Sivan Talmor by E

Catch up with Tel-Aviv-based singer-songwriter, musician, and activist Sivan Talmor and watch the video for single "I'll Be" off her upcoming album, FIRE, to be released in October.

What first got you interested in music?

Music was always around because my parents loved listening to a lot of good music. But when I was 9 years old, one day I just decided I wanted to study professional singing and I somehow found a conservatory that had opera lessons. So I reached out to my mother with that request, it kind of came out of nowhere because it wasn’t really a common thing for a nine-year old child to ask for opera lessons, and especially not in my family where no one had a thing to do with music. So, we drove there, about a 45 min drive, and asked to take lessons. They said I was too young, and that I could meanwhile start with piano - but I insisted on opera, and was very assertive with what I wanted... So the manager took me to a room and auditioned me and then told my mother that while I might be young,  my voice was ready. Two years later, I decided my dream was to participate in a musical and that’s what happened. I took the train to Tel Aviv (from the north of Israel, where I lived), auditioned in the national theatre, and got it. So, I guess I just had an inner feeling that that’s what I want and have to do in this life, and nothing stood in my way.

Which musicians have you been influenced by?

At the beginning it started with what I heard back home - Peter Paul and Mary, Beatles, Simon & Garfunkel, Leonard Cohen, Crosby Stills and Nash. Later on, great jazz singers such as Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald and, today, Emiliana Torrini, Bon Iver, M.ward, Radiohead.

How would you describe your own sound?

I guess it’s a mix of acoustic folk, with jazz and 60s singer-songwriter influences. 

What were your inspirations behind your single and the video for "I'll Be"?

So the song was actually written as a forgiveness song after a fight I had with my partner. It was my way of trying to say how I'd finally understood and that I'd be willing to be anything for him, if he'd come back and forgive me. Later on, I wrote another verse, and it became a true love song, my first one I ever managed to write.

When Tal Rosenthal and Noam Sharon, the two directors of the video, heard it for the first time, they almost immediately came up with the idea of connecting the song to environmental issues, and I loved it. I felt like it’s an amazing interpretation to the lyrics and environment issues are something that I feel really attached to. It felt like a great platform to bring it out and connect this important message to my art.

Could you tell us more about your forthcoming album, FIRE?

FIRE is a short album, but one that feels like it tells a full story. The songs are a bunch of personal and intimate stories, and Ori Winokur, who produced it, managed to fill the whole surrounding with the exact musical set. He was gentle enough to keep the lyrics and the stories in the middle, very focused and, at the same time, have a greater perspective about a full album that will include many different instruments and rich arrangements. Every song has its own musical world, with different instruments and sounds (from a wind instruments quartet in one song, to a double bass, harp and a glockenspiel in another) but somehow they all connect together in a right way that leads you through one story, one deep journey. 

Is there a track from this album that you're most excited to share with your fans?

I guess each one of the tracks tells of a different experience that I had, and reveals a different side of my personality, so all of them together create a very important and and honest document about myself. 7 songs of 7 different angles of my life story, and in the most exposed way I've ever written for myself.

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

I hope my music will get into peoples hearts and would let them travel in their own memories. Their childhood, their beautiful moments, their sad ones - their first love, first heartbreak, first cry, first kiss. Probably the biggest thing for me is that people would feel like I wrote their thoughts, and helped them bring up memories and things that, in the day to day run, they hadn't had time to stop and think of.

Is there anything you want to add?

Soon a new music video for FIRE will be released, and I promise it’s worth waiting for! It is not going to be an easy one to digest thematically, but I promise it will leave you with a strong feeling.

Website             Facebook             Twitter             YouTube             SoundCloud             Instagram

Chelan by E

Photo Credit: Matt Drenik

Catch up with Joshua Tree-based synth/indie pop band Chelan and listen to new single, "Won't Break", off the band's forthcoming fifth album, Vultures, to be released August 26th.

What brought you all together?

Justin: We met in Olympia, Washington a few years back. Jen and I first met at a party while we were in high school. Couple years later we hooked up with Chad after seeing his band play on a mutual tour.

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

Chad: Just to quickly name three: Mum, Carpenters, Innocence Mission

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

Justin: At its structural core it's basically pop music. Then throw in some melancholy indie elements and a whole lotta synths. It's always our hope that we are making something original and authentic. 

What were your inspirations behind your latest single, "Won't Break"?

