Browsing Tag

singer-songwriter

Young Jay Channels the Tides of Romance in His Tropic RnB Trap Pop Fusion, ‘Her Ocean’

Young Jay’s latest single, Her Ocean, is as sonically oceanic as the title—it moves with the same tranquil yet powerful force. Fusing pop, RnB, and trap, the independent artist found his space in the contemporary landscape with a track that radiates warmth and intimacy. There’s a sultry undercurrent, but the real strength lies in the sincerity of his lyricism. While others lean on excess, Young Jay proves that restraint and poetic depth leave a far stronger impression.

After stepping away from music for a year following the passing of his great-grandmother, Lillie Mae Jones Manning, Young Jay resurfaces with a song that feels like both a reflection and a return. Her Ocean is far from surface-level sentimentality—it’s a testament to the kind of romance that refuses to drown in modern trends. With a vocal delivery that rolls in like a tide, carrying both tenderness and intensity, he captures the equilibrium between admiration and longing, bringing a tactile emotional depth to the track.

The production lingers in the same atmospheric space, conjuring images of golden-hour heat and slow-motion devotion. The melody doesn’t overpower; it guides, letting the lyrical honesty take centre stage.

Her Ocean is available now on all major streaming platforms, including YouTube.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Ged Wilson Spins Everyman Blues into Gold with Regular Man

Like a TARDIS hurling you back to a time when jazz blues grooves knew how to scintillate the soul, Ged Wilson’s latest single, Regular Man, isn’t just another exercise in virtuosity—it’s the sound of an artist who has lived every note. The track carries all the gravitas of a blues lifer, but it is Wilson’s effortless ability to channel boy-next-door charisma through velvety vocal lines that allows him to scribe gold with his sonic signature.

Cheltenham-based but proudly carrying his Mancunian roots, Wilson has spent years pushing the boundaries of the British blues scene, fusing the grit of Lightnin’ Hopkins with the poetic dexterity of Gil Scott-Heron and the warmth of Santana. Regular Man, lifted from his upcoming album of the same name, distils those influences into a track that makes even monotony feel rich with possibility. Swanky in tone and seraphic in execution, it’s a vignette of life’s quieter moments, spun with a nostalgia-laced charm that makes it all too easy to follow Wilson wherever he goes next.

With his feet firmly planted in tradition but his gaze set forward, Wilson isn’t just another bluesman—he’s a “bluesifier,” as adept at breathing contemporary life into the genre as he is at honouring its past. Signed to Bad Monkey Records and supported by Help Musicians, he’s bringing his innovative style to an ever-widening audience.

Regular Man is available to stream on all major platforms, including SoundCloud.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Liverpool’s Luke O’Hanlon Dissects the Wreckage with ‘Alcohol and Sodium’

https://soundcloud.com/lukeohanlon/alcohol-and-sodium

There’s no glamour in self-destruction on Luke O’Hanlon’s single, Alcohol and Sodium. The first cut from his forthcoming album, The River Only Flows One Way, carries the weight of every regret that lingers long after the bottle’s empty and the neon lights have lost their warmth. O’Hanlon’s lyricism, steeped in stark poetry and weary wisdom, doesn’t romanticise the rough edges—it lays them bare, exposing the loneliness in bad decisions and the inevitability of time slipping through cracked fingers.

Sonically, O’Hanlon leans into the mesmerising guitar work of Kurt Vile while pulling from Modest Mouse’s raw alt-country grit. When the composition fractures into garage rock territory, Strokes-esque vocals carve their way through the stripped-back instrumentation, ensuring every line lands like an unfiltered confession rather than a performance.

There’s a whisper of Tom Waits’ barstool storytelling and Richard Thompson’s cutting clarity in the delivery, but O’Hanlon’s voice is entirely authentic—ragged yet resolute, with a cynicism that never topples into defeat.

Rather than framing hedonism as rebellion or a necessary rite of passage, Alcohol and Sodium offers a different perspective—one that doesn’t ask for sympathy or redemption, just recognition. If this is just the first glimpse into The River Only Flows One Way, the full release in April 2025 is set to be an unflinching, razor-sharp reflection on survival itself.

