I was a little girl, I've been singing, writing poetry, drawing: I was born an artist. My parents noticed early on that I was not a normal kid, 'she's out there, she's writing screenplays, she's doing this and that,' so I think, for them, it was a natural thing and, as I grew older, I started to write my own music and I started performing a lot in different talent shows and in church. Then, I pursued a career in design and I met a lot of people in the music industry through that and I started collaborating with a lot of interesting artists because I was trying to create a brand of art and music together, as a concept, fusing my musical talent and background with my artistic background to start an art movement as a way of supporting upcoming artists - like myself - and other artists who need a platform to be represented on. That was where it started, it's really just this idea that I could help other artists reach their greatness through inspiring them with provocative art, thought, and poetry.

Do you remember the first song you wrote that you were happy with?

It's funny, my first song - and I always forget about this because it was so early - I wrote my first song when I was 10 and it was called "Sheer Ecstasy"; I don't know where the hell, as a 10 year old, I would come up with this [laughs], but it was because I love nature, I love being outdoors, doing outdoor activities, and just admiring the beauty of nature itself - simplicity-wise - so I wrote, basically, a poem or a song that captured what the breeze felt like and the feelings you would get from that solidarity of being you, yourself, alone with nature. So, that was my first song. It was not even a love song [laughs] it was more of just an appreciation for life.

Which musicians have you been influenced by?

It's interesting, my influences of who I gravitated to when I was young is totally different than what I would say I've become as an artist now, but my earliest influences would be Metallica, Pink Floyd, The Beatles - I had a wide range. My parents opened me up to a lot of jazz music as well and I used to listen to Fleetwood Mac a lot, they were a big influence, The Pretenders. When I got into my teens, I loved No Doubt, they were a huge favorite of mine, and I like a lot of solo artists. I don't really identify with Celine Dion, but I always felt in awe of her vocal ability and how she was able to use her voice so powerfully and that was inspiring; as a vocalist myself, you're not always looking at the music, sometimes you're looking at the technical skill behind an artist and the message they're sending. Sarah McLachlan was definitely another early vocal influence; I loved her, the way she used the different tenors of her voice, the different variations of sound and emotion, and I think that's what brought me into doing dance music - not just pop music - because in dance, you can use your voice artistically in different ways to make people feel things, whereas in pop, you're kind of fitting a format of one sound, so it's nice to be able to jump between genres. I'm trying to think of another band, there's so many! I listened to everything growing up. Stevie Wonder was another big influence for me, so it was a mixture of rock and soul.

Is there a current band you've got on repeat now?

There's three bands I have on repeat right now. I have Minus the Bear; I've been listening to this indie band that I found on YouTube, his name's Thomston, he's been on repeat; and I love The Weeknd, I've been listening to him for awhile, too. But it's always different, it changes depending on what my moods are.

How would you describe your sound or brand?

I wanna say rock and roll glamour; it's a little bit edgy, but it's still soft around the edges, there's this grunge pop. Also, dreamy. Whenever I've been creating music, even when I was younger, I always had this desire to evoke emotions in people, whether it's through lyrics or voice. You always wonder, what is it about a song that makes the hair on your arms stand up, some kind of scientific thing, and every time I would listen to a song that was my favorite, I would be like, 'why is it that I feel like I get shivers?'. You know, when you hear a certain sound in a song? I would love to provoke that feeling in other people, because those are the moments where you contemplate life is beautiful, I can overcome this situation, or this song is getting me through something that I maybe couldn't have gotten through on my own. I guess, music as therapy is my motto.

Could you tell us more about your inspirations behind your single "Falling"?

