story / Talullah Ruff
illustrations / Nicole Wargon
Elle King sits across the table from me. Weāre at Hangawi, a Korean restaurant where customers take off their shoes upon entering. Sheās gone from TV tapings to record signings to live performances all week, and we only have twenty minutes before she leaves for the airport. But King is laid back, at ease on the floor cushions, platinum hair and winged liner offset by a Mƶtley CrĆ¼e t-shirt and arms crowded with tattoos. Sheās unconcerned with our timing, ordering jasmine tea from the waitress and breathing it in when it arrives. However, she answers each question with fervor, wide eyes engaging as her mouth motors to keep up with her thoughts.
King is twenty-nine, with just two full albums under her belt, but already sheās cemented herself as a force in a multitude of genres. Since the release of The Elle King EP in 2012, King toured with the likes of Dixie Chicks, James Bay, Of Monsters and Men, and Ed Sheeran. Her single āExās and Ohāsā off her first LP Love Stuff has sold over two million copies, peaked at number ten on the Billboard Hot 100, and was nominated for two Grammys. The songās clean, jangly pop production is contrasted by Kingās signature grit, her wails, and growls akin to hard-rock fire. And yet, Kingās 2017 country collaboration with Dierks Bentley, āDifferent For Girlsā (which earned a Grammy nomination and won a CMA) shows the tender, understated side of Kingās voiceā proving that King knows how to use her sizable range and memorable tone with finesse.
Shake the Spiritā her latest releaseā is a dynamic exploration of Kingās personality, at once intimate and playful and fierce. While āShameā harkens back to the style of āExes and Ohāsā with its inescapable hooks and distorted vocals, āManās Manā is stark and vicious in comparison, allowing the nuance in Kingās voice to take precedence. āIt Girlā is a pithy jaunt, with lyrics such as āTo be a hit / Itās all in the wristā set to a warbled brass section and bouncing beat. āLittle Bit Of Lovināā is the albumās finale and mission statement. It begins as chipper pop-rock, growing into its earnestness. With a choir voicing approval at Kingās impassioned proclamations, the song nods at the gospel. And as this energy grows, āLittle Bit Of Lovināā reveals integral lyrics and the message behind her album title: āYou can be living, but you’re not really alive / You have to be awoken, you have to be revived.ā King declaresā refreshingly upbeat for rock nā rollā that the power to revive is not found in an outside source, but found within oneself.
In our short time together, Elle King discussed her thoughts on the future of rock nā roll, the strength of her voice (physically and metaphysically), and the importance of being nice.
Ā Every song on Shake the Spirit sounds like it could be a singleā are lyrics and melody lines an inseparable part of the songwriting process for you?
Ā I think itās all kinda different. I mean, sometimes Iāll sit down like I wrote most of the songs on bass and so I would come up with a groove and Iād write lyrics to fit that. And the kind of songwriter I am, Iām not gonna sit and write a song about this day and blah, blah, blahā¦ I just kinda let it come out. So, most of the time, I usually come up with them together, so itās this weird thing that comes out. But other times, and only recently like on this process, will I try to sit on something and try and write it later. But usually, it all comes out in one kind of go of it. Otherwise, if I donāt really sit down and let it out in one sitting, it doesnāt usually get finished except for a couple songs. āTold You So,ā I played everything and wrote by myself, but didnāt write the chorus ātil seven months in between. And I tried to write the chorus with a bunch of people, but everyone that I took it to, what they loved about it they then tried to change. I loved it so much and I was like: Iām the only person who could write this. And one night it just came to me and I wrote the chorus for that. So, I don’t know, itās all kind of different, but usually, itās in one sitting and itās melody and groove at the same time.
Do you ever feel like thereās anything you wonāt write about or share in your music? Do you ever get nervous being so candid in your lyrics? I was listening to āIt Girl,ā and itās awesome, but also in something with more emotionally taxing lyrics, as well.
Thank you, thank you.
I donāt know, I don’t know. I feel like Iām a super open person and Iāve really respected people whoāve been really open. Like when I was fifteen or sixteen, Cat Powerās album The Greatestā
I donāt know if youāre familiar with that album, but she has this song called āHateā on it, and the lyrics are: āI hate myself and I wanna die,ā but itās this beautiful, sad, song. And I remember not being like, āWhoa, thatās too heavy!ā What it made me feel was like, āWow, Iām young and angsty, and I wanna just hug her.ā And I loved her. So, Iāve always loved Cat Power and Iāve always loved that kind of thing. I donāt write music to please anybody else, I really do write music as a cathartic kind of therapy. So, I donāt knowā I canāt say what Iāll do in the future; Iām not ashamed of anything I made, Iām proud of what I made. This is the music I make and I donāt make it for anybody else but me; it may be uncomfortable for some people. If it makes people uncomfortable, they can listen to something else. I donāt really give a shit if people donāt connect with it. I donāt have a problem with that, I understand that. I donāt wanna listen to death metal all day. I respect that people may not wanna listen to my music all the time. So, it just makes me that much more grateful for the people who do wanna listen to my music and I donāt know, everyone has different taste in genres. I donāt really wanna hear trap music and metal, you know, so I understand that and Iām okay with that.