Alcohol and Sodium is now available to stream on SoundCloud.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Heather Dolly Turns Back Time with her Retro Chamber Folk-Pop Ballad, ‘My Love’

Don’t be fooled by the wavy, lo-fi, tape deck-esque intro—‘My Love’ doesn’t linger in nostalgia for long. From the mind of one of 2025’s most authentic aural architects, the single unfolds into a euphonically intimate trip across the decades. Heather Dolly flits between the 60s and 90s with a sound that carries echoes of icons from both eras, yet her sonic signature remains unmistakable.

Between Beatles-esque chamber pop crescendos and the aching touch of Hurt-era Christina Aguilera, ‘My Love’ sells sanctuary to wearied lovers, embedding them in the tonal catharsis of a track classic in all the right places, innovative in all the rest. It plays out like an affectingly poetic diary entry, wrapped in orchestral swells and folk-pop warmth, with hints of jazz rock swimming in the underpinnings.

At just 19, the Welsh singer-songwriter—now based in Liverpool—has already mastered the delicate balance between timeless and contemporary. With influences ranging from Laufey and Faye Webster to Bob Dylan, she’s not just borrowing from the greats; she’s reinterpreting their legacies with a voice that could heal the deepest of emotional scars.

‘My Love’ was officially released on Valentine’s Day and is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Julia Powell Resurrected the Esoteric with Her Art-Pop Earworm, ‘LAZARUS’

In a world where mannequin heads and hypnotic light shows serve as the set dressing for Julia Powell’s sonic exorcisms, ‘LAZARUS’ arrives as the latest séance. Since her 2022 debut EPEphyra, fans have been left suspended in Powell’s void—unsure whether to dance, dissolve, or do both at once. With her upcoming album alchemically stirring for a late 2025 release, she’s already made it clear that her dominion over the avant-garde is absolute.

Between the stabbing ache of the piano keys, the chamber strings that oscillate beyond recognition, and the trip-hop-tinged middle-eight teetering on the edge of total chaos, ‘LAZARUS’ doesn’t just transcend—it disorients. Powell’s teasingly arcane vocal lines slither through the arrangement, twisting through histrionic motifs that claw at the psyche. The track is as much a fever dream as it is a statement: Powell has reached the epitome of art pop and staked her claim to supremacy.

If her live shows—described by fans as out-of-body experiences—are any indication, ‘LAZARUS’ is only the beginning of the next rupture in Powell’s hauntingly immersive world. The esoteric earworm is a sign of the seismic shifts to come.

‘LAZARUS’ is available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

your friend juniper: An Interview on Music, Love, and the Art of Feeling Everything

your friend juniper builds worlds where emotions are raw, love isn’t sugar-coated, and every note carries the weight of something real. With makesmehappy leading the charge for her next album, she’s taking listeners beyond the predictable highs and lows of love songs, exploring the in-between—the messy, unfiltered parts that make relationships human. In this interview, she opens up about crafting music designed to hit like a dopamine rush, the balance between creative freedom and self-promotion, and why Nashville’s storytelling tradition has shaped her lyricism in unexpected ways. From the way she assigns colours to her songs to her belief in slow, meaningful career growth over viral fame, Juniper’s perspective is as thought-provoking as it is refreshing. Read on to step into her world of sound, sonder, and sonic connection.


Juniper, welcome to A&R Factory! With
 makesmehappy kicking off the rollout for your upcoming album, there’s a lot to unpack about your creative vision and the way you approach music as a full-spectrum experience. makesmehappy offers a perspective on love that isn’t just about the highs but also embraces the messier, unpolished parts. What drew you to write a love song that challenges the typical narrative?

I know there are many songs out there that touch on so many aspects of love, but it tends to be in these certain worlds of either gaining it or losing it. There’s this whole middle area of navigating it that’s really the juicy bit. Love, in every kind of relationship, is really challenging, and sometimes it’s pure joy, and in others, it’s really putting aside your desires or expectations for the sake of another person, and it’s all driven by the same thing: love. I wanted a song that took me through that turbulent and wonderful journey of expectations and compromise and deep connection, almost like a simulator. I figured no one is ever alone, so there had to be other music lovers out there searching for that song as well. I think I honestly got too impatient and decided to make it myself.

