nathaniel bellows premieres “to wait”, talks swan and wolf and creative start

nathaniel bellows premieres “to wait”, talks swan and wolf and creative start

We’ve been inundated with a little too much fluff lately. And, while we’re all about being happy and upbeat and feeling free, sometimes you need to slow it down and enjoy a good song for what it is: emotional, dark, intense, and equally as freeing. This is the feeling you get from the first chords of Nathaniel Bellows‘ new track “To Wait”,  which finds its exclusive streaming premiere right here, right now. As the song progresses, a dark and beautiful love affair brims within its lines for those who happen upon it.

If nothing else, this track reminds you that patience – even when you’re waiting for dissonance in instrumentals and the next line of a brand new song – is a damn virtue.

We caught up with Nathaniel himself briefly before the release of this new track to talk shop. Check out our words below!

How is your new LP, Swan and Wolf, different from your previous album?

With Swan and Wolf, I left the city and went up to Maine to record all the vocals and guitar tracks by myself. Being in that secluded environment, I was able to spend more time organizing, layering, and experimenting with how the background vocals interacted with the main vocal, which ultimately—hopefully—gives the songs greater emotional texture and depth. Another main difference is that, with Swan and Wolf, I worked closely with a mixer, Brian Losch, who really understood the mood and tone I was looking for, and which resulted in a more cohesive, consistent overall sound.

While The Old Illusions featured two of my drawings as part of the CD booklet, Swan and Wolf incorporates more of my visual art: I created ten illustrations that correspond to each of the ten songs on the record, which are available to view on the album’s website, and in a limited edition hardcover book that I produced as a companion to the music.

How would you describe the sound of Swan and Wolf?

As with The Old Illusions, I was looking for a very direct, spare, open-room sound, but this time, with a more polished, professional sheen. There aren’t that many elements in these songs, but I was eager to have each component sit within the mix in an organic, but ordered way. Overall, I wanted the sound to be clean and immediate, with a slight tinge of rawness, and the distinct presence of human imperfection.

Where do you find the inspiration to write?

I grew up in rural environments, so I’ve always been very inspired by the natural world. I live in New York City now and have written most of my music here, so maybe there’s something to the urban landscape that particularly inspires this work—perhaps the pervasive, invisible rhythms of the city? I’m not sure, but it’s definitely given me a lot to write/sing about (much to the dismay of my neighbors, I think!).

You are a poet, a novelist, a visual artist, and a musician. What got you into doing music?

Playing and studying music has always run alongside the other disciplines that I work in. I took piano lessons for 11 years when I was young, and I picked up the guitar when I went to college. I started writing songs around the time I finished college and went to graduate school as a way to explore a different approach to poetry, which I was mainly writing at the time. Ever since then, songwriting has slotted in among my other artistic pursuits in a pretty seamless and satisfying way.

How do you differentiate yourself from your music and your writing?

There is a definite overlap in my music and my writing. But with the songs, I tend to include more vernacular language than I would in a poem—the rhyming is more forceful and structured, and there’s a more deliberate symmetry in a song’s verses and choruses, which are choices I don’t employ so overtly in my poetry. Sometimes I use quotations in the songs in a way I might when writing fiction, but the songs tend to be blurry, abstract meditations on emotion, memories, events or images, so I don’t feel any need to crystalize these spoken scraps into something more narratively realized, the way I do when writing a short story or a novel. In all my work, I aim for clarity, specificity, and vividness, but with songwriting, I like to explore the tension between exactitude and ambiguity.

What was the inspiration behind your first single, “Keep in Mind”?

It takes me a long time to write songs, because they evolve as a slow accrual of ideas, generated in fits and starts, over months and sometimes years. I’m also unable to write lyrics in the absence of the guitar—the lyrics and music tend to evolve in tandem. I practice a lot and record drafts of the songs on my phone, and walk around listening to them to try to figure out what the music is attempting to evoke and express. It can take a while. Given all of this, it’s a little hard to pinpoint what the inspiration is for any one song, except that they usually begin with a central image or phrase, around which the song slowly congeals. In the case of “Keep in Mind,” I think it was the image of the seabirds mentioned in the second verse—the idea that they have an innate sense of where they are headed, how they are meant to live, all in their own mysterious and unknowable ways.

What is next for your career?

I am looking forward to playing these songs live in the upcoming months, after the release. I have also been working on a new novel—a contemporary ghost story set on a small island off the coast of Maine—and I’m in the process of finishing my second collection of poetry.

I frequently collaborate with the composer Sarah Kirkland Snider—our first record, Unremembered, a song cycle for 7 voices, chamber orchestra, and electronics, based on 13 of my poems and illustrations—came out in 2015. We are now working on a Mass for Trinity Wall Street, about endangered animals and the environment, which premieres this spring, and we’ve also begun work on an opera.

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Keep up with Nathaniel here!

pronoun, “run”

pronoun, “run”

pronoun just released her new track “Run”, which brings back all the nostalgia on “Run” with a 90’s pop feel. The track is tipping with angst and for reason as she describes the track as “A ball of frustration. It’s about someone you loved taking the easy way out and running away from the entire life you built together because times temporarily got tough.”   

Look out for pronoun at SXSW and keep up here.

katie ekin’s “little moon” is a little slice of heaven

katie ekin’s “little moon” is a little slice of heaven

Santa Cruz, CA native Katie Ekin just released her new single “Little Moon”.The song almost feels outer worldly and is definitely worth the listen. Lines like “You breathe softly in my hair…”, I wouldn’t have it any other way”, and my favorite “you got your own little moon where you go, I go too” makes for a warm and comforting track. You’ll want to share it with a special someone or just blast it in a long car ride. 

