After she describes her multi-faceted identity, Americana and country soul singer/songwriter Crys Matthews laughs with a slight trace of self-deprecation, âIâm the poster child for intersectionality, right?!â She is.
While each and every day, on each and every media platform, weâre reminded of the division, alienation, marginalization, and divisiveness rampant in our country (and our world), weâre not often enough met with people like Matthews who exist as reminders of what beauty can occur when we bridge those divides.
A native of the South and the daughter of a preacher, this Americana-creating, Black lesbian — who is in an interracial marriage — understands and appreciates the myriad ways her background informs her ability to help others empathize with those with whom they might assume they have nothing in common. With her recent full-length album, The Imagineers, and her compassionate, politically charged EP, she is recruiting an âArmy of Lovers,â despite all of the divides — real or perceived — that come between us, driving out hate not with hate, but with love.
Country or Americana or roots music fans might not expect someone described like you to fit into this music. How did you come into roots music? Whatâs your background in it?
I was born and raised in North Carolina — I live in Virginia now — and I went to college at Appalachian State University in Boone, North Carolina, which is a bluegrass Mecca. I never set out to really create [within] any specific genre of music or anything like that. My songwriting process, itâs very organic. The songs just come out how they come out. Living in Boone all that time, I just fell in love with the Blue Ridge and with all of that. I guess osmosis is what you would say — it just fused its way into my music and into my songwriting style. It seems like every year it just gets country-er and country-er, which is hilarious to me. [Laughs] Listening back through the newest album I was like, âOh, my God, my grandpa would be so proud!â
Did your grandpa get you into country music?
Oh yeah, weâre so Southern. Like I said, born and raised in North Carolina, but in the southeastern part of North Carolina. It is so country over there. [Laughs] I grew up watching The Dukes of Hazzard and other stuff that you wouldnât necessarily expect. I guess it feels foreign to people when they think about, okay, âA Black lesbian isnât going to be watching Dukes of Hazzard with her grandpa.â But, if you grew up in southeastern North Carolina, Iâm pretty sure almost everyone watched The Dukes of Hazzard no matter what, no matter who you were. Iâve never lived my life trying to fit into any specific thing. I just am who I am, and the things that Iâm into are just the things Iâm into. The things I think about, think are beautiful, and love in the world center so heavily around my home state.
The title track of your EP, Battle Hymn for an Army of Lovers, is an upbeat, hopeful number. Itâs looking to the future and outward-facing, but itâs also very realistic and grounded. Itâs not denying the realities of this moment in time. Why did you strike that balance?
I always try to be like that in life. I feel like every big moment that has ever happened in this country has happened, at the root of it, because of love. And because of somebody loving somebody else and/or not being okay with the person that they love not having fair treatment, in some regard.
My worldview is that love is always the thing that moves us forward. It always is and it probably always will be. Itâs super important to me. As frustrating and hard as this moment is for me, obviously, as a triple-minority, it is terrifying for me living in this time, I trust and believe so deeply that love will move us forward. It was very important for me to use that song and use that message for rallying the army of lovers, mobilizing the army of lovers, and believing wholeheartedly in trying to live that notion of Dr. Kingâs, that hate cannot drive out hate, only love can do that.
I appreciate in your music that youâre including specific calls to action. In your song âParis Is Burning,â you sing, âDark days call for more than profile picture overlays,â and that line resonates so much with me because weâre in a time when just showing up doesnât really count for much anymore. You arenât letting listeners and fans feel like just putting on your EP is taking action.
Again, growing up in the South, the history of activism, what it means, and how important it is is not lost on me. Being a singer/songwriter, having a platform, and with people actually listening to what I have to say, it would be so hypocritical to not use that platform, in some regard, to actually have a call to action, to let people know whatâs happening in the world beyond their possibly limited view, let them know things that they can do to help. And people who arenât them, who may not have whatever privilege they may have, need them to help. It was super important to have the mindset of the soundtrack of the resistance.
I went into it hoping that it would come out in a way that would motivate people, and inspire people, and make them do something. Itâs so hard feeling so powerless, and I think so many of us are so frustrated right now, because we feel powerless, but weâre not. Itâs important to remember that. I hope that these songs remind people that there are things that we can do. We cannot be complacent. We have to act.
As a triple-minority, like you said before, you donât exactly have the luxury or privilege of choosing how much or how little of your identity is visible through your art, but I wonder if you think about how much you present in your songs, or if you just let that happen organically, as well?
It depends on certain songs. I have this song from my album, Come What May, called âYou Remind Me,â that [was inspired by] the Lovings of Virginia [of the U.S. Supreme Court case on interracial marriage, Loving v. Virginia] and Edith Windsor and Thea Spyer [of the case United States v. Windsor on same-sex marriage]. Itâs about how we keep having to learn the same lesson in this country about love, and how we canât seem to let people love who they want to love. Itâs a parallel of those two things and, of course, my wife and I decided we wanted to piss everybody off and be an interracial, lesbian couple. [Laughs]
The love songs, for me, I feel like those things are just so universal. Only people who donât realize how universal they are think that theyâre different and weird. People are like, âOh my God! Gay marriage!â And I think, âIf you could just see us sitting on the couch with our cats and dogs and bunny, being like, âAre we going to watch TV? What are we doing?ââ Itâs so boring! [Laughs] Itâs just what everyone else is doing on their couch at the end of a work day. Itâs crazy that we even have any kind of distinction between the two, because it is literally so boring.
Me, personally, Iâve been married for four years. In general, weâre just as mundane as every other person whoâs been married for four years. In the love songs, I donât try to make an effort to make them any more ânormalâ or any more heteronormative. Thatâs just the reality of it. I think that people would be better served to actually realize and know that. Itâs always fun for me, when I write a song thatâs about my life, and somebodyâs like, âI feel the exact same way about my husband!â or âI feel the exact same way about my wife!â Because inside Iâm like, âYes. Thatâs the point.â
Thatâs what it means to be human.
Exactly. The best line I think Jason Mraz ever wrote was in regard to humanity. He says, âOur name is our virtue.â Thatâs so much it. If we could just be more human, thatâs all we ever need to do.
How do you think we can bridge the gap that divides all of us right now? Do you think itâs just playing these songs and letting it filter in for people?
I do. I really do. The hard thing for us to do is engage one another. Itâs a scary thing — rejection is a scary thing, being the butt of somebodyâs anger is a very scary thing — but we have to engage each other. I sing the songs that are a little more difficult in places where itâs not necessarily the most advisable thing for me to do. Ultimately, if I donât make those people think, if I canât make them feel something or think something, theyâre not going to do it on their own, because theyâre only going to be hanging out with the same type of people. I feel like we have a responsibility to put ourselves in those uncomfortable situations for the good of the whole. We have to do it.
Itâs very difficult traversing this world with a limited worldview. Itâs so easy, for so many of us, to just be comfortable. If youâre a 30-year-old white guy, with all of your 30-year-old white guy friends, itâs not that youâre a bad person; itâs not that you donât care about anyone elseâs issues or their daily life. Itâs just not your reality because itâs not something you see every day. Worldviews are so different. Simple things can help people think, but itâs so much easier to be comfortable. Whereas, with me, I donât really have a choice. Iâm always in various multi-cultural situations. If more of us did that, it would just be second nature to realize what somebody elseâs walk through life looks like because you arenât just having to imagine it; youâre literally standing there watching it.
Photo credit: Sarah Stuart