You’ve described your music and visual content as designed to trigger a dopamine release, almost like an essential vitamin. How do you translate that idea into the way you produce and arrange your songs?

I desperately push for every second of my songs to inspire the listener to feel something. I’m a person with high expectations, and it for sure creeps into my music and content-making process. I had to really discover why I wanted to live this insane lifestyle and make music, and it came down to wanting to affect people in a positive way. Music and art are extremely powerful and I want someone who discovers me to have an experience from the second they go to my profile to the very end of the first song they hear and then have it just continue. I want my music and content to be like a good friend.

It takes a lot of time and effort, but it’s just so worth it. I make all of my own visual content as well as my music, and right now I’m really diving into a new aesthetic of sondering, which is the realization that you’re one of many complex lives. It can make you feel small in the existential sense but also fill you with awe and curiosity. So, welcome to my little world where we wander, ponder and most of all, sonder! 

Since you write, record, and produce everything yourself, what’s your creative process like when you’re shaping a track from the ground up? Do you start with a sonic idea, a lyric, or something visual?

My songs often begin with lyrics or weird voice memos of me humming a melody. Song seeds honestly come to me at the most inconvenient times, like when I’m in the shower or driving or trying to fall asleep. All of a sudden, lyrics will just start flooding into my brain, often with a rhythm. I have to get them down immediately or literally just repeat them until I can. Sometimes, I feel like one of those characters in a movie who has visions and the world stops, and they seem to lose control and have to draw something or write something.

I’ll always finish the song acoustically before I record anything. It starts with the main instrument and a vocal demo and then I’ll produce the song fully and often record the final takes of the vocal last before I start mixing. The ideas come as I go with production. I often hear a rhythmic part or a melody in my head and then figure it out on whichever instrument I’m hearing and layer things in until I can’t hear any more parts. That’s when I’ll go in and really strip back and take things away until it’s only what the song really needs. Sometimes, a simple production is the most effective. You have to be willing to undo and go back and redo and all these really annoying things but refusing to compromise with your songs has to be the main goal.

Your upcoming album is your second full-length project. How does it build on or contrast with your debut in terms of themes, production, or the emotional weight behind it?

My first album was really an attempt for me to just get all these songs I had in my bank out. It varies so much from song to song, and I truly love it and think all of those songs deserved to be released, but it’s not a cohesive album by any means. This second full project was more intentionally put together as an album, and there is definitely a strong cohesiveness throughout it lyrically and sonically.

Haley Heynderickx was my big inspiration for the sound of the album. I love the intimacy and saturation of her music. For the lyrical content, the moral of the story is really to sonder and realize how crazy this world is that we live in and that we only get one weird little life on it. I think as a species, we focus on all the wrong things and separate ourselves from each other in all these ways that don’t matter. Spend less time thinking about yourself and way more time thinking about the world and the strange and beautiful people in it. It’s medicine for the brain and the heart without the long list of horrible side effects while a lady twirls on a beach.

What’s been the most effective way for you to reach listeners who truly connect with your music?

Slowly. I know it sounds like I am being cheeky but slow and steady wins the race. I want an authentic, grassroots fan base grown through actual engagement, and that just simply takes longer. I could really spend most of my time trying to go viral and rise to fame quickly, but it’s not a great long-term investment and I’m a musician, not an influencer. I’ve had friends go viral multiple times and it’s great for the views on that one video and the streams on that one song but I haven’t seen it curate a true fanbase who stays with you. I’d way rather spend my time making really good songs, putting together a great live set, making authentic content that’s easy because I actually enjoy making it and then travel the world and share my music in person with people.

There’s a strong visual element to everything you do, from colours to the way you present each track. What role do visuals play in shaping the way your audience experiences your music?