Keep up with Katie at katieekin.com.

kiddo, “trouble”

kiddo, “trouble”

Swedish artist KIDDO just released her debut single, “TROUBLE,” her first project of 2018. Previously referred to as “one of Sweden’s most exciting and creative songwriters,” KIDDO has written songs for Icona Pop, Dagny, Alan Walker, and more.

Her new single, “TROUBLE,” is an ethereal indie track that boasts KIDDO’s raw yet powerfully unique vocals blended with a futuristic, synth instrumental.

KIDDO describes “Trouble” as a song about escaping reality. “It’s about a time when I knew I had lost everything but it was too painful to face it so I tried to ignore the truth for a little longer in every possible way,” she states. The intimate lyrics pop against the simple, mellow instrumental.  Lyrics like “leave trouble behind” and “take the trouble off my heart” let listeners on an escape adventure as KIDDO sings about letting go of responsibility and relying on love in a time of uncertainty.

KIDDO’s distinctively haunting vocals layered with the light, atmospheric instrumental provides the perfect background to any occasion. “TROUBLE” is a summer playlist necessity.

Keep up with KIDDO here.

molly moore, “tough love”

molly moore, “tough love”

Los Angeles-based singer-songwriter Molly Moore has just released “Tough Love”, the first single off her upcoming EP, Third Eye High. Moore has worked both as a part of the duo Cosmos & Creature as well as solo, as well as penning songs for other artists, including Lea Michele. “Tough Love”, created as part of her solo project, clearly displays her individuality and unique sound. Filled with tight beats and synthy backing vocals, “Tough Love” packs multidimensional aspects within a few minutes. Anyone who’s ever felt that no outsiders understood their relationship will resonate with this song; it’s the ultimate significant-other-or- nothing type of song.  

Says Moore of her songs, “Dealing with human emotions isn’t always easy but I do think that we innately want to help each other. I want my music to leave people with hope amidst the ‘reality’ we are faced with.” Throughout “Tough Love”, Moore’s dedication to expressing difficult emotions authentically is evident.

Molly Moore will be dropping her brand new EP, Third Eye High, on May 11th. Until then, check out “Tough Love” for a taste of what is to come.

KEEP UP WITH MOLLY MOORE |
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kiki halliday, “kiss me”

kiki halliday, “kiss me”

Unique and fresh are just two attributes that Kiki Halliday brings to the table when it comes to her new and upbeat track, “Kiss Me.” This new blossoming artist is currently based in the Nashville, but her love for music is deeply rooted in her hometown Los Angeles. Not only does Halliday have a defined and fully developed sound that is impressive for such a young budding artist, but she also has a clear direction of where she wants to go as she progresses in her career. Her music thrives on luscious melodies and bluesy beats that have touched the hearts of her fans throughout the country. She also showcases light heartfelt lyrics that tie her tracks up with a bow.

Recently, she released, “Kiss Me” as a tribute to a love that she lost as she moved across the country this past year to pursue her potential in music. In her own words she explains, “Writing this song made me feel like I had almost grasped love, that I would have it someday.” The acoustic vibes of this song encompass the heartache that comes only when a person has to choose between two loves. With this new track out for the world wide streaming web to love, Halliday continues to work hard to reach new heights and lifelong dreams.

Keep up with Kiki here.

matthew de ver, “the gift & the wound”

matthew de ver, “the gift & the wound”

Hailing from Madison, Wisconsin, Matthew De Ver has dropped his debut single, “The Gift & the Wound”. It is evident that talent runs in his family; Matthew is the son of poet and author Shel Silverstein. As is shown through his music, Matthew utilizes song to express a variety of emotions through layered symbolism and mellow tunes. “The Gift & the Wound” will appear on Matthew’s upcoming album, Surface Tension (A Tincture for Integrating Shadow). If the title of his forthcoming record is any indication, Matthew puts meticulous detail into the creation of his music, especially this album, which encapsulates the years of his life surrounding the passing of his father, specifically, his teenage years. “The Gift & the Wound” is a culmination of the artistry that has resulted from this time. Anyone who has an appreciation for attention to detail will take a lot from this track.

Matthew has also released a slightly trippy and highly symbolic music video for “The Gift & the Wound”.

Keep up with Matthew De Ver:
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stay inside, the sea engulfs us and the light goes out

stay inside, the sea engulfs us and the light goes out

Poetic realism is the bread and butter to Brooklyn based band Stay Inside. With their words and artistry, they are able to speak of real issues not only discussed on the television, but also experienced first hand by the musicians themselves. Vocalist and guitar player Bartees Cox Jr. recounted an experience that he had on night as he was walking the streets back to his home:

A cop ran up on me one night when I was walking home – he thought I was somebody else. Things got heated and I couldn’t de-escalate the situation – we were totally alone and I thought I was going to die. I’m black, so when I’m out alone at night, I try to stay extra aware so I can avoid stuff like this, but this song is about how sometimes there’s not a lot you can do and how it’s terrifying. By the end, I’m begging for an apology – and moreso for people to acknowledge that the lasting impact of slavery and oppression is why these power dynamics exist.

Throughout the EP,  nuances of subject aforementioned by Cox adorn the lyrics of their tracks. It is refreshing to have such artistry hit the stages that speak up for the minorities and do not allow for social norms to obstruct the difference between equality and injustice.

Keep up with Stay Inside here.

nuela charles, “do it right”

nuela charles, “do it right”

Nuela Charles has been making strides in the music industry since her debut album Aware. The JUNO Awards-nominated soul singer-songwriter has released a new single titled “Do It Right”, which is an upbeat tune with a little bit of spice to it. The song starts off snappy with just the right amount of attitude.

“Do it Right” is catchy and has just the right amount of energy to get you up and dancing. The song sums up itself: if you’re going to do it, do it right and come correct at me.

Keep up with Nuela Charles here.