Artist:Melody Guy Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee Song: “Dry the Rivers” Album:Dry the Rivers Release Date: January 25, 2019
In Their Words: “In my first apartment in Nashville, I went through a very depressing time in my life and had never lived anywhere with cockroaches. Eek! I woke up in the morning and stared out into the grey cold hallway. I couldn’t have been lower. The first line is ‘I’ve got monsters creepin’ in, I hear voices speaking sin.’ The monsters were emotional as well as the physical ones, the dark thoughts of: ‘How did I get there? There’s no way out.’ I decided that day I was not going down like this. I will be happy, I will continue, I will not let this winter emotion or season destroy me. My daughter Delaney Smith is singing harmony on this song as well, and when her harmonies come in, my heart starts to glow with happiness.” — Melody Guy
Artist:Adam Klein Hometown: Atlanta via Athens, Georgia Song: “Low Flyin’ Planes” Album:Low Flyin’ Planes Release Date: March 1, 2019 Label: Cowboy Angel Music
In Their Words: “This is the title track and centerpiece of the record, and the most sparse song in terms of instrumentation. To me, it cuts to the core of what this album is about. The expression of someone still searching, on a journey toward a sense of fulfillment. The narrator is barely lifting off, nearly scraping the ground, one misstep away from some kind of rock bottom. Then again, maybe they will rise — who knows? It may be a song about passivity, not exercising agency in one’s own life, and enduring what can be called the poverty of vulnerability. For those to whom these notions resonate, may we practice peace, acceptance, and compassion, not only to others, but also to ourselves.” — Adam Klein
In Their Words: “This is a song I wrote while trying to get my infant daughter back to sleep. It’s a promise to the one person in my life that I hadn’t broken a promise to. It’s aspirational but honest. It’s for her. It’s one of the first songs I recorded with Western Youth and the last song on the album.” — Graham Weber
Capturing your band’s live sound in the studio is right up there with writer’s block as one of the most common challenges you can face as an artist—particularly if, like The Devil Makes Three, your live shows are your bread and butter.
The California trio, whose high-energy tours and festival appearances attract a fiercely dedicated fan base, have already released a couple live albums. But as they were writing Chains Are Broken, Pete Bernhard, Lucia Turino and Cooper McBean made a conscious effort to further capture their live instrumentation in the studio by inviting their touring drummer, Stefan Amidon, to record with them.
“We recorded with a [session] drummer who we really liked on our last album, Stranger, and it was just fun,” Bernhard says. “It gave us a lot more, I dunno, freedom I guess. There’s a certain freedom in playing as a string band too, but it was a different kind of freedom. But yeah, we’ve been playing with [Stefan] for years. Sometimes people see us play and they’re really shocked that we have a drummer, but that usually means that they haven’t seen us in like three or four years.” He laughs. “So we wrote a lot of the songs including drums, so when we went into the studio, it seemed like the natural progression to have him play.”
However, that doesn’t mean drums are a permanent addition to the band’s setup.
“I don’t like to predict the future,” he says. “I think that maybe we’ll use him if we think the song is appropriate, and if we write a song that’s just like a guitar and a bass, then we’ll do that. The main thing I like to do is just approach it like there really aren’t any rules, you know? And if the song wants drums and it wants a bass clarinet, then that’s what we’re gonna do. And if it doesn’t want that, if it wants like an electric guitar and standup bass and vocals and nothing else, then that’s what we’ll do.
“We still play without a drummer sometimes, it just really depends on the gig. But for us it was really exciting to do it and just try it because we hadn’t done it before. But yeah, for the next record, maybe we won’t. Maybe we’ll use drums on some songs like we did on Stranger and not on others; maybe we won’t use them at all. I think it really depends on what we’re excited about writing. There are no hard and fast rules.”
That lack of rules when it comes to their recording process led them to venture out to Texas for a new sort of studio experience as well, working on Chains Are Broken at the Sonic Ranch, the largest residential recording studio complex in the world.