I think music and visual art are soulmates. They can exist without each other and still be extremely wonderful but they’re even better together. Color is a really strange thing because it doesn’t really exist, at least without light. We really only perceive color based on the wavelength and the object it’s bouncing off of and that’s just insane and amazing. I always wanted color to be a part of my brand because it’s a universal language. Every song of mine is attached to a color that not only visually represents the song but scientifically does as well. Our brains react to different colors in different ways and I want to utilize that to enhance my songs. It’s kind of my way of adding frosting to a piece of music.

Nashville is known for its rich musical landscape, but your style stands apart from the city’s more traditional sound. How has being in that environment influenced your work, if at all? 

Nashville is a great place to be if you want to really grow as a lyricist and songwriter. Country music is about storytelling above anything else. It stems from the structure of classic 12-bar blues where every song essentially has the same movements but it’s the story and the way the singer tells that story over those movements that makes it unique. There’s a depth of forethought in country lyrics that I love where a line at the end will finally tie together a phrase or idea from an earlier part of the song. It’s like the whole song is connected in these really clever ways, like a novel or a movie rather than just a good hook and who really cares what we’re saying in the song you know? Being in this environment has absolutely helped me grow as a musician. It’s also really about talent in Nashville instead of clout or connections and that’s why Nashville is quality over quantity. Country music is definitely what makes up a majority of the landscape here but so many artists these days are blending genres, as they should, so it doesn’t feel so important that I am not a country singer.

Independent artists often have to balance the creative side of music with the reality of promoting it. How do you manage both without losing the heart of what you want to create?

Oh my gosh, I lose heart all the time! Musicians have to be so disciplined and work so hard and put so much of their own money into their careers without getting anything in return for a long time. I honestly don’t think anyone from any other field of study would accept the terms in their careers that artists are pretty much forced to accept. The music industry is broken…really broken so we have to support each other and really go back to basics. It really feels like every system is broken because nowadays pretty much everyone is working two or more full-time jobs and can’t afford basic essentials.

I’m still finding the balance and I think I always will be. I don’t think anyone ever fully gets it or finds the one true method because it’s so dependent on so many things. I had to find where the deficit was in my own process and make peace with the fact that I had to save up money to invest in marketing for my releases, tours and live shows. I’m still hoping to get a manager or a booking agent this year because it’s really overwhelming a lot of the time but I’m a big believer that nothing good comes easy and it proves to me every day how much this is my passion and my purpose because no matter how hopeless it seems, I just keep doing it.

You clearly believe in this album and its potential to connect with listeners. If people take away one thing from this record, what do you hope it is?

Sonder. Think about others way more than you think about yourself. Be beautiful in the ways that really matter. Forgive people as quickly as you can and for the love of Mary fight for a life where you’re spending most of your time doing something you love. If you let it, life will break your heart. Love yourself so much that you’re willing to sacrifice to be healthier and a better person. It’s not about indulging every feeling or thought like truly allow yourself to grow and change.

Find your preferred way to listen to your friend juniper’s latest single and connect with the artist via this link.

 

Interview by Amelia Vandergast

Jenna Louise’s ‘Safe’ Opens Wounds Just to Show How They Can Heal

Jenna Louise strips back the glossy veneer of love songs in ‘Safe’, offering something far more valuable than sentimentality—understanding. The North East singer-songwriter, whose reputation has been cemented through BBC Introducing and international airplay, takes the worn-out phrase you have to love yourself before someone else can and reshapes it into something more compassionate. The standing ovation-worthy piano-led ballad explores the weight of past trauma in new relationships, showing gratitude for the kind of love that doesn’t demand perfection but instead cradles scars with care.

The classic pop stylings in Safe are pulled into the present by the sheer emotional intelligence in the lyrics and the affecting maturity in Jenna Louise’s expansive vocal range. Cinematically seraphic harmonies rise between honeyed verses steeped in introspection, turning a deeply personal reflection into a universally resonant moment. Every note is delivered with the kind of conviction that makes the difference between a song that’s heard and one that’s felt.

With her debut album My Journey already making waves, turning heads at HMV in Darlington, and featuring collaborations with Carl Pemberton (Journey South) and Sam Haynes, there’s never been a better time to affix Jenna Louise to your radar.

