WATCH: Jeremy Garrett, “I Am the River Wild”

Artist: Jeremy Garrett
Hometown: Loveland, Colorado
Song: “I Am the River Wild”
Album: River Wild
Release Date: March 25, 2022
Label: Organic Records

In Their Words: “‘I Am the River Wild’ is a song that supports a double meaning. It is actually about the spirit and the wildness of a raging river, but it’s also about personality. Perhaps that personality is mine as the songwriter, or maybe it translates to you that way as the listener when you hear the lyrics to the song. Like a free-spirited person, a river has calm waters, and rough waters… free waters and from time to time, raging waters. We made the video for this song in a pristine part of the southern Colorado wilderness, way up in the mountains, where life to rivers begins. The wolf and the moose bring an amazing feeling to the video and the story unfolds nicely in that setting. I hope you enjoy ‘I Am the River Wild.'” — Jeremy Garrett


Photo Credit: George Trent Grogan, Mountain Trout Photography

LISTEN: Madeline Hawthorne, “Riverbank” (Feat. Mimi Naja)

Artist: Madeline Hawthorne
Hometown: Bozeman, Montana
Song: “Riverbank” (featuring Mimi Naja)
Album: Boots
Release Date: October 1, 2021

In Their Words: “I wrote ‘Riverbank’ after my first overnight rafting trip down the Smith River in Montana. This was early on in the pandemic, May of 2020. I was in a dark place emotionally after having to cancel my tour and say goodbye to bandmates, who decided to move on from music to pursue other careers. This river trip brought me back to life and that’s when I decided to write my entire album, Boots. I hold a very special place in my heart for our rivers. They foster beautiful and healthy ecosystems that open your heart and your mind. Floating down a river allows us to witness a part of this earth untainted, serene and powerful. I am so grateful to have the opportunity to explore rivers in the West and I hope that this song brings listeners the feeling that I have when I’m in my happy place hanging out on the Yellowstone River or the beautiful Salmon River in Idaho. There’s just nothing like floating down the line with the one you love, cold beer in hand, warm sun on your skin and good tunes in the background — pure bliss.” — Madeline Hawthorne


Photo credit: Dan Bradner

Vikesh Kapoor, ‘Down by the River’

Like Bob Dylan to those roaring locomotives, the mythical river has long been a source of artistic inspiration, impacting everyone from classical musicians to modern rock stars: Less assuming than a powerful ocean but no less captivating, that wayward wind of water often tells a story of its own. The mystery of the river — so easy to take for granted, until it dries up or overflows — runs as deep and long as its path, always headed toward a greater force and never sedentary. A river can whisper one moment and rage the next, hiding truth and lies beneath its murky surface.

When folk musician Vikesh Kapoor wrote “Down by the River,” he wasn’t hopping steadily along the banks in the summer sun. Instead, he was stuck home in Pennsylvania, while a snowstorm lingered. “A river called the Susquehanna rushed through my town and I’d sit on its bank in the snow thinking about a Ukrainian girl I met there, by chance, the winter before,” Kapoor says. “A few nights later, waiting for the snow to melt, the image of her on the edge of the river became clear in my mind. I finished the song while the sun was still down, but never got to sing it for her in the morning.” Maybe, just maybe, she can hear it now.

Set to a delicate pluck of guitar and Kapoor’s voice floating like a gentle mist over the water, it’s a moment to appreciate the ephemeral nature of things: Just like love, which changes in an instant, the river is transforming as it’s being watched, ever shifting and creeping toward its eventual goal. On “Down by the River,” Kapoor acknowledges that movement — and understands that, as romance and time get washed down stream, there is nothing more valuable then a simple second of standing still.