Artist: Wayne Graham
Hometown: Whitesburg, Kentucky
Latest Album: Bastion
What’s the toughest time you ever had writing a song?
The enemy of creation, for me, is judgment. I often superimpose other peoplesā suspected judgments onto something Iām working on, before Iāve written anything down. The true work is in letting go of that fear. When I am in a good flow, I am like a child. I am totally swept up in imagining the possibilities and that ride feels like communion with something much bigger than myself. I hope that doesnāt sound grandiose, I am just left feeling very grateful.
What has been the best advice youāve received in your career so far?
Dave Prince ā or Laid Back Country Picker ā told me once that, āThe world is real big, and real cool.ā Trusting this to be true leaves a lot of room for pretty much everything to be OK. Not that there arenāt horrendous things happening everyday, but maybe most people are on the side of wanting things to be good and theyāre just doing the best they know how at any given point. Maybe itās naive, but itās definitely not cynical.
Genre is dead (long live genre!), but how would you describe the genres and styles your music inhabits?
Genres are great if weāre looking to make broad categories that point to a recognizable aspect of a piece of work, but they start to lose their meaning when they come with their own dogmas. In other words, a genre should be used to contextualize a work, not as a frame to create a work within. That being said, we donāt discriminate along genre lines in what we listen to and draw from. We also hope our music is infused with the best parts of what we listen to, so hopefully we end up in a place we couldnāt have planned to go.
How often do you hide behind a character in a song or use āyouā when it’s actually āmeā?
I think the songs that make the cut for us are the songs where weāre not hiding. But that doesnāt mean the āyouā or āIā is always used in a first person way. Oftentimes the āyouā in my songs is āmeā and the narrator is someone with a helpful perspective. Sometimes we put on characters to inhabit a lesser known part of ourselves that may have something cool to say, sometimes we just write whatās on our mind without needing it to mean anything.
If you didnāt work in music, what would you do instead?
Our mom retired a few years ago from teaching at a public school. Itās a job that has so much impact, and is so thankless, and I have so much respect for the people who do it for the right reasons. Our mom took the job very seriously, and so I saw what a struggle it could be at times, but it is really the only other job Iāve ever considered.
Photo Credit: Hunter Way, Impact Media