Safe was officially released on Valentine’s Day and is out now on all major streaming platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Noah Meadors Stakes His Claim with His Emotionally Raw, Euphonically Polished Earworm, ‘I Want It All’

I Want It All bleeds synth pop and R&B over a trap beat as Noah Meadors shape-shifts through his vocal delivery, slipping between honeyed low reverberant harmonies and pseudo-rap verses that slap just as hard as the beats cutting through the wavy, delay-saturated production. Lyrically, it’s a straight-from-the-soul confession—an unfiltered declaration of desire for a life and love without compromise. If one of the things Meadors wants is a revered career, this hypnotically aphrodisiacal track proves he’s already well on his way.

Born in Tennessee in 1998, Meadors has been writing songs since he was twelve. Releasing music under the moniker Only Lonely, he built a foundation before deciding to step into the spotlight under his given name, embracing a more personal and uninhibited creative approach. With I Want It All, he distils his most primal pop sensibilities into a release that leaves no doubt about his versatility as a singer, rapper, and producer.

The track pulses with urgency yet never loses its smooth magnetism; if this is your first introduction to Noah Meadors, it will be an unforgettable one.

I Want It All is now available on all major streaming platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Lensky’s ‘Valentine’s Day’: A Bittersweet Serenade Straight From A Scorned Soul

With the intimacy of an overheard confession and the weight of a longing left to decay, Lensky delivers a serenade steeped in vulnerability with ‘Valentine’s Day’. His sophomore single, mixed and engineered by Montreal producer Chris Kengard with guidance from Grammy-winning sound engineer Richard King, drifts through jazz-tinged alternative rock, soaking up the influence of Jeff Buckley, Wilco, and Lana Del Rey. Yet, for all the ghosts of past inspirations, ‘Valentine’s Day’ is wholly his own—an ode to the aching disconnect between love and reality.

Lensky’s vocals resist unnecessary inflections, reverberating with the same contemplative stillness heard in Father John Misty’s quieter moments. Wrapped in the ambience of warm guitar tones from Antoine Tousignant, supported by a rhythm section that mirrors the pulse of a restless heart, the instrumental arrangement pulls listeners into a meditative quietude. The track moves from soft introspection to a stirring, full-bodied climax, capped with a guitar solo that burns like a last flicker of hope before the flame dies out.

‘Valentine’s Day’ is out on all major streaming platforms, including SoundCloud.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Jason Patrick X Interview: Striking the First Chord on His Own Terms

Jason Patrick X

With a debut album that refuses to be boxed into a single genre and a musical philosophy shaped by everything from Berklee College of Music to his time in the Army, Jason Patrick X arrives with a sound that’s both studied and instinctive. His approach to songwriting leans into emotion over formula, and his ability to intersect rock, blues, and unexpected influences keeps his music authentically unpredictable In this interview, he discusses the moment that ignited his songwriting ambitions, the lessons he’s carried from his military career into his music, and the personal mission driving his creativity. Whether you’re a fan of guitar-driven anthems or curious about the mindset of a musician crafting his own lane, this conversation is one to read.

Jason Patrick X, welcome to A&R Factory! With your debut single and album set to make waves this year, there’s a lot to unpack about your music, background, and approach to songwriting. We’d love to explore what has shaped your artistry and what listeners can expect from your upcoming releases. 

Absolutely. I appreciate you giving me the chance to do that.

You’ve been playing guitar for three decades and started taking songwriting seriously about ten years ago. What was the turning point that made you shift from playing to writing, and how did your approach evolve over time? 

You know, there was a moment that I remember at a young age, around 13 or so, where I heard an uncle of mine playing a song he had recorded on a cassette in his car. He ran a recording studio out of his garage. And I thought to myself, “I think I could do that.” But I guess the idea had to marinate in my brain for a couple of decades before I finally tried it. There was one fateful day, when I was at my brother’s house for a birthday party. He’s a computer guy, and he was showing me this new software he just picked up called Fruity Loops. It was my first exposure to recording music on a computer. He showed me the basics of how to navigate the software and map out instrument sounds, then I completely disappeared from the party for a few hours. When I finally emerged, I had composed a complete sketch of a song. That was the moment when I figured out that I had something to say that needed to come out.

