BGS 5+5: Abby Litman

Artist: Abby Litman
Hometown: Bethesda, Maryland
Latest Album: Still on My Mind EP

Which artist has influenced you the most … and how?

The one artist who has influenced me the most is Joni Mitchell. I first discovered Joni when I was in high school, and she became one of the reasons I wanted to pursue music. Listening to her, I was floored. Her lyrics were so relatable yet incredibly smart and observational, grounded in nature and full of poeticism. I spent hours and hours listening to all of her songs, dissecting them, taking them apart and putting them back together. Her albums made up my syllabus in songwriting. I read every biography and article about her I could get my hands on. Now, whenever I feel stuck with my own writing, I often go back to her songs and am quickly reminded why I wanted to be a musician in the first place.

What other art forms — literature, film, dance, painting, etc — inform your music?

I love reading poetry. My favorite poet is Edna St. Vincent Millay. I discovered a collection of her books on the shelves of my great-grandparents’ house in Maine. I was immediately taken in by her writing: blunt, sparse, yet layered with meaning and metaphor. Similar to my relationship to Joni Mitchell’s music, reading St. Vincent Millay’s poetry felt like finding someone who saw the world as I do. I also find inspiration in Sylvia Plath’s poetry and Shel Silverstein.

What’s the toughest time you ever had writing a song?

Sometimes, I struggle with finishing a song. Often, a song comes out all in one piece, almost seamlessly, but other times it can take weeks, sometimes years for a song to feel “finished.” Learning to enjoy the revising process has been helpful, but I sometimes feel like the constant revision takes away from the song’s authenticity, its initial spark. When I was writing my song “Alright,” I went through dozens of verses, melodies, and guitar parts. And the more I messed with the song, the less connected I felt to it. I was getting further from what the song was initially trying to say. It wasn’t until my producer Tyler Chester and I put some of the disparate parts I had written together, that I felt like the song finally revealed itself. Collaborating with Tyler has been one of the best experiences of my songwriting career.

What has been the best advice you’ve received in your career so far?

It sounds obvious, and maybe a bit trite, but the best advice I’ve ever been given is to “write good songs.” When I find myself comparing my music to other artists’, worrying about whether I’ll ever be successful, or feeling jaded by the music industry, I go back to that advice. I go back to writing songs because that’s really the only thing I can do. As long as I focus on my craft and keep making art that I am proud of, things will fall into place. I know that as long as I continue writing songs and making music, I’ll be happy pursuing the thing I love.

Which elements of nature do you spend the most time with and how do those impact your work?

I currently live in Los Angeles and my go-to spot for nature is the beach. My favorite thing to do is grab a towel, sit on the sand and stare out into the ocean. There’s something about the vastness and wildness of the ocean that helps to clear my head. It’s actually a place where I’ve gotten dozens of lyrics and guitar parts. One of my favorite times to go to the beach, perhaps paradoxically, is when it’s cold and cloudy. I love the salty wind, the crashing waves. It makes me feel small and renewed, but most of all, it opens up my mind to accept inspiration that I otherwise wouldn’t find in a city.


Photo Credit: Tammie Valer

Spotlight: Badly Drawn Authors

Illustrator Sean Ryan is best known for his popular Instagram account Badly Drawn Models, which boasts nearly 80,000 followers and features black and white caricature-esque portaits of everyone from Kendall Jenner to designer Raf Simons. What Ryan's followers may not know, however, is that the illustrator is at the helm of his own Badly Drawn empire, one that also interprets portraits of authors, musicians, rappers, and other public figures. 

Based in Liverpool, Ryan was called out by Dazed as "fashion's favourite illustrator." A self-described "artist, slacker, and pizza fan," Ryan has been profiled by everyone from Elle to the Guardian for work that ranges from fashion's elite to the finest footballers. We, however, took particular interest in his Badly Drawn Authors series… admittedly a less popular collection thanks to its lack of any Kardashian-Jenners. 

"A few years ago, I was visiting my parents' house and my mum had a pile of my old things that she wanted to throw out," Ryan tells the BGS. "Most of it was junk, but I found an old football sticker book, which I kept. I don't really know why, but I started to draw the footballers within it, spending about 30 seconds on each one. I uploaded a few to Facebook and, to my shock, people seemed to like them, so I turned it into a project called 'Badly Drawn Footballers.'

I'm pretty unoriginal with my ideas, so I started thinking about other groups of people who would make interesting 'badly drawn' subjects. A few days later I was reading something about William H. Gass and thought his face would be great to draw. Thus, badly drawn authors was born!"

Ryan takes iconic photos of literary giants and distills them to black and white line drawings that, while perhaps not offering the most flattering image of each author in question, are still somehow instantly recognizable. We've rounded up a handful of our favorite author portraits, all of which are available in his Badly Drawn Authors Etsy shop. Be sure to check out the rest of his work, too, and feel free to send me this Badly Drawn portrait of Mariah Carey, if you're really feeling the holiday spirit. 

Nobel Prize winner and all-around badass Alice Munro

Papa Hemingway himself

Everyone's (least) favorite batshit faux-losopher — Ayn Rand 

James Joyce, Patron Saint of "Oh Yeah, I Totally Read It All…"

Poet and fiction writer Sylvia Plath

BONUS: Ryan graciously drew the Lonesome Trio, the bluegrass project of our own Ed Helms, just for the BGS. We're feeling pretty special.