Yes [laughs]. Actually, the whole EP is called Forever and Forever was this concept that there were so many things happening around me at the time with my own love life and other friends of mine who were going through some difficult times and I just kept coming back to this one thought: what if the reason we can't find this peace within ourselves is because we're always fighting ourselves? We're always going against the grain, but I think if you could pick a moment in your life where you were your happiest or if you could pick an ideal moment that belongs to you and no one can take it away, why not make that the moment you live in forever; why not make it your every moment? So, what does that mean? That means that life becomes simpler, your expectations vanish because you're so present in the now that you don't care. So, "Falling" is a love song, Forever is an ode to life that's saying, 'listen a moment, stay with me forever because I'm not letting you go, I deserve happiness, peace, and love that belongs to me, as a human being'. "Falling" is, I'm in love with life, I'm in love with people, why don't we think about how beautiful that feels; just that innocence of being in love - your first love or your first friendship with someone new - and embracing that and letting it be what it is and not complicating it with other circumstantial things that happen in our lives. So, it's about innocence, romance, acceptance, and living in the now.

You've touched on this a bit already, but could you tell us more about what we can expect to hear from Forever?

I would say that soul, blues, and rock and roll are the influences. I collaborated with a couple of artists who are very genre-ly different: one of my co-writers is in a pop-punk band and my producer is a soul, blues, rock guy, so there's some elements of even their artistic style and, as an artist, I believe in collaborating with other artists. I like to let people express themselves freely because I think it makes for a different concoction of sounds and you have to be open to that as an artist. I think most solo artists get stuck in this idea that it has to be their way and I don't think that's how you grow as an artist and that you have to open up your mind. 

My first album was more alternative, it had a little bit of rock in there, a little bit of pop - more classical pop, I would say - and this one is a little edgier, there was a different group of people I was writing with. I've always wanted to be a rockstar; from when I was born, my parents were like, 'alright, she's going to be a rockstar,' so it's just something that I envisioned for myself because, when you have big dreams and big hopes and passions and you think big, you just want to be able to help other people with that; bring them up and not push them down. It goes back to what I first said about a movement: music as therapy, music as a movement. We're all artists and I think, sometimes, we don't see ourselves that way, we just see ourselves as music makers, but we're artists and art speaks to, not just the ears, it speaks to the senses, it speaks to the emotions. 

As for my future sound, I don't know, I'm evolving; I'm fairly new in the music scene. The EP is three songs; it's two remixes and "Falling", but I have some singles that I'm going to be releasing in the next few months that are different because, again, they're with different artists. Some indie pop stuff, I'm doing some trance, I'm collaborating with Blackmill, I'm also collaborating with a new artist out of Chicago, doing some experimental stuff, so I'm always looking to push myself to the next level that I expect from myself as an artist.

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

I just want them to know that I'm going to keep making music for everyone and not just for me. I want people to enjoy music as an art form and not as an automated, I deliver you the same thing every time. I want people to be part of that movement, I want them to realize that they can do anything they want to do, they just have to put their mind to it. Whatever their passions are, I want people to be inspired so that they can go out and chase their dreams and do what they want to do. I want to talk to them through my music and make them feel things that are going to provoke their actions into doing something positive.

Is there anything you would like to add?

I have an EP release show on May 13th at The Bitter End at 7 PM in New York City. I'll be performing with a few other bands there and my flyer is up on my music page on Facebook. That one I'm really excited about. I feel like The Bitter End, in general, is one of the oldest rock clubs in New York City and it has history in itself, just of the people who've stood on the stage and performed there; artists from 30/40 years ago to, now, Lady Gaga, so it's just a nice venue and I feel honored to be able to perform there.

I just want to say, for me, I look at myself as a singer - aside from being a songwriter and a producer - because when I was little, I felt like my voice could heal, that it had the ability to heal people, and maybe that means heal them through a time. I had a pretty rough childhood: my mom died when I was 11 and I was left to fend for myself for many years and it was very tough to lose somebody that young that is a major figure in your life - especially when that person was the one who supported you in your music and was pushing you towards your dreams - so that was something that changed me as a kid. It made me realize that I only have one life to live and I can't waste a single second doing anything that doesn't help me or benefit others in a positive way, because we're not guaranteed tomorrow or a week from now. My goal is to give back the love that was taken away so that people know that they're not alone, that they have somebody, that my music can be a friend to them. Whether it's rock and roll or if it's dance music or if it's pop, you'll know it's me; it's always going to be me coming through there.

Website             Facebook             Twitter             YouTube             SoundCloud             Instagram