Zitat des Tages von Aubrie Sellers:
A lot of the songs are very rock-oriented. My voice makes them country, and a lot of people think that is a strange combination... I think it creates something different and unique.
My record's all electric, and that's why I call it 'garage country.'
My favorite movies are from directors that have a vision, like Wes Anderson or Tim Burton.
One great thing about my mom, about the business, is that she has a really great head on her shoulders about everything and always has been 100 percent about the music and not about the other junk.
I always knew I was going to do something with music, but with my whole family being in the business, acting was something that was just mine. But when I was 20 or 21, I started writing songs and felt the itch to make a record.
It is like therapy to write and have people connect with it. That's the kind of music I connect with most.
I prefer to create friction. Because if you're not pushing buttons, you're just making something pleasant; it's probably been done before, and it's not making anyone feel anything.
I was always drawn to darker sounds, things with an edge and a little bit of grit, things that have a lot of emotion and a lot of drive.
When I'm writing, I'm focusing more on just the basic melody and the lyrics.
My voice is very country, and my songwriting is very country.
'Sit Here and Cry' was one of the first songs I wrote with that overdramatic sarcastic dry sense of humor, which is why the energy of the song doesn't necessarily reflect the subject matter.
When I was thinking of video ideas for this song, I wanted it to reflect the energy of the music and express the big eye roll that 'Sit Here and Cry' is. I had a very specific visual vision for it, and when I saw Sam Siske's reel, I knew he was going to get it.
I'm a very friendly, smiley person.
There's a new grievance every day to write about.
There's a lot to live up to when three of your parents are successful in the music business.
Vocally, I sound like my mom. I don't think I can help it. That's just my natural voice.
Listening to 'Raising Sand' was one of those turning points in my life that really made something click in my brain.
So much of the music I love is polarizing. People might either hate it or love it, but they remember it because it was different. That means it was pushing buttons and not just following trends.