“I’d never been to a recording studio like that before,” Bernhard says. “I’d never done like a live-in sort of studio. It was really cool. It was a very strange experience. You live at the studio, and there’s a lot of other people recording there too, so it’s kind of like—I don’t know, I don’t know how to describe it. It’s like band camp or something. Because while we were there, there’s like a jazz artist next door who’s recording, and there’s a rock group, and then there was Tito & Tarantula, which is a little more on the punk side of things, and it was really cool and very, very different. We’re used to sort of going into a city and recording in a studio and kind of spending a lot of time someplace in the middle of everything, and this could not be further away from that.”
He adds, “It was incredibly isolated. It was down by the Mexican border. It was really, really pretty and really quiet and really peaceful, and we just focused on playing every day for a couple of weeks and before we recorded the record, we sort of hung out and played the songs and talked about how we wanted to change them, things we liked, things we didn’t, and it was like we got so much more space and time to work on the record than we ever have before. It was really cool. It’s kind of creepy out there though…It’s the desert, you know? And I think that kind of influenced the sound of the record too. Just sort of the environment is very kind of empty and really pretty but also a little bit lonely.”
You can hear that influence on tracks like “Can’t Stop,” a deceptively upbeat song with dark lyrics that only reveal themselves if you’re listening closely. Bernhard says it’s about the pitfalls of being an artist.
“I think mainly for me it’s just a song about being an artist of any sort—a musician or a visual artist—and what I think is sometimes necessary to be an artist. When I wrote the song I was thinking a lot about how a lot of artists kind of finish their lives in a terrible way, you know?” he says. “Like someone like Hemingway, he was given electroshock therapy and he basically drank himself to death, and somebody like Townes Van Zandt also met with a sad end. I was reading James Baldwin and he was talking about how being an artist is one of those things where instead of you choosing to do it, it’s one of those things where you can’t help doing it. You have to do it. And you don’t have a choice whether you do it or not, and you do whatever’s necessary in order to make that happen.”
He continues, “And sometimes that’s kind of not that great. But people who are artists and feel they have a vision that they want to see happen and that they’re driven to are willing to do that. And I think that was the inspiration for the song, you know, really not being able to stop. You might want to, but you can’t. And I think that’s sort of a part of the life of being an artist or a creative person in any way, and it is kind of dark sometimes. I think it’s a really great thing and it’s a wonderful gift to be given, but at the same time, yeah, it can be kind of a dark thing. And just that feeling of not being completely in control, I think that that’s part of being an artist of any kind. You kind of give yourself over to that, and it takes you wherever it’s gonna take you, and sometimes where it takes you isn’t that great, but that’s part of the ride.”
Sonically, Chains Are Broken is a heavier record as well—a natural progression stemming from the band’s live show.
“I think it actually sort of unfolded in the live show over the years, playing with a drummer, and everybody in the band is really into heavier music,” Bernhard explains. “It’s pretty funny, actually, if you like go around the room and ask the band what kind of music everybody’s listening to right now, the answers you get back are really hilarious for the kind of music that we play. We all started out in the punk scene, and as we’ve gotten older, I think Cooper especially got really into sort of slow metal and a lot of experimental music, like drone music.
“So yeah, we definitely made the album heavier just out of our music getting heavier over the years onstage. I think it’s just kind of happened naturally. And it’s also so fun to play like that. I think we’ve always tried to emulate that, even when we were just three people playing acoustic instruments. We always tried to play as fast and hard as we possibly could, so it’s sort of a continuation of that.”
But like their live show, no Devil Makes Three record is immune from being tweaked with and evolving, and Bernhard says the group is eager to see how Chains Are Broken shifts as they take it on tour.
“I think the thing that happens for us, you know, we write a record, we’re excited about it, we go out on the road, and then a lot of times we change it.” He laughs. “We change how we play the songs. We like to do them in a different way, we might change the tempos of them, it’s like things evolve and we find a certain way that we really like to perform stuff. I mean, I think that’s part of why you want to see a band live, too. Just sort of to see the different songs and see how things evolve.”
