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Question of the Month: What Makes Your Music Unique to You?

Question of the Month: What Makes Your Music Unique to You?

Brad Labelle

Nap Eyes’ Brad Labelle joins reader Galen Brownson and PG staff in sharing about what makes them—and thereby, their tunes—so unique.

Question: What are some personal qualities of yours that set you apart from others in your writing or playing?


Brad Labelle - Nap Eyes

A: I love dance music and have an unrelenting thirst for new and fresh sounds. I don’t feel my guitar playing is particularly groundbreaking, but those influences must seep through somehow. I do believe I’m a fairly expressive player and my short attention span keeps me endlessly improvising.

Nap Eyes’ latest release, The Neon Gate.

Obsession: I can’t stop listening to the recent Jane Remover track “Magic I Want U.” The production is deeply detailed but doesn’t feel cluttered, and her melodic sensibilities are intoxicating. She gives you crunchy guitars paired with breakbeats, West Coast synth lines, a Janet Jackson-esque electro outro, scratching, a fun little guitar solo.... I could go on.

As of late, Two Star & the Dream Police by Mk.gee has been in Brad's regular listening rotation.

Galen Brownson - Reader of the Month

Metallica’s two-guitar format inspired Galen when he was learning guitar.

A: When I was learning how to play, I was listening to a lot of two-guitar bands, like Metallica and Megadeth and Iron Maiden. I tried to find ways to play both guitar parts at once, which is not always possible, but I write two parts for one guitar now.

Metallica’s second album is a fan favorite of their early, pioneering years.

Obsession: My latest obsession is finding ways to combine metal music with electronic music, particularly dubstep. My younger brother once chastised me for ignoring electronic music by saying “metal and dubstep have a lot in common,” and he was absolutely right. I’ve since made it a goal to weave them together.

Galen names Polis by Uppermost, a French electronic music producer, as one of his favorite records.

Ted Drozdowski - Editorial Director

Ted takes a slide solo on his well-traveled and beloved Dollycaster.

A: My interests toggle between history and mystery, so my technique is based in archaic/anarchic blues playing styles and an expansive sonic palette that relies on blending fingerpicking, slide, and an array of pedals to create tones and sheets of sound. I think of it as cosmic roots music, and don’t hear a lot of other people doing what I do the way I do it.

The marquee image for Ted and Coyote Motel’s new movie, The River: A Songwriter’s Stories of the South.

Obsession: For a few years now, much of my creative energy has been invested in a feature film I created with my band Coyote Motel—scripting, recording narration, performing as part of the band, editing, and learning many painfully new and hard lessons about movie-making. And then getting the film to festivals, where we’ve won laurels, and onto a few select screens. Now, I’m working on distribution, in a field where there ain’t no Bandcamp or DistroKid. It ain’t easy, but I’m obsessed with getting The River: A Songwriter’s Stories of the South into the world.

The current state of Ted’s pedalboard. (He’s aware he could do a better job with the wiring.)

Kate Koenig - Managing Editor

Kate’s newest album, which contains some of their rawest and most vulnerable lyrics to date.

A: I wear my heart on my sleeve—to the point where I’ve always struggled to have a verbal filter—so I tend to write very raw, vulnerable lyrics. A taste for cerebral art during my formative years has also informed my approach to coming up with challenging and intricate fingerpicking guitar parts.

When PG’s worldly gear editor Charles recommended Black Flag’s record Damaged, Kate got on that posthaste.

Obsession: I’ve been revisiting, digging into, and expanding my knowledge of classic ’80s and ’90s punk in preparation for my next artist interview for Premier Guitar(some foreshadowing, eh?). I have always been intrigued by punk culture’s outspoken rebelliousness and commitment to anarchic ideals, which strike me as free and authentic.

Kate has a distinct memory of a classmate playing “You’re Gonna Go Far, Kid” on loop in their senior-year studio-art class. (They still wonder why their teacher didn’t intervene.)


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