Posts Tagged ‘Echo Mountain’

2015 NewSong Music Finalist: Megan Wilde

Wednesday, December 30th, 2015

MEGAN WILDE (SEATTLE, WA)

*2015 Early Bird Finalist

This series of features highlights the 2015 NewSong Music finalists. Each artist is invited to Lincoln Center on January 7th for the opportunity to win the #NSM Grand Prize. We sat down with each finalist to learn more about their music and background. Hope you enjoy!

BIO
Within month’s of the release of her soulful fiery debut, ‘Wildfire’ – Megan Wilde was chosen as winner of an LA Music Critic Award, a string of international songwriting contests, a few coveted Tv/Film Music Licensing Deals, a National college radio promotion deal, and she’s received glowing national and international press for her bold, sultry, and heartfelt singing. With a scorching voice that knows no boundaries, a fiery on stage presence, and a robust and bodacious soul for crafting music – Megan Wilde’s music has been compared to the likes of Aretha Franklin, The Black Keys, Beyonce, Adele and The White Stripes. While Seattle Music Insider has declared Megan Wilde a “soul powerhouse” and the Examiner exclaimed, ‘”Wilde could very well become a musical force with which to be reckoned” – Who is the woman behind the music?

Megan B. Wilde was a school yard nickname given to her for her talent for climbing trees, getting in fights with boys, and running around covered in dirt with wild untamed lioness hair. You could say she’s always been a bit rough around the edges. Growing up in a small town outside of Chicago never suited her style, and at 15 she found her ticket out. She was accepted into one of the world’s finest performing arts schools – Interlochen Academy of The Fine Arts. Day in and day out she studied music and art from the masters. Her teachers quickly learned that while she was talented – ball gowns, opera, and being neat as a button was not her thang. Once you’ve been seduced by the brash, rusty, soulful voices – there is no turning back.

Look out for Megans debut EP release -Wildfire- on May 19th, 2015. When recording Wildfire at one of Seattle’s top studios, London Bridge, the artist brought in mastering wizard – Howie Wineberg. Howie is a 4 time Grammy nominee with an estimated quarter of a billion records sold. Producing, composing and arranging the material on the record (with the exception of “Spoonful”), Wilde also takes the helm on Wurlitzer, piano, and of course, the powerhouse vocals. Wildfire combines elements of indie-rock, blues, soul and R & B. Her debut album has been showered with early praise from critics around the nation and is just a ‘spoonful’ of things to come.

Q: What is your songwriting process?
A: When I get that first spark, I stop everything I’m doing and ride the wave of inspiration. Sometimes it’s like lightening when it strikes – rare and intense. I’ve had song’s come to me when in my dreams, and I’ve had songs come to me when I’m wasted at the bar with my girls. My newest song is a new process in that it’s coming to me in pieces month’s apart. I store everything on my phone, and looking back through my recordings I realized the last 3 month’s inspirations have been in the same key. It’s like it’s slowly releasing itself to me.

Q:What does it mean to you to be selected as a NewSong finalist, and what do you hope to get out of the experience?
A: It means I can be proud of the work that I created from the bottom of my soul.

Q: How did you hear about New Song Music?
A: The Internet. I also know The Banner days from Seattle, they were finalists last year.

Q: What is currently happening with your music?
A: I just released my EP ‘Wildfire’ and have signed some licensing deals with TV/Film. I also won a college radio campaign for spring.

Megan Wilde’s Links
MeganWildeMusic.com + Facebook + YouTube + SoundCloud + Twitter + Instagram

2015 NewSong Music Finalist: Rachael Kilgour

Tuesday, December 29th, 2015

RACHAEL KILGOUR (DULUTH, MN)

This series of features highlights the 2015 NewSong Music finalists. Each artist is invited to 14th Annual NewSong Music Showcase & Competition Finals – Lincoln Center (Jan 7th) for the opportunity to win the #NSM Grand Prize. We sat down with each finalist to learn more about their music and background. Hope you enjoy! #NewSongMusic #WhereGreatArtistsAreDiscovered

BIO
Based out of Duluth, MN, singer-songwriter Rachael Kilgour has built a devoted following over the last ten years, captivating audiences with a balance of provocative, topical lyrics, passionate musical delivery, and a charmingly witty stage presence. Kilgour began writing and performing her own songs in 2005. She was invited to join recording artist Catie Curtis on a tour of the Midwest as an opener and backup musician in 2006 and again the following year. Her original music was received well enough that she decided to break from the pursuit of a Music Education degree in order to focus on a career as a performer.