Iām not just saying that I wouldnāt say it if I didnāt mean it! So, I was listening to one of your interviews and you were talking about the collaborative, familial spirit of your band, which I think can especially be a challenge when one person is clearly the leaderā do you have any tips for aspiring bands/musicians on this collaboration process and how to build these successful and lasting relationships?
I had to really pull it out of the guys because we had to get to a space that was comfortable. So, I think the best advice is that when it comes to being open in a creative space, it can be pretty uncomfortable to share your ideas and youāll get shot down. Iāve always said the worst thing anyone can ever tell you is āNo,ā and āNoā is always negotiable, in most cases. It just comes with being comfortable, and you donāt get what you donāt ask for and if you donāt say your idea, youāll never get your idea out. It can be uncomfortable, just do it with people youāre comfortable with. When I first started making music and I would go around doing these co-writes with people, it was like a first date and it was really uncomfortable. And because I make music from a really personal place, sometimes it just wasnāt a good fit, you know, and I think the more you practice it and the more you practice writing music with other people, the more comfortable you get. But I think if anyone were to be making music in the way that I do, which is really a personal kind of thing, you just have to be comfortable, and then soon enough you get more confidence in yourself. Iāve only made two albums and Iāve only made one album in a band scenario, so I donāt know if I know everything on it, but Iām proud of what we did. I think that we had a really great collaborative effort. But it wasnāt like, āOh, every day we wrote a fucking hit song!ā It was hard work, you know. But we ended up writing like twenty-five songs togetherā well, maybe we wrote fifteen songs together and I wrote like thirty.
Thatās great. I can tellā or at least to my earsā listening to Shake The Spirit there are a lot of Soul and 60ās rock influences. Were there any specific musical influences for Shake the Spirit? Were there any specific artists that made deep impressions on you or helped you in some way, when you were younger?
Well, I really didnāt listen to too much music literally for like a year. I listened to a very short list of things, and that was Abba, Parliament, Disco Goldā which is just a mix of disco songsā and I listened to this one song on repeat called āYouāre Gonna Need Me,ā by Barbara Lynn, and itās just an old soul, kind of a doo-woppy kind of feel. But I didnāt want anything new to kind of creep in and I didn’t want it to seem like I was copying any trend. And I donāt really listen to any new music anyway, which seems kind of hypocritical because I put out new music, but whatever, I like what I like, just like I said. But when I think about my deep-rooted influences, I love Aretha Franklinā itās really hard because I donāt know if what I do is compartmentalizing, but I have different genres of music and I think that because I have idols in every genreā And so yeah, Iāve got soul heroes, Iāve got country heroes, Iāve got rock heroes. And Mƶtley CrĆ¼e is not on the list but this is a cool shirt. I donāt know if I could cite Mƶtley CrĆ¼e as a hero. If I had to do my female heroes, itād be Aretha Franklin, Dolly Parton, Wanda Jackson, Joan Jett, and maybe Mavis Staples. Yeah, I think thatās good to go with, all female. I just love big powerful voices.
Unrelated to anything, did you see the new Joan Jett movie?
I havenāt yetā Sheās the coolest. Sheās probably one of the coolest people. I got to meet her and record with her and we hung out and sheās just the best. Sheās really amazing. I swear Iām not trying to name drop or anything but Iāve really had the most beautiful luck and gotten to meet a lot of my heroes and Iāve found that the people that Iāve idolized, Iām glad that I idolized them because theyāre really kind, really cool, really down to earth, and it just reminds me that thatās such a big reason probably why theyāre where they are because people root for them. So, I always have it in my head: be kind, people will root for you. And of course, thereās always gonna be fucking assholes, assholes will always creep in. But I donāt know, I just feel sorry for them because you wonder what they think at night when they lay their head down, you know? But the nice ones, they sleep well. I sleep well.
Yeah. Thatās actually part of one the later questions I was going to ask you about, I forgot where I read it, but I saw you were talking about Joan Jettā¦ You talked about how the most successful and badass women are the women who are also nice. Do you think thereās a way for women in rockā especially because rock is a notorious boyās clubā to be nice but to also be a strong presence and still be successful? Do you think women can be both, in rock music?