Jen: Well, I was a couple of months into my pregnancy when writing this song and I had been experiencing some scary health related issues during that time. I decided to channel my fear into this song and create a positive outlook for an uncertain future. I tend to usually go dark with nervous energy, so this was a shift in my emotional reaction and gave me power over my fear by writing this song or ode. My health has fortunately improved since that time and it signified a turning point for me during recording to how I wanted to approach singing on this record.

Are "Beams" and "Won't Break" indicative of what we can expect to hear on your upcoming album and could you tell us more about Vultures?

Jen: I would say that they are indicative of the record and what I enjoy most about this record is that there is a lot of balance in lightness with darkness. Vultures tapped into that intimate side of darkness that you can experience with an idea, obsession or see in a person that you wish you could let go of. That haunting feeling that it is taking over the better sides of you and has an unstable influence. Like you are being hunted by it.

Is there a track off the record you're most excited to share with fans?

Chad: I'm really proud of how track 4, "Nervous", turned out. I think it embodies the work particular to this record perfectly. Building tracks piece by piece into big soundscapes and then peeling and paring those elements back down into a sharp and efficient song. But honestly, I'm really excited for people to hear this whole record, as an album.

Jen: I can honestly say that I do not have a favorite, which I think is great, because I always gravitate towards just one song on an album. There are many that I am really into this go around and I am pleased with the balance with how we all contributed in creating this record. It's my favorite Chelan record to date.  

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

Chad: When I really like a record, I don't hear the individual songs so much as the individual moments that surprise and stick a feeling to you. A lot of the sounds on this album, and so much of Jen's vocals in particular, do that for me. I really hope this is that kind of record for someone else. And they find themselves returning to listen again and again.

Justin: I hope that people take away that we put everything we had into this album. A lot of thought went into every element of Vultures. It's easy to rush these days and we did everything we could to avoid that.

Is there anything you want to add?

Black lives matter.

Facebook             Twitter             YouTube             SoundCloud             Bandcamp

Albis by E

Catch up with indie-alternative singer-songwriter Oscar Albis Rodriguez and listen to his latest single, "Broken Man", off Albis' forthcoming EP, ANIMALS, set to be released this September.

What got you interested in music and in songwriting?

I hate to have a generic answer for this but it was The Beatles. They’re the reason I started playing guitar when I was 10 years old (I had also been studying piano since age 5 but did not take it seriously until age 10). I tried to write songs right away but it wasn’t until Nirvana’s Nevermind came out that I realized that I could write a simple song with 3 chords and a melody and it could just be that. I also started learning a bunch of cover songs around that time and that also greatly informed a lot of my writing (and still does actually). 

Which musicians have you been influenced by?

In terms of bands: The Beatles, Led Zeppelin, Queen, Nirvana, Big Star, Nada Surf

In terms of guitarists: Eddie Van Halen, Roy Buchanan, J Mascis

In terms of writers: Elliott Smith, Neil Young

I mean, there are so many I could list but those are the ones that quickly come to mind. 

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

Sad songs played by a 90s byproduct of punk and emo who also loves classic rock and has just come to appreciate Appalachian music later on in life. 

What were your inspirations behind your latest single, "Broken Man”?

Lyrically speaking, I was going through a really tough time where I was bedridden with a mysterious ankle injury, isolated in Philadelphia away from my New York social scene and work, and just utterly depressed and suicidal. It’s very much in the same vein as the film It’s A Wonderful Life

Musically I wanted to do something along the lines of the faster but folky Elliott Smith songs mixed with Neutral Milk Hotel and just a little bit of punk rock. 

Could you tell us more about your upcoming EP, ANIMALS?

The entire record was written in that tough time in Philadelphia that I mentioned before. Besides my physical ailments, my wife and I were going through a rough patch and fighting a lot. She had been in open relationships before we met, and at the time we were monogamous and having a very hard time with it. Despite the monogamy I was still super jealous and she was angry at me and missed her old life. We did actually co-write some of the lyrics together, which I think was therapeutic for both of us. I remember when she read the first draft of another song on the EP, "Redwoods", I could tell she was feeling both love and sadness. 