It took quite a few years of dabbling in it when I had time, realizing that I didn’t really know what I was doing, and enrolling into the Berklee College of Music for four years so they could help me discover myself and develop into the songwriter and producer that I am today. I am a firm believer that Mastery is a goal that is always just out of reach. It’s not a destination where you finally arrive. There’s always another level, a new thing that you can learn, a new skill that you can acquire. I am infinitely better in all aspects of music today than I was four years ago. This is only the beginning of that evolution. I imagine that in four more years, I’ll be making that same statement about today.

Rock and Blues are at the core of your sound, but you’ve played across multiple genres. How do those varied influences manifest in your music, and do you consciously lean into certain styles, or does it happen naturally 

This will be an interesting answer. There was a time when I thought that those genres needed to be kept in separate buckets. Like, today I’m a blues guitarist, tomorrow I’ll be a Latin musician, and next week I’ll be a metal guy. But the more I learned and experimented, the more fascinated I became with the bleedover between these various styles. And I think it is really cool having so many different angles that I can look at the same thing. Maybe see what this gospel progression might sound like pushed to 10 on a screaming hard rock guitar. Or, hey, I wonder what it would sound like mixing a Reggaeton beat with Texas Blues?

There are times when I make those conscious decisions just to push my limits and do some experimenting. But when I get into a track, things happen a lot more organically. Everything I do, I try to do in service to that particular song so that my audience feels something through my music. Many times, I’ll find those influences from other genres slipped their way into a song I was working on after the fact for that very reason. But at the end of the day, if you listen to one of my songs and don’t feel something, as far as I’m concerned, I failed.

As a retired Army Soldier, did your time in service impact your songwriting, either in terms of discipline, perspective, or even the stories you tell in your lyrics? 

Oh, most definitely. The Army taught me a lot. They trained me to pay attention to small details while still keeping the bigger picture in mind. They also taught me how to adapt to changing circumstances since life is always a dynamic thing that you can’t predict. I think all the things I learned in the Army play a role in how I approach music. But more than anything else is a “you don’t stop until the mission is complete” attitude. That’s the whole reason I now have three college degrees, and I’m set to release my debut album. I feel very confident that as my listeners start absorbing my music, they will find nods to my time in the military in the lyrics. What can I say, the Army played a major role in who I am today in all aspects of my life.

You recently completed both a Bachelor’s and Master’s degree in songwriting from Berklee College of Music. What was the most surprising lesson you learned about your own songwriting process during your studies?

Yeah. There were so many takeaways from that experience, but I’ll give you two. One that was echoed by almost every professor I had was, “It’s tools, not rules.” Whether it’s music theory, scales, chord progressions, or whatever rigid thing, you sometimes get too wrapped up in trying to do things the “right way.” We tend to take that to mean following all the rules, which invariably make things too formulaic. This takes all of the soul out of a song. And akin to that was something I know I heard from Prince Charles Alexander, Bonnie Hayes, and Valerie Orth during my time at Berklee. You walk away from Berklee having all this newfound knowledge forgetting that simplicity is where it’s at. Attending Berklee makes you feel like you now have to impress the world with this newfound enlightenment by cramming every little thing you’ve learned into every song you work on.

What I had to keep drilling into my brain was that learning all of that technique is only the first step. That’s learning what the rules are. The second step is, now that you know the rules, you also know how to break the rules, which is the essence of “it’s tools, not rules.” And then the bigger part is that we are making these songs mostly for people who aren’t professional musicians. That’s the people we are servicing, people who just love music. If you make things too complicated by cramming too much into a song, all you’re doing is making the song too complicated for someone other than another musician to enjoy. In other words, the simpler, the better. And if you think about it, it’s true. Most of the biggest hit songs over the last 50 years masterfully employ some of the simplest things to make the most memorable songs ever. And that, amazingly, is one of the hardest things for us as songwriters, musicians, or any creative person to do. Know when to not use that cool guitar riff or drum part that you’re so proud of because it’s actually making the song worse.

With two teenage sons who are also looking to pursue music, what’s the most valuable piece of advice you’ve given them about navigating this path, especially as someone who’s lived through multiple phases of the industry?

