Music / Premieres
Read Me Your Work -
A conversation about lyrics with Jarrow
A conversation about lyrics with Jarrow
In her new podcast series Read Me Your Work, pting bandleader/TJ contributor/general woman about town Elsie Lange chats with artists and writers about what they have written lately.
Elsie started the podcast as a way for people to keep sharing and giving their art to others while entertainment industries have been shattered. In each episode a contributor reads something they have written - lyrics, poetry, short fiction, non-fiction, or a review, it could be anything.
In episode two, Elsie chats with Dan Oke, the mastermind behind Jarrow, about his song ‘Project x Prodigy’, from his forthcoming self-titled record out on May 22nd. Read on to indulge in an excerpt of their conversation, or better yet, dive into the full podcast below.
In episode two, Elsie chats with Dan Oke, the mastermind behind Jarrow, about his song ‘Project x Prodigy’, from his forthcoming self-titled record out on May 22nd. Read on to indulge in an excerpt of their conversation, or better yet, dive into the full podcast below.
Elsie: You’re going to be reading us something from your upcoming release, tell us a little bit about what it is and why you wrote it.
Dan: The song I’m going to read today is a song called ‘Product x Prodigy’, it’s on the side B of my new album. It’s a song that covers a lot of themes on the album. It’s also one that I kind of want to break down before people get other ideas.
I guess the style of the song is more upbeat actually, it’s got a sort of funky, electronic beat round the back of it, so it's gonna sound really dark [without it]... this is the first verse of the song.
PROJECT x PRODIGY
Being a product usurps being a prodigy
I wish that someone told me that
Before I got to 23 and the weight was lifted off my back
Is there not even a shred of human decency
Inside that little brain of yours?
Working all the dials
Take your conscious off the beaten track
That almost sounds like a diss track when I read it out like that. The song is kind of anti-industry, I guess? I wrote the song after preparing to take a break from the mainstream side of doing Jarrow on the bigger scale than what I was used to.
The song was written as a reflection of that and about feeling a bit deflated after the process.
You have taken a really different path with your latest release. In the past you’ve gone through labels and you’re still going through a label this time, but it’s pretty close-knit and you’re working with friends - do you think those lyrics were more before you came to the new place you’re in to release this record?
Definitely. That was something I was really conscious of. I was pitching the album around a fair bit before I ended up with Sam and Spoilsport Records. The process of being able to work one-on-one with a label and bring my ideas to life in away that had more creative control over it. Not that I didn’t before, but I now have the final say about what works and what doesn’t work.
This is the best I’ve felt putting out new music and making the videos. It’s been a really smooth process, which has been nice.
Give us your next verse!
So after that first verse, the chorus of the song is:
Let’s take a ride on that lazy Susan
x4
A lazy Susan is just a rotating plate, and I think what I was going for there is ‘you’re just a piece of cheese on a rotating plate for the world’, I guess that’s the metaphor I was trying to go for there. And it probably sounded a lot deeper in my head.
No, but I totally get it - about being vulnerable and just hanging there waiting. I really like that.
Dan: The song I’m going to read today is a song called ‘Product x Prodigy’, it’s on the side B of my new album. It’s a song that covers a lot of themes on the album. It’s also one that I kind of want to break down before people get other ideas.
I guess the style of the song is more upbeat actually, it’s got a sort of funky, electronic beat round the back of it, so it's gonna sound really dark [without it]... this is the first verse of the song.
Being a product usurps being a prodigy
I wish that someone told me that
Before I got to 23 and the weight was lifted off my back
Is there not even a shred of human decency
Inside that little brain of yours?
Working all the dials
Take your conscious off the beaten track
That almost sounds like a diss track when I read it out like that. The song is kind of anti-industry, I guess? I wrote the song after preparing to take a break from the mainstream side of doing Jarrow on the bigger scale than what I was used to.
The song was written as a reflection of that and about feeling a bit deflated after the process.
You have taken a really different path with your latest release. In the past you’ve gone through labels and you’re still going through a label this time, but it’s pretty close-knit and you’re working with friends - do you think those lyrics were more before you came to the new place you’re in to release this record?
Definitely. That was something I was really conscious of. I was pitching the album around a fair bit before I ended up with Sam and Spoilsport Records. The process of being able to work one-on-one with a label and bring my ideas to life in away that had more creative control over it. Not that I didn’t before, but I now have the final say about what works and what doesn’t work.
This is the best I’ve felt putting out new music and making the videos. It’s been a really smooth process, which has been nice.
Give us your next verse!
So after that first verse, the chorus of the song is:
x4
A lazy Susan is just a rotating plate, and I think what I was going for there is ‘you’re just a piece of cheese on a rotating plate for the world’, I guess that’s the metaphor I was trying to go for there. And it probably sounded a lot deeper in my head.
No, but I totally get it - about being vulnerable and just hanging there waiting. I really like that.
Hear Dan's full breakdown of 'Product x Prodigy' and more excellent conversations about writing here. Jarrow's third album Jarrow is set to drop on Friday, May 22nd, through Spoilsport Records - pre-order the album at jarrow.bandcamp.com.