Ā I think so, yeah. I think so. I mean, Iām probably six or seven years in this now. And Iāve had success in rock and Iāve had success in alternative music. But I used to think that I had to be so much tougher. But when I was first really starting out and touring, I thought that everybody was my friend. And so I partied with everybody and I was niceā I can out-party anybody. And so I just did whatever I wanted and I thought it was all a good time. And then I realized: these guys donāt take me seriously. So I started realizing: I donāt have to be everybodyās friend. Iām nice to everyone and Iāll always be nice. Iāll like you until you give me a reason not to like you. Unfortunately, some people have given me a reason not to like them. And they havenāt been nice to me or they havenāt been, I donāt know. But if guys donāt think women in rock music are a threat then they probably should get their fucking eyes and their ears checked because I think there are so many women that are really driving everything. And thatās why, you know, Iāve never been asked to produce anything, you know, so I just took it in my own hands. And like, I donāt think that there are enough female producers out there, I donāt think that thereāsā¦ I will always say that we need more women to do everything. Because I think that women have, I donāt know, I donāt think people give women enough credit. Oh my God, did you hearā I just heard this thing of this female pilot on Southwest, this plane that dropped their engine, I just saw this last night on television. And the female pilot is so calm, she sounds like sheās just talking to another person, and people got sucked out of the plane, and sheās so calm. Yeah, look up Southwest flight female pilot, like 1380 or something like that. It was the craziest thing Iāve ever seen. My dad always says men canāt handle their emotions as women can. But women have such a bad rep, that weāre crazy and emotional, blah, blah, blah. So, if you canāt tell, Iām very pro-women.
So, talking about the nuances in your voice, which I love. Especially on āManās Man,ā by the wayā
Ooh, I just cringe about that song. Thatās the only song that makes me really nervous, but I donāt regret anything and I hope people know when they listen to the lyricsā I just want people to know that Iām not generalizing in any sense of the word. I can only speak and sing about experiences that Iāve gone through. I just get nervous because Iād never want to hurt anyone and have someone think or assume that Iām generalizing or singing about anyone else. It was just an experience song. Iām sorry, go ahead, I just get nervous.
Ā No, I totally get that. So, my question was: What has your process been in developing your vocal sound throughout your life? Because everyone talks about your defining rasp, so I was just wondering if thatās something youāve had to work on or if that was a natural part of your tone?
Ā My voice was something that I had to grow into. I had started singing when I was much younger, but I donāt think I really grew into my voice until I was nineteen and thatās when I really started writing songs and music was really like, I know it sounds hippy-dippy, but it really does come up through something, through an emotional experience. And I donāt know what else to do, ācause I can get frazzled really easily and Iām not great at speaking about my emotions and formulating words. But for some reason, when itās through the song it really just comes out in a really nice way for me. But I donāt know, I didnāt really try to do anything with my voice. And itās funny ācause I really love watching videos of other people singing my songs and Iāll see young girls trying to kind of do what I did because I would try to emulate singers that I love. I would try to sing like Aretha Franklin and I would try to sing like Dolly Parton or Janis Joplin, and I can hear girls trying to sound like me and Iām like āOh, thatās so crazy!ā And even in the process of this album something new happened and Iām still learning so much more about my body and my voice and what happens, and it was almost like I would work so long, usually only around the banjo, it was almost transcendental. I spent like six hours tracking this song, and I guess some people describe it as throat singing, and I think I might look into that because this thing was happening and I was like, āIs there a demon singing along with me?ā But it felt like this ball of energy would come up through my chest and my teeth would chatter and as I was singing this would happen. It was the craziest experience of my life. I donāt know, I canāt describe it. And thatās just my voice, I donāt know.
What do you think is rock nā rollās place in the music industry right now and continuing on into the future?
Neil Young said, āHey hey, my my, rock nā roll will never die.ā And I believe that. Just like anything, thereās an ebb and flow, and thereās been a change. I think that rock nā roll will never phase out and itās here to stay. I think that it can go through changes and thatās okay, just like anything in the world. But Iām sick of dance music and Iām ready for real rock n roll. I see a lot of young people coming upā I mean, I donāt know if you know who Starcrawler is, but she is like the embodiment of young fucking filthy rock nā roll and sheās just cool. And so I see something like that ten years younger than me and Iām like, āOkay, I feel good.ā And because I have my foot in so many different genres of music, I feel like I have a cool insight into things and I donāt know, rock nā rollās not going anywhere and as long as Iām alive Iām always gonna make rock nā roll and Iām always gonna be rowdy. But I do wish there were more real live bands. Ā You know, I mean I listen to fuckinā Bad Company like thatās rock n roll. Allman Brothers are rock nā roll. AC/DC is rock nā roll. So, thatās what I feel about that. I shouldnāt talk shit, but thereās a lot of bullshit out there thatās not real rock nā roll and thatās how I feel about that.
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