16 October 2017

camaron marvel ochs

Interview: Cam – The Golden State Girl

With her sunny disposition and effervescent vocal, Camaron Marvel Ochs is country music’s very own “Little Miss Sunshine”. Country Music caught up with the bubbly blonde to get the lowdown one of the scene’s brightest lights. Charismatic, Camaron Marvel Ochs, aka Cam, is the Californian gal with the psychology degree who wowed every stage she played at this year’s Country to Country Festival. She’s a thoughtful, engaging woman and her debut album, Untamed, and breakout single Burning House, are rare in being instant classics that also repay repeated listens. A jolt of fresh energy, Cam has not looked back since she released her debut studio album, Heartforward, in 2010 on an independent record label. She was soon snapped up by Sony Music Entertainment and released both a debut EP, Welcome to Cam Country, and Untamed in 2015. The 32-year-old singer-songwriter has gone on to charm country music fans the world over… You’re a born and bred Californian, so why did you pick country music? Being Californian, we are aware of how country music migrated during the dustbowl, and brought the whole Bakersfield sound. You had all these people making music for dancehalls, for their own audience. They were doing it in their own way. That’s something that all Californians love; being independent and entrepreneurial. When we make any kind of music, we make it how we want to make it. Like [hip-hop icon] Kendrick Lamarr, I’m so proud he’s from my state. If you’re going to devote your life to something that’s probably going to put you in financial ruin… I couldn’t just sing, “oh baby, baby”. What are your first memories of music? I remember being in my parents’ room, and besides Twinkle Twinkle Little Star, the first song that I knew how to sing was I’ll Follow The Sun [from the Beatles For Sale album], which I’d been listening to with my friends. I was maybe five, and we’d just moved to Northern California, and I would sing those words over and over. Growing up, what country music did you listen to? Patsy Cline was my favourite to put on repeat at the ranch. I sang Crazy and I still do. Some Willie Nelson. My parents and grandparents also loved what’s on the fringe of country, like Bonnie Raitt and Ray Charles. People with one foot in country, one foot out. I met Bonnie at the Grammys, and she is hip! That streak in her hair is the hippest thing I’ve ever seen. Were there any musicians in your family? Nobody! My dad sings well and is a great singer, great tone and pitch. But when he was in elementary school he was singing through the halls on the way to the bathroom, and a teacher was annoyed with him for making so much noise. So he brought him in front of this older class and said, if you want to sing for everyone, do it right now. It embarrassed the shit out of him, and he says that was the end of his musical career. You don’t really meet musicians in the Bay Area, in California; it’s such an expensive place to live. One of my friend’s dads was in a cover band and that’s the closest I ever heard anyone. It wasn’t really a financial career, so you’d never devote your life to it. When I got into psychology, I loved the research, studying emotions and what makes you feel the way you want to. Just when I was about to dive into that career full-blown, I went to my professor and she said: picture yourself 80 years old, and what you’d regret, missing out on psychology or music? I was like, ‘doh!’, it’s music. So I’d graduated at 21, but didn’t quit everything until I was 24 or 25. How did you keep involved in music while studying? I graduated from UC Davis, which is very agricultural, so on Wednesdays I went line dancing. I started doing research there, and then I worked at Berkeley, then Stanford, which is where I talked to my professor about getting out. That’s when I switched. I learned how to play guitar during college, and back in fourth grade, my parents put me in a children’s choir. So that’s how I learned how to sing, to read music, to harmonise. I learned theory, and I could sing in 14 languages! We did lots of religious stuff, and actually travelled Europe and sang in Canterbury Cathedral, and Notre Dame in Paris. In high school I sang in the choir. Then in college I started an all-female a capella group. That was awesome, because there wasn’t one, and they’re still going, and sell out this huge concert hall on campus every year. I am so proud it still exists. When it started out I had friends sit with me on a couch when people auditioned so it looked like there was a group already! Did your studies help with songwriting ideas? In Davis I worked on attachment theory, how you relate to your parents and your romantic partner. Then, at Berkeley under Bob Levenson, I learnt relationship dynamics and conflict resolution… which was all very songwritery! In Stanford, under Jeanne Tsai who does culture affect valuation theory, I was educated in how culture influences what emotions you want to feel. How in Eastern cultures, there’s a valuing of calm and peaceful, and in Western cultures there’s generally a valuing of excitement. What music were you listening to during this time? I love travelling, and I spent four months in Nepal. I realised there were things I needed to re-learn. So when I came home I started listening to American genres – hip hop and country. I’d been one of those people who picked songs that I liked from genres, but never only one genre. I loved soundtracks and my grandparents’ 30s, 40s, 50s music, and my parents’ music from the 60s. Tell us all about your most recent album, Untamed.

