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Interview with Singer-Songwriter Jon Prophet

I talked with Jon Prophet recently, he’s a guitar player, singer-songwriter from Arizona. He shared some great insight on his journey thus far as a musician … his guitars, his musical influences, producing his album “New Religion“, and his inspiration and motivation for succeeding in music and life. With a bit of luck, look for his song, “Painted Horse” – see the video below, to be featured in a Harley- Davidson ad.

Interview with Jon Prophet

1. You mentioned that you’re a guitar buff, and have about 7 guitars at any one time, what are they and which ones are your favorites?
JP: I had an old Kay guitar that I loved and I wished I still owned it when I first started taking guitar lessons. That was my second guitar and my first electric guitar. I usually own some combination of a few acoustics; steel string, nylon string and maybe a 12 string I’ve owed a few Reso-Phonics over the years as well. Usually I’ll get lucky and find one of the cheaper brands that just plays excellent. My main axe for may years was a Tobacco Sunburst Fender American Strat from the late 90s that had the rolling nut which I thought was a brilliant edition to the design.

I’ve owned several electric Epiphones over the years; SGs, various hollowbodies and Les Pauls. But I never really bonded with them for some reason so I ended up trading them out. My favorites now are Fender Telecasters and the Republic Reso-Phonics. I like having a variety of sounds to pull from when writing so I borrow a lot of gear from friends who tend to collect way more than I do for the sake of writing. I also have an Epiphone acoustic with a nice tobacco sunburst finish that I do a lot of writing on. Each instrument inspires something different from me.

2. When you started getting serious about learning to play guitar, did you take lessons and what did you make the most progress with practicing?
JP: I really took it seriously when my school offered a guitar class when I was 15. The teacher was an old school bass player and was very proficient as such and as a band teacher but he certainly was no inspiration as a guitar player so I just learned theory from him and would come home and practice nearly 8 hours a day for about 2 years. I’d listen to the radio and jam along with the jazz station and the late night blues hour and then rock out to my favorite bands while trying to decipher the tab in the various guitar player magazines I’d collect.

I think at the end of the day you just have to put in the time on the instrument. That’s it! The second thing is that you have to truly and critically listen to music so you can hear what’s actually happening in there compositionally. What makes a great song great? If you break it down, you can start to get a sense of how and why it works. Of course there is a certain magic that is hard to pin-point but that, I think, is something you have to feel your way through.

3. For your album, A New Religion, can you share how it came to be? … From conception, to songwriting, to producing it.

JP: I was doing some recording work with a friend of mine in his garage studio and trying to get better recordings of the demos I was doing in my own home studio. (As an aside the pure acoustic tracks on A New Religion were actually recorded in my tile bathroom in the house I was living in at the time.) Anyway, I was also gigging out with my drummer David Cates and a sort of rotating line up of bassists around town.

At one of our shows, we were approached by a local PR person who loved the sound and wanted to meet with us so we took the meeting and he said he wanted to represent us. He didn’t really know the music business but he loved what we did and he had some contacts so at that point, that was enough. He ended up working out a deal for us to record at a really top notch studio called Chaton.

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Daria Musk – Emerging Talent and Queen of Google+

I recently had the opportunity to talk with Daria Musk. If you haven’t heard of her, I venture to say that you soon will. She’s been performing for the majority of her young life. I first heard of her through a “hangout” she was hosting on Google+. In less than two weeks she’s become a force on Google+, with over 9,000 people joining in to her most recent show in which she performed for 7-1/2 hours!

I wasn’t sure what to expect, but in talking with her she gave me the impression of someone with a true passion for her craft. She has a strong connection to nature and people as evident in her lyrics. She’s from the quiet woods of southwestern Connecticut and started playing in local coffee shops. Since then, she’s played at well-known venues along the east coast and as well as The Vibes Festival in CT and the SXSW Festival in Austin, TX.

+1 Me is a song Daria wrote while playing live on her G+ hangout:

I find her music as well as her personality to be spirited and uplifting. Her combination of strong lyrics, vocals, and guitar skills are undeniable. We talked an hour or so and here’s what she shared …

About her Google+ experience …
One of the great experiences of her life. Considering that she only got involved less than two weeks ago, she can’t say enough positive things about it. Her brother first called her about it when she was on her way to open for Nils Lofgren and she almost couldn’t be bothered with it, now she’s sure glad she did it.

She never thought of as herself as an internet artist. She’s found out through performing the G+ hangout how global her audience is. She plays for hours and says that her least favorite part is having to stop.

About her first album …

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Interview with Singer Songwriter Sam Parks

I recently had a chance to interview Samantha Parks, a singer songwriter from western Michigan who’s pursuing her passion by releasing her cd entitled “Everything I Am” and gaining a fan base at local venues. I think she’s got a great sound that’s pure and unique and I wanted to get to know more about her and her approach to playing guitar. She’s working on her music career as well as attending college with the admirable goal to to become a math teacher as a backup plan.

Sam at the Kettle Coffee House – Hartland Music Hall:

Here’s my interview with Sam …

1. You first started taking guitar lessons at a local music shop with Scott when you were eight, since then what was the most important technique or concept you’ve learned about playing guitar? What did you find to be the most challenging?

For me, the most important concept has been learning as many chords as possible because the more you know, the more diverse your songs can be. It is amazing how many different chord combinations there are, and each one can be molded into a new song! The most challenging thing on guitar for me is playing solos and really rockin’ out! Chords are definitely my comfort zone, but I would love to be able to just play a sweet solo out of the blue!