In 2007, Kilgour married and enthusiastically took on the role of step-parent to her wife’s young daughter. She released her long-awaited debut album in December 2008 and a second release, “Will You Marry Me?” in January 2011. Both albums give an earnest glimpse into the life and politics of a young woman turned wife, mother and advocate for a generation of dissatisfied global citizens. In February 2013, Kilgour released “Whistleblower’s Manifesto,” a three-song EP that focuses on issues of social injustice and showcases her innate ability to challenge and inspire listeners.


Kilgour has performed across the country in coffeehouses, concert series and radio studios as well as protests and picket lines and has shared the stage with such folk luminaries as Greg Brown and Cheryl Wheeler. In 2015 Kilgour took fifth place in the Telluride Troubadour Competition and was named the winner of the LEAF Newsong Contest in North Carolina. Following her 2014 divorce, Kilgour has written a collection of new, powerfully intimate material. She plans to release a full-length, studio album of the work in the spring of 2016. The album is being produced by Catie Curtis. 

Q:What does it mean to you to be selected as a NewSong finalist, and what do you hope to get out of the experience?
A: I was thrilled! As an artist, it’s always heartening to hear that your work resonates with people. It is an honor to be given the opportunity to perform in such a beautiful space alongside such talented artists.

I am most looking forward to meeting the other finalists! I love coming together with folks who live the same kind of life, share the same kind of passion and yet express it in such individualistic ways. I am also looking forward to meeting the judges and the rest of the Newsong team! I am excited to challenge myself to perform to the best of my ability at the showcase and I hope to connect with some new listeners as a result of this experience.

Q: What is your songwriting process?
A: I don’t exactly have a process. It’s taken me some time to settle into a trusting kind of relationship with my writing. I don’t practice, I don’t force myself to write when I don’t have something to say, I don’t panic when I have dry spells or if I get stuck writing about one topic excessively. Songs seem to come to me like little gifts, I just need to make time to receive them. For me, songs are almost always born out of a repetitive thought. Sometimes it is a problem or injustice I am trying to resolve – either on a personal level or a world-wide one. Sometimes it is an intense emotion (eg: love for a child) that I am trying to communicate. I think we all write with the hope of being understood, whatever the topic. Songwriting allows me to sort the mess inside my head, but the magic lives in the sharing of the complete work. That moment of mutual understanding between the performer and listener is something I live for.

Q: What is currently happening with your music?
A: I am currently working on a new album – produced by Catie Curtis and recorded in the Boston area by Crit Harmon. I am very excited to release it, hopefully in the early spring! The album consists of the work I’ve written in the last year and a half since my divorce – it is raw and emotional and people have been connecting with it in a big way since I began sharing the tunes on stage. I’m very proud of the work we are doing in the studio and can’t wait to share it!

Rachael Kilgour’s Links
RachaelKilgour.com + Facebook + YouTube + SoundCloud

2015 NewSong Music Finalist: Sarah Kervin

Monday, December 28th, 2015

SARAH KERVIN (NEW YORK, NY)

5

This series of features highlights the 2015 NewSong Music finalists. Each artist is invited to 14th Annual NewSong Music Showcase & Competition Finals – Lincoln Center (Jan 7th) for the opportunity to win the #NSM Grand Prize. We sat down with each finalist to learn more about their music and background. Hope you enjoy! #NewSongMusic #WhereGreatArtistsAreDiscovered

BIO
Story-telling through music has always been the heart of the matter for Brooklyn-based singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Sarah Kervin. Schooled in jazz and classical, this Atlanta native came to New York with a soulful sound and inspired writing that blends modern and classic influences to “take you to the place where your heart is smiling” (MuzikReviews).