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Chris Stapleton

Chris Stapleton – King Of The Hill

He’s the country star on everybody’s lips right now, an unassuming, modest man with simply a stellar talent for songwriting and singing. Here’s why Chris Stapleton is bound for more glory in 2017. Alongside Jason Isbell, Chris Stapleton is the current hottest property in country music. His 2015 Traveller album grew to become country’s biggest selling album in 2016 and new album, From A Room: Volume 1, has already gone Gold – the first country LP to do so in 2017. With Volume 2 due later this year, Stapleton’s undoubtedly on a roll. Here’s 12 reasons why Chris Stapleton is once again going to win over the country faithful and mainstream in 2017: 1. He grew into bluegrass Living a shared house in Kentucky in his late teens, Stapleton and friends absorbed themselves in bluegrass. “I really got heavy into it. It was more of a modern bluegrass… I didn’t really grow up with that kind of music.” From 2008 to 2010, Stapleton was the lead singer of The SteelDrivers, a blistering gut-bucket-bluegrass quintet founded by some of Nashville’s most gifted backroom players. But it was Stapleton’s gutsy voice and timeless lyrics that made them a hit with traditionalists and critics alike, not to mention an increasing army of fans who stumbled across them. A self-titled debut album (2008) and follow-up, Reckless (2010), earned them three prestigious Grammy nominations. 2. He can rock with the best Stapleton left The SteelDrivers (replaced by Gary Nichols) but soon founded the Jompson Brothers, a Southern-rock outfit serving up barely-veiled sex and drugs references like Ride My Rocket and Secret Weapon. Peer approval for The Jompson Brothers came quickly, though: Zac Brown hand-picked them as a support act and Jason Aldean adopted Secret Weapon as his live show intro theme. “It’s just one of those songs that gets you fired up and ready to go,” says Aldean. 3. He had Nashville at “Hello” Arriving in Nashville in 2001 “with a chair, a sleeping bag, a sack full of clothes, a recorder and my guitar,” Stapleton signed a publishing deal with Sea Gayle Music after a week. Good job, as all else he had was two months of basic living expenses as a gift from an encouraging uncle. It was in the Sea Gayle office that he first bumped into Morgane Hayes, a fellow singer and top-shelf songwriter who later scored a big hit with Carrie Underwood’s Don’t Forget To Remember Me. 4. He’s married to music Stapleton and Hayes became an item, and eventually married in 2007. The two have become perhaps the greatest unsung duo in modern country, with Morgane serving as Stapleton’s harmony partner, onstage foil, and all-around muse: onstage, you can see she is clearly dazzled by his talent, especially when he hits some of those high notes, but everyone knows that while he’s great, he’s even greater with her. “We’re married so we hold each other accountable,” says Stapleton. “We can lift each other up on bad nights, kind of give each other a wink when we screw up or do something funny.” It’s the sort of ‘Golden Couple’ story every country fan loves. “They light each other up,” says Stapleton’s producer Dave Cobb said. “He knows that when she walks in the room, he’s got to make it better.” 5. Traveller was the perfect debut Released in May 2015, Stapleton’s solo debut Traveller was met with universal acclaim, from fans and critics alike. The title track was written while on a road trip with his wife, driving down Interstate 40 from Phoenix, Arizona, to Nashville via New Mexico. Its sales are now nudging the two million mark in the USA alone, and at Metacritic’s aggregated ratings it received an average score of 85 out of 100. For a debut country album, that’s quite astonishing. 6. He’ll take risks… At the 2015 CMA Awards, Stapleton performed with pop superstar Justin Timberlake (who was already a friend), performing his own version of the song popularised as a George Jones live-show staple, Tennessee Whiskey and Timberlake’s Drink You Away. “He’s one of the greatest musical talents in this world,” Stapleton said of Timberlake, which are bold words to a country audience. However, there is no doubting that it was Stapleton’s night, taking home a trio awards: New Artist of the Year, Album of the Year and Male Vocalist of the Year. 7. …And reap the rewards Stapleton’s admiration for Timberlake is mutual: “REAL music fans already know. So mainstream: @ChrisStapleton Remember that name,” the pop star tweeted after the duet, and that CMA Awards co-performance was a definite water-cooler moment – soon after, Stapleton’s sales rose 6,000 per cent and Traveller soared to become a Billboard No.1 album. 8. He’s a songwriting machine… Stapleton already fits the perfect Nashville narrative, with him writing a slew of hits for other artists. After penning 50 album tracks, he scored his first single – and first No.1 – with Josh Turner’s Your Man. Other chart-topping hits include Never Wanted Nothing More for Kenny Chesney, Darius Rucker’s Come Back Song, Drink A Beer by Luke Bryan and Thomas Rhett’s Crash And Burn. Tim McGraw, George Strait, Lee Ann Womack and Alan Jackson have also cut his songs. His songs reach way beyond Guitar Town, too – If It Hadn’t Been For Love, which he wrote for former band The SteelDrivers, was cut by global superstar Adele for the deluxe edition of her 21 LP, one of the best-selling albums (31 million copies!) of all time. 9. …But also studies the craft For 2017’s From A Room: Volume 1, Stapleton carefully picked out one song to cover: Gary P Nunn and Donna Sioux Farar’s Last Thing I Needed, First Thing This Morning, taken to No.1 by Willie Nelson in 1982. “I think it’s one of the greatest country songs ever written,” says Stapleton. “If you wanted an instruction manual on ‘How You Write a Country Song’, that song would do it.” Recorded as an outlaw country

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