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5+5: Old Sea Brigade

Jan 7, 2019

Artist: Old Sea Brigade
Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee
Latest album: Ode To A Friend
Personal nicknames (or rejected band names): Here’s an ongoing list of fictional band names. Iā€™m sure at some point some of these were rejected band names: Dog Park, Denim Egoā€™s, Definite Lefty, Almost Pasadena, Almost Passed Adena, Chad The Gardener, Spiders in Australia

Which artist has influenced you the most and how?

Iā€™d say Tom Waits. A friend of mine first introduced me to his music when I was 16, and having been a big Springsteen fan, I found a similarity between his and Waitsā€™ music. I came to find a lot of influence from Tom Waits, particularly by how he lets his songs speak for themselves. Heā€™s not afraid to change sounds and consequently allows his voice to present itself bare-naked to listeners. Thereā€™s such an intense degree of depth and emotion in his music that always draws me in.

Whatā€™s your favorite memory on stage?

Back in February 2016 I was on tour in the UK and Europe with Joseph. For the London date I had the privilege of opening up their sold-out show at Union Chapel. The venue is an old church that has such deep history as well as amazing acoustics. The date was particularly significant because exactly a year before I was traveling around the Midwest playing to basically no one. One night I had slept in my van and woke up thinking I was going to freeze to death in a Walmart parking lot. Going from that to playing a sold out London show in front of 900 people, exactly one year later, was definitely a memorable moment Iā€™ll never forget.

What other art forms inform your music?

I think in a lot of ways, dance has greatly informed my music. With that said, Iā€™m a horrible dancer, but my mom was a professional ballet dancer so I spent a lot of my youth hanging out in dance studios. Iā€™ve always been drawn to the connections between dance and music, especially for ballet. I love the unity between free flowing motions and musical rhythms, and how they seamlessly morph together to form an even greater artistic expression.

How often do you hide behind a character in a song?

Iā€™d say I generally try and avoid writing completely fictitious songs. If itā€™s a character-based song, I still draw on personal experiences. Sometimes itā€™s easier for me to come up with one central character that embodies multiple people in real scenarios.

Whatā€™s the toughest time youā€™ve had writing a song?

ā€œLove Brought Weightā€ was a tough one to finish. I wrote the main chorus hook years before I wrote the verses. When I initially wrote it I wasnā€™t releasing or performing my own music and couldnā€™t seem to figure out where the chorus should go. It was probably three years later that I wrote the verse to the song. I initially intended for the verses and chorus to be totally different songs until I couldnā€™t finish either. One afternoon I realized they were in the same key and they seemed to fit perfectly together. It was one of those moments where I realized, in just five minutes, I had solved a three-year puzzle.


Photo credit: Steven Mullan

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