Equal parts Ella Fitzgerald and Sara Bareilles, her music has history, soul and the optimism of a small town girl making her way in the big city. With strong, soulful vocals, dense textures, and driving rhythms, Sarah’s sound embodies the depth of self-exploration, discovery, and independence. Into the City, her 2015 sophomore album, tells stories of the shared human experience: trying to making it through life without totally screwing everything up. It’s about coming to the big city with stars in your eyes and pulling yourself back up when it doesn’t turn out like you thought it would. Her music is influenced by the complex harmonies of jazz, the inspired messiness of gospel, the melancholy passion of the blues, and the frankness and openness of storytelling.

Sarah has received international recognition as a soloist, guest artist, composer, and bandleader, including six Downbeat Student Music Awards, the Jazz Education Network Composition Award, and research grants in Vocal Pedagogy from the Magellan Foundation. She has performed with great artists such as Jon Hendricks, the Manhattan Transfer, Ben Folds, the Fort Worth Symphony, and Afro Blue. Sarah also teaches voice both in the New York area and as a member of the voice faculty at the renowned Berklee College of Music.

Q:What does it mean to you to be selected as a NewSong finalist, and what do you hope to get out of the experience?
A: I was incredibly excited and honored to be named a New Song Finalist! It has been one of my dreams since I was a little girl to perform at Lincoln Center, and I can’t believe that I’ll finally be able to realize that.I can’t wait to share my music and my story!

I’m already struck by the positivity with which NewSong has been presented – from the first email, it was all about joining with other singer-songwriters and celebrating our music and our stories. I’m humbled to be a part of this group, and I think the most rewarding part will be getting to meet and create with everyone.

Q: What is your songwriting process?
A: Some of my best memories are of listening to music in the car with my folks on long road trips through the mountains. Carole King, James Taylor, Steely Dan, Bonnie Raitt, even Stevie Wonder… I couldn’t get enough of the nostalgic and heartfelt stories while I was looking out the window watching the world go by. I feel like I always think about those trips a little bit when I’m writing.

I usually start with a single line that gets stuck in my head. I make obsessive voice memos and notes on my phone – in the middle of the night, in the car, walking down the street – they’re just stuck in my head going over and over again like a broken record. That almost always ends up being the first line of the song. Or the main hook. I like to compose music and lyrics together, and when I’ve got enough to start taking on the shape of a song, I fill out the rest of the music so I have a framework. Sometimes the lyrics come as soon as I sing a line, flowing effortlessly right onto the page without needing a lot of editing. Everything comes together like a math problem; I’ve just got to solve it and write it down, like I’m a vessel for a song that already exists. I call those “thirty-minute songs.” Sometimes, though, the songs are long and a little arduous; I have whole notebooks filled with crossed out and scratched out lyrics and days and weeks and months go by and I’m still chipping away at them. The first type of song feels like it was already written for me, while the second is something I fought for; both rewarding, just different types of stories.

Q: What is currently happening with your music?
A: In 2015 I released my sophomore album, Into the City. The record is a set of stories, sort of a catalog of my life moving from a small town to New York. It’s all about just keeping going no matter what life throws at you. It features a special song, “The Least You Could Do,” that I made into a music video to raise awareness for survivors of domestic violence. Written as part of my own healing process from an abusive relationship, I hope the song can lend catharsis to others and help them find inner strength to keep moving forward. All the proceeds from the single go to benefit the Joyful Heart Foundation, which does tremendous work offering support for survivors, education, and advocacy. 

I’m writing for a new original musical, “Hot Mess In Manhattan,” starring Cait Doyle. Coming soon in 2016. You can find out more at hotmessinmanhattan.com

Sarah Kervin’s Links
SarahKervin.com + Facebook + YouTube + SoundCloud + Twitter + Instagram + iTunes