2. I’ve read that your songwriting process so to speak is pretty much spontaneous. As an example, can you take one of your songs and share the details on how it became lyrics, chords, melody, and a ultimately a complete song?

My songwriting is very spontaneous, it is just kind of a result of me feeling an extreme emotion. For example, I wrote the song “Sisters” when my sister was graduating from high school. She was the first of us three kids to go off to college and I knew it was going to be hard not having her around. That was when I decided I wanted to write her a song as a graduation gift.

I just sat down and started playing a guitar part and singing along with it. I incorporated memories from our childhood (which explains the part about Brittney Spears!), and pretty much just wrote what I was feeling and the things I wanted to tell her. It was like writing a meaningful card but with music and a melody. This is how I write all of my songs, from the heart.

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Interview with Singer-Songwriter Beth Jimenez

She is a self described acoustic pop singer-songwriter from Hemet, CA. She’s been writing songs since she was just 14 years old, and now at 16 she’s finished recording her first cd entitled “Honesty”, set to be released in April.

I came across her video introducing each song from her new album and I was impressed with her professionalism and and the quality of her music.

Recently, I had an opportunity to interview Beth to find out more about her and her music:

1. What or who first inspired you to learn how to play the guitar? What was your first guitar and what guitar do you play now?

When I first started playing the guitar I was probably about 13, I didn’t have one of my own so I used my grampas old Yamaha, and after that I played with my brothers. I don’t remember a specific time where I decided I wanted to play the guitar, I just slowly learned on my own.

But now that I am really into it my biggest inspirations are Ingrid Michaelson, and Taylor Swift. I think it’s cool how they can use simple chords and patterns and still have great songs. My first guitar was a birthday present from my mom and dad when I turned 15, I picked it out at guitar center.

I didn’t really know much about guitars or anything, so I picked it out basically because it looked cool. Haha, I named it “Rose” because it is red, and the neck is made out of Rosewood. I still play him for performances, and for important songs I write. I just recently got another guitar for Christmas, I named him “Randi” I like to name all my instruments. Rose is a Laguna, and Randi is a Ibanez.

2. How do you approach songwriting? Do you try and work something out with the guitar or piano or is it a melody in your head?

Well, It all depends on what inspires the song. I usually have lyrics in my head before I start the song, then I mess with chords and see if the sound matches the feeling of the song. It all depends on what I am trying to say, but it’s mostly always the lyrics first.

3. I thought that your video for “Daniel’s Song” was very creative using black and white footage and the lyric flip cards. How was it put together and did it require much in the way of shoots and editing?

Recording “Daniel’s song” was very fun. I got the idea from the cards because of the lyrics in the song “…This is you, you’re a wordless song..” I thought it would be cool to not speak in the music video and just use the cards. My dad actually helped me out with the cards, he said that he once saw the cards idea in a Bob Dylan video.

We recorded it in my neighborhood right up the street from Daniel’s house. He was going to
be in the video but he was sick. The videos we make are just for fun, we don’t take them to seriously. So not much editing is being put into them as of right now, maybe in the near future we will start thinking about that.

Video for Daniel’s Song …

4. If you could work with any artist that’s influenced you, who would it be and why?
I am greatly inspired by the Beatles. To work with Sir Paul McCartney would be amazing. He is one of my biggest inspirations as a songwriter and musician. I feel as if his music is very honest, and he really enjoyed writing. I think it would be fun to write or work with someone that not only enjoys his work, but also loves it.

5. From your bio, I read that you were inspired by artists like Tracey Chapman and the Beatles, did you start learning their songs on guitar at first?

Well, learning songs on the guitar was always hard for me because I mostly taught myself. But I have worked with guitar players for short periods of time, and the first fingerpicking song I learned was “Blackbird” by the Beatles. Although I didn’t learn much of there songs at first I was always listening to them.

6. Did you always have the support of your family and friends to make your own music? Were you always determined to make it happen or was there a moment in your life when you thought , “wow, people think I’m pretty good, I can do this”?

Well, I wasn’t always into music as much as I am now. I mean, It has always been in my life, but I fell in love with music when I was about 15. I used to play basketball, and was very much into that. Then one day I had a collapse and after trips to the doctor we found out I have a blood condition and could no longer play anymore. That completely broke my heart, since I had been playing since I was 5 years old. So after I lost basketball I kind of put everything into music, and of course my family and friends supported me. So I think after the loss of basketball, music took that empty spot.

After writing for a couple months (writing an average of one song a day) I started to realize that I really enjoyed it, and it started to come natural, I think my friends started realizing that as well, because they would always ask me to play them new songs I had written.

7. What’s your understanding of music theory? Chords, keys, etc. Is it part of playing or do you strictly play by ear and what sounds good to you?

Last year started taking piano lessons, and in each piano lesson, there is a 30 min time of music theory. So I am now learning theory. But I don’t always follow the “Rules” my cd Honesty was written by ear. (I don’t even know some of the names of the chords I used)

8. Your album “Honesty” comes out in April, which is a great thing all by itself. What’s next for you Beth? What would you like to do or accomplish in the near future? (music-related or not)

In the near future I want to show people who I am as an artist, and a person. Hopefully play as many shows as I can, and just enjoy life. When people watch me perform I want them to forget about there problems, and just have fun. Even if it’s just for one hour. To me that’s what music is, an escape from reality. If an artist can make problems disappear by playing a song. Then I think they are doing there job as an artist. At least that’s what I want to do. As long as there is one person listening, I will continue to write, and perform.

For more information about Beth and her music, visit:
BethMJimenez.com
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