What I try to impart to them is to always remember why you’re doing this. It’s your passion. It’s what drives you. Because there are going to be obstacles, problems, people who tell you no, times when you want to give up, and situations where you have to get creative to get out of life what you want. But if you always remember that burning fire inside you to make other people feel something through what you do, it will be what motivates you when you want to give up. In other words, never forget your “Why.” The reason why you have to do this thing. The reason why it is the only thing you can see yourself doing with the limited time you have on this spinning rock we call Earth.

Metallica, Prince, Queen, Michael Jackson, N.W.A., Stevie Ray Vaughan, and Jimi Hendrix are just a few of the artists who have shaped your musical DNA. If you could sit down with any one of them for a conversation, who would you choose, and what would you ask?

Since a lot of them are dead, any one of them could explain to me what happens after death, lol. No, seriously, I would have loved to sit down with Prince before he died. That guy was such a Renaissance man when it came to music. He was extremely skilled in most of it. Something I aspire to myself. I would love to sit with him for a day and have him explain his creative process to me as he was doing it in real time. I think that would have been eye-opening.

Having spent most of your life in South Louisiana, how much does the local music scene and culture seep into your sound, and do you see yourself as a reflection of that musical heritage?

As far as the musical aspects go, without a doubt. From the great musicians that came from Baton Rouge, where I’m from, to the sweet sounds of New Orleans. My grandmother is from the New Orleans area, so NOLA and the sounds of its music scene down Frenchman Street, at Tipitina’s, and just on street corners in the French Quarter have always inspired me and soothed my soul. It’s a very unique sound unto itself. Nothing is quite like New Orleans Blues, Jazz, or even New Orleans Bounce, for that matter. Obviously, I have a lot of influences from a lot of areas, but I think it all started with the sounds of the bayou. I’ve even had people tell me that they had a feeling I was from Louisiana just by the way I play guitar.

With this being your debut album, do you feel a sense of freedom in introducing yourself on your own terms, or do you feel pressure to establish a particular identity from the start?

Freedom definitely. And I have Berklee, and more specifically Patrick Ermlich, to thank for that. What they helped me do was define my musical vision and then turn that vision into an entire brand image. I’ve actually never been more sure about who I am as a songwriter, musician, producer, or artist than I am right now. As far as I’m concerned, the identity, as it exists right now, is solidified. Now, it’s just a matter of people discovering it. I consider myself to be the next iteration of the Gen X sound. I think it takes an actual Gen Xer like me to truly capture the essence of the experiences my generation lived through. And there just aren’t enough new artists out there servicing us and what we grew up on. So I almost feel as if it’s my obligation to bring my fellow Gen Xers and those who are Gen X adjacent something familiar, but in a new way. And the best way to see what that embodiment looks like is to check out my website. I’m not in any way, shape or form a web designer, lol. But I spent a whole lot of time figuring out how to put one together. And I ended up with a product that I’m proud to say I created. So go check it out at www.jasonpatrickx.com. And sign up for my newsletter so you can stay on top of what’s going on as this story unfolds.

Looking beyond this album, what are your bigger ambitions in music? Do you see yourself continuing to push your sound in new directions, or is there a particular musical goal you’ve always had your sights set on? 

I actually already have plans in the works for a second album that I’m hoping to have ready in 2026. I would like to follow up this initial project with more material that will help further define my sound to my listeners. I imagine there will always be some element of guitarwork in what I do. It has been one constant throughout my life. But I do want to push myself. One thing we can always depend on is change. Nothing ever stays the same. And even though I’ve been around for a while, I still want to see who I am as an artist and songwriter continue to evolve over time.

One other area where I see myself doing that is in the sync space, writing music to be synchronized with live action. You know, like movies, TV, video games, ads, etc. If you think about it, the movie by itself is not half as exciting as the movie synced to some dramatic piece of music that accentuates what’s happening. I find that to be a fascinating way of mixing artistic mediums, and I want in. Stream Jason Patrick X’s album on Spotify from March 14. Until then, connect with the artist via Instagram and Facebook.

Interview by Amelia Vandergast