When I was somewhat back on my feet a few months later I started producing the record at my own Russell Street Recording studio in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. The band and I built the arrangements as we went along which was super fun (and different from the recording process of my last album, Smoke & Ghosts, which was mostly recorded live). I played guitar and sang on the record, Zach Jones is on drums, Mike Chiavaro played bass (and actually did his tracking remotely - something I still find amazing because the technology has just come so far and it can help make the process more efficient), Dave Moose Sherman is on keyboards, Billy Libby played ambient guitar, Kristine Kruta played all the cellos on "Redwoods", and Hannah Winkler sang some pretty beautiful backing vocals. I’m really excited about this lineup of Albis; the hang is really great and everyone is super talented. 

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

I'm really excited about the song "Runners". I'm just happy with all aspects of that one; the writing, playing, production. And the guitar solo, hahaha. 

If you had to, how would you sum up your ANIMALS EP in one sentence?

Acknowledge your thoughts and desires and be honest with everyone in your life. 

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

I play and write songs in the hopes to make a connection with others. I felt a connection to The Beatles when I started listening to them and it really changed my life in that it gave me a purpose. I met some of my closest friends through touring and at shows. In terms of Albis and the ANIMALS EP specifically, I hope it can connect with people that are going through a tough time in their own relationships, whether they’re polyamorous or monogamous or something in between. Relationships are hard, especially when you factor in sex and jealousy and love. 

Is there anything you want to add?

Thanks so much for talking to me!

Website             Facebook             Twitter             SoundCloud             Bandcamp

The Chordaes by E

Photo Credit: Phil Knott

Catch up with Leo Sawikin of New York-based post-power-pop band The Chordaes and watch the video for their single, "Get The Feeling", off the band's debut full length album, Touch The Ground, out now.

What brought you all together?

Leo: I think the thing that made me want to start music, back when I was ten years old, is when I saw School Of Rock. A friend of mine saw it and suggested to me that we should start a band and this was when I was very little, I had no idea that I could be any good at music or anything like that, but I met Ethan a few years later and somebody mentioned that he played the drums and ever since then I had been looking for somebody to be in a band with and so me and Ethan started playing together and we really clicked. Then, Jesse came onboard about 2014 I think, right after we had recorded our first round of recordings, and I found him through somebody online. And then, Max was just less than a year ago; he was just at a show and he really liked it and we were looking for a keyboard player.

Which musicians have you been influenced by?

I'd say that the most profound influence any one artist has had on me would have to be Brian Wilson; I just feel like there's really no one else out there who has songs that sound quite like him. I've always been very, very inspired by the incredible chord progressions and the amazing production and I feel like, with The Beach Boys and Brian Wilson, I can't think of another group where more thought goes into those two things and I want to try and model this project on that as much as I possibly can.

How would you describe your sound?

It's basically a hybrid of music like that that's very composed with very complex chord progressions but it also has aspects of heavier rock bands with more guitar based things. I write everything on guitar so, that being said, my songs all tend to have a little bit more of a power-pop vibe to them, like The Raspberries or Todd Rundgren or something. So, I'd say it's sort of in those worlds, with a little bit of modern influence from bands like Radiohead.

What were your inspirations behind your last single "Get The Feeling"?

I wouldn't say it's about anything specific, it's just, I woke up one day and I felt very, very good and these words just came to my head, a melody and everything. I'd say that the song that it reminds me of the most is this song called "I Wanna Be With You" by The Raspberries, so I sort of used that as a template. I wanted a song that would lean much more to the pop and rock side and less to the more softer things.

Could you tell us more about your debut album Touch The Ground?

It's a pretty mellow album in terms of there aren't too many heavy songs on it. People who have listened to it have told me that they think it's very mellow, relaxing, something to listen to on a day at the beach or something. But, really, it's different for everybody who experiences it, so I don't really know how to describe it.

Could you sum up that album in one sentence?

I called it 'Touch The Ground' because the place that I was in at the time was just the place of coming to terms with growing up and understanding the world as an adult and what life would be like and so, honestly, to me, it's just about being young.

Is there a track off that album you're most excited for people to be hearing?

Yes! I'm very excited for people to hear the song "Cry Another Day". There's something very special about it.

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

I hope that when people listen to my music that it gives them a, for lack of better words, a sort of a spiritual experience but one that's not difficult to engage with and is easy to process so that you can remember it.

Is there anything you want to add?

Just follow us [laughs], check out our video on YouTube.

Photo Credit: Phil Knott

Website              Facebook             Twitter             YouTube             SoundCloud             Instagram