Artist:Paul Bergmann Hometown: Leeds, Massachusetts Song: “Death of Me” Release Date: August 3, 2018
In Their Words: “I wrote this song a couple years ago. Why I forgot about it I don’t know, but maybe it didn’t make sense to me. It resurfaced in my mind recently and hit me like a ton of bricks. I think the words and their weight matured over time. I’m just trying to be on speaking terms with death. I think it’s important.” — Paul Bergmann
Artist: Clay Parker and Jodi James Hometown: Baton Rouge, Louisiana Song: “Every New Sky” Album:The Lonesomest Sound That Can Sound Release Date: July 20, 2018
In Their Words: “We wrote ‘Every New Sky’ pretty early on in our first year performing as a duo — when we were first developing a sound together that we liked. It’s a true-to-form duet tune. Sort of an anti-sentiment sentimental song that concludes with the phrase, ‘You’ll agree that it’s so lonely being alone.'”
Artist:Juliana Daugherty Hometown: Charlottesville, VA Song: “Easier” Album:Light Release Date: June 1, 2018 Label: Western Vinyl
In Their Words: “I don’t think anyone would describe me as a bleak person, but I do feel like my capacity for sadness — depression, sometimes, and sometimes just garden-variety melancholy — has always been somewhat overgrown. I find my various sadnesses to be infinitely interesting when I’m writing, and deeply boring and unhelpful at almost all other times. To write a song is to externalize a feeling, so that I don’t have to carry it around in my daily life. ‘Easier’ also has the benefit of catharsis: Singing the last section feels a little like howling at the moon.” — Juliana Daugherty
Artist:Megan Keely Hometown: San Francisco, CA Song: “Love Will Find You” Album:Bloom Release Date: May 25, 2018
In Her Words: “‘Love Will Find You’ was the first song I wrote off the Bloom song cycle. It was a rainy day in August 2016 and I was on my way home from a magical seaside wedding on the Oregon coast. I was alone in the airport cafe, scribbling in my notebook, basking in the beautiful afterglow and digesting something that the bride’s parents had said to me on my way out. They had asked me for updates on my love life, and with no good news to share, I muttered, “I’ll find love some day.” They looked me in the eye and said, “No, Megan, love will find you.” The next day, the song spilled out of me in an unconscious effort to remind myself once and for all that the aloneness I felt was part of a long and crucial process that I needed in order to grow into the person I would become. Flying solo to a wedding was the very step I needed in order to rediscover and strengthen the needle of my own emotional and moral compass — the internal guide that would eventually lead me to the true, open-hearted, laughter-filled love I wanted.” – Megan Keely
Artist:Kady Z Hometown: New York, NY Song: “I Curse the Day” Album:Daddy Issues Release Date: February 2018 Label: Fraknwitch Records
In Their Words: “My dad once told me, as a child, ‘Don’t hate.’ But he never said I wasn’t allowed to curse the day someone was born. And never could have imagined that when I did, I would be cursing him.” — Kady Z
Artist: Letitia VanSant Hometown: Baltimore, MD Song: “I Know Just Where I’m Bound” Album:Gut It to the Studs Release Date: February 2, 2018
In Their Words: “When we think of the leaders of the past who helped bring more justice to the world, we tend to think of them as sure-footed, confident visionaries. But hindsight is 20/20 and, in the moment, many of them felt a great deal of doubt about what to do and whether it would work.
For instance, John Woolman, an early abolitionist who asked people to free those they had enslaved, was doing something so against the grain of the way the economy worked at the time that he couldn’t really see the way forward. If any of us want to change the way things work, we’ll have to contend with that uncertainty and proceed with faith in the face of the obstacles we’ll inevitably encounter.” — Letitia VanSant
Photo credit: Shervin Lainez
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