LADYGUNN VIDEO PREMIERE: Aly Tadros – "This Is How You Lose Her"

story by Aly TadrosĀ 

Ever want something you thought youā€™d never have?

I have, more times than I can count.

In April of last year I was opening for Louise Goffin at the Union County Performing Arts Center in Rahway, New Jersey.Ā  Iā€™ve played some nice rooms over the years, but none like this. I stepped out onto the stage for sound check, took a long look at the theatreā€™s vaulted ceilings, tiered chandeliers and absolutely fell in love. Never mind that itā€™s a 1600-seater, and I usually play 250 capacity rooms, tops. The only reason Iā€™m here is because Iā€™m opening for Louise, and all I want to do is figure out how to come back. A voice in my head tells me I will shoot a music video here. Another voice tells me to eat a case of sour patch kids.

In that moment, I had not even written the song, but didnā€™t give the ā€œhowā€ much thought. I know better now. My entire music career has been built on seemingly impossible dreams.

Ten years before I stepped on stage in Rahway, I sat in my boyfriendā€™s living room in Austin, Texas fiddling with my acoustic guitar. Iā€™d just started learning Mirahā€™s ā€œArchipelago,ā€ and was stumbling through the chords, trying to impress him. I kept fucking up. Slowing down to try and remember the next chord, hitting the wrong notes, and then apologizing. Long, dumb silences while I cursed and corrected myself. Feeling my face grow hot.

ā€œItā€™s okay,ā€ he told me, ā€œmaybe when youā€™re on stage, itā€™ll just be your thing. Long, slow pauses in the middle of songs. It could be cool.ā€

Pffft. I could barely even hold a guitar upright, much less play it. I knew the opening riff to Nirvanaā€™s ā€œCome as You Areā€ and that was pretty much it. He referred to me on stage as casually as heā€™d ask me to pass the salt, and I thought he was nuts. I was a college kid, not a musician. Music was something other, more courageous people did. I couldnā€™t even muster up the discipline to get through a simple tune without freaking out.

Though I didnā€™t have much guitar prowess, I did have enough going on in my life that I had to get my feelings out. That boyfriend and I broke up, and a few nights after, I stayed up late and spilled all my frustration into my first song. I played it for my sister, and she actually liked it. So I played it for a friend and then tried an open mic. A few weeks later I met with Alexis, my first songwriting and voice teacher. After having me play every song Iā€™d written (all three of them), she told me I was going to record an album. Since I was paying her good money to tell me what to do, I wrote down the list of tasks she gave me, anxiety bubbling up in the pit of my stomach.

ā€œYou know any graphic designers? Great! Call them.ā€ She told me. ā€œYou should aim to write another 10 songs.ā€

I had no idea if I was going to be able to pull any of it off, but nodded anyways. She promised me all I had to do was follow the steps she laid out, one by one.

ā€œOh and next weā€™ll book your first show.ā€

Fuck, I thought. Maybe it wonā€™t be so bad and by the time we get a gig Iā€™ll have written a lot more songs and practiced and everything will be fine?

A week later, Iā€™d booked my first gig. It was a two-hour set, and I figured my three songs would get old if I just played them, over and over. So I pieced together a band, wrote another few songs, and learned enough covers to make up the difference. I was a musician.

ā€”

That show went surprisingly well. Well enough that Iā€™ve played over 800 gigs and released three records since.

This past year I crowdfunded enough money to record my third album, with just enough left over for a video. I knew immediately that I wanted to shoot it at the Performing Arts Center in Rahway. So I got to work, putting the music video together, one uncomfortable phone call at a time. Nobody ever taught me how to sound like I knew what I was doing when negotiating a 1600 seat theater rental. Like everything else in my career, I went in fairly sure Iā€™d make an ass of myself, but did it anyway. Everything Iā€™ve ever asked for has felt well above my pay grade, until it wasnā€™t anymore.

Today, weā€™re celebrating the premiere of ā€œThis is How You Lose Herā€.

Itā€™s still kind of crazy to me that the video came together. Sure, I didnā€™t just roll out of bed and make the video (though I did spend an offensive amount of those work days in my PJs). There were plenty of obstacles along the way. I went well over budget, ended up dipping into my own money, delaying the release 6 months. But it really just was a series of steps that I was taking for the first time. The journey from my boyfriendā€™s apartment, to touring the world, and now to releasing this video taught me how to be comfortable in confusion. It wasnā€™t that I knew how to do any of this, but more so that I got comfortable figuring it out along the way.

There are probably things you think are out of your league. Youā€™re afraid you will look like an idiot. I get it. Iā€™m still afraid of making an ass of myself most days, and often, I do. But then I keep moving. I realized that you rarely know what youā€™re capable of until youā€™re in over your head. Thatā€™s how I became a musician, and now, how I created this video.

Now I love the awkward silences I sometimes leave in the middle of songs. They embarrassed the hell out of me in my boyfriendā€™s living room years ago, but now they are my moment to reflect on how far Iā€™ve come. Mostly, by making an ass of myself.

 

CONNECT WITH ALY TADROS:

West Coast Dates:
Los Angeles, CA,Ā January 21, Hotel Cafe – second stage
Fullerton, CA,Ā January 22, The Continental Room
San Francisco, CA,Ā January 24, Neck of the Woods
Portland, OR,Ā January 25, White Eagle Saloon

Ā Seattle, WA,Ā January 27, Fremont Abbey