• Marcus King Talks With Stoney About The Big 2 Day Family Reunion Concert In Simpsonville & The New Album Mood Swings!

  • 2024/06/24
  • 再生時間: 14 分
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Marcus King Talks With Stoney About The Big 2 Day Family Reunion Concert In Simpsonville & The New Album Mood Swings!

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  • Marcus King didn’t plan on making his new album Mood Swings. He didn’t even plan on living much
    longer before he started working on it...
    Heartache, addiction, and mental health brought him to the brink in 2022. However, it’s more than fair
    to say that music brought him back. You can hear it in his grizzled, yet honeyed bellow across these
    eleven tracks. The album feels like the moment of baptism when water washes away a life’s worth of sins
    and degradation and all that’s left is a revived, yet still real-as-hell primal scream.
    It’s as if Marcus strained raw soul straight from his gut up through that broken heart and on to the record
    under the watchful eye of Rick Rubin. Pain quakes below the vibrato of his voice, and his delivery weighs
    heavy with booze-drenched regrets and mistakes in lonely hotels. Emphasizing his vocals
    front-and-center more than ever before, the trusty guitar he’s so often associated with plays the sideman
    this time around (though there’s no shortage of impressive shredding).
    For as dark as everything seemed, you can’t help but feel a sense of hope in the power of Marcus’s voice.
    During a North American tour, Marcus had designs to drink himself to death. He admits, “I had an escape
    route already decided for myself and a backup if that didn’t work.”
    Nevertheless, fate stepped in.
    Rubin saw a performance at the Ryman and decided to cold-call Marcus and they quickly agreed to work
    together on Marcus’ next project. During the promotion of his critically acclaimed album Young Blood,
    Marcus and Rubin covertly holed up for sessions in Italy and Malibu. Instead of crumbling under the
    weight of his anxiety, Rubin inspired him to shift his perspective. Drawing on dark moments where King
    was plagued by suicidal thoughts, dealing with addiction and in mental health crisis, Mood Swings also
    shares a message of hope. Rubin helped King find a new personal and sonic approach to the turbulent
    period in his life that also inspired songs on his previous album. “He helped me view mental health as a
    writing partner in a way,” recalls Marcus. “I’ve learned it can give me that creative spark.”
    In the studio, he opted to spotlight his voice as well. “There was no hiding behind the guitar at all,” he
    grins.
    The single “F*ck My Life Up Again” finds him in a space of reflection, recognizing a predisposition to
    chase codependent relationships. Strings accent the smoky jazz beat, while his soulful delivery booms,
    “Come fuck my life up again, don’t deserve to live without pain.” A guitar solo “played backwards”
    channels stark confusion offset by the unshakable hook.
    Elsewhere, his high register towers over the bluesy guitar of the title track “Mood Swings.” He adds, “In a
    nutshell, Mood Swings is about a guy with ups and downs and his relationship with mental health.”
    On “Hero,” co-written with Young Blood cohort Dan Auerbach [The Black Keys], his croon rises over
    acoustic guitar towards a fluttering crescendo. The song tells the story of “a free-spirited young girl who’s
    not looking for a man to be her hero.” The same naked emotion defines “Delilah” where he depicts “a
    coming-of-age tale about learning how to love and how to allow yourself to stay still long enough to be
    loved.”

    Given his personal challenges, his success is all the more impressive. King is a GRAMMY® nominated
    fourth generation musician from Greenville, SC, who started playing guitar at 8 years old following in the
    footsteps of his guitarist Father and Grandpa. Logging thousands of miles on the road as “The Marcus
    King Band,” he established himself with unparalleled performance prowess and a dynamic live show.
    During 2020, he linked up with Dan Auerbach and cut his solo debut El Dorado, garnering a GRAMMY®
    Award nomination in the category of “Best Americana Album.” In between packing venues on his own,
    he performed alongside Chris St ...

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あらすじ・解説

Marcus King didn’t plan on making his new album Mood Swings. He didn’t even plan on living much
longer before he started working on it...
Heartache, addiction, and mental health brought him to the brink in 2022. However, it’s more than fair
to say that music brought him back. You can hear it in his grizzled, yet honeyed bellow across these
eleven tracks. The album feels like the moment of baptism when water washes away a life’s worth of sins
and degradation and all that’s left is a revived, yet still real-as-hell primal scream.
It’s as if Marcus strained raw soul straight from his gut up through that broken heart and on to the record
under the watchful eye of Rick Rubin. Pain quakes below the vibrato of his voice, and his delivery weighs
heavy with booze-drenched regrets and mistakes in lonely hotels. Emphasizing his vocals
front-and-center more than ever before, the trusty guitar he’s so often associated with plays the sideman
this time around (though there’s no shortage of impressive shredding).
For as dark as everything seemed, you can’t help but feel a sense of hope in the power of Marcus’s voice.
During a North American tour, Marcus had designs to drink himself to death. He admits, “I had an escape
route already decided for myself and a backup if that didn’t work.”
Nevertheless, fate stepped in.
Rubin saw a performance at the Ryman and decided to cold-call Marcus and they quickly agreed to work
together on Marcus’ next project. During the promotion of his critically acclaimed album Young Blood,
Marcus and Rubin covertly holed up for sessions in Italy and Malibu. Instead of crumbling under the
weight of his anxiety, Rubin inspired him to shift his perspective. Drawing on dark moments where King
was plagued by suicidal thoughts, dealing with addiction and in mental health crisis, Mood Swings also
shares a message of hope. Rubin helped King find a new personal and sonic approach to the turbulent
period in his life that also inspired songs on his previous album. “He helped me view mental health as a
writing partner in a way,” recalls Marcus. “I’ve learned it can give me that creative spark.”
In the studio, he opted to spotlight his voice as well. “There was no hiding behind the guitar at all,” he
grins.
The single “F*ck My Life Up Again” finds him in a space of reflection, recognizing a predisposition to
chase codependent relationships. Strings accent the smoky jazz beat, while his soulful delivery booms,
“Come fuck my life up again, don’t deserve to live without pain.” A guitar solo “played backwards”
channels stark confusion offset by the unshakable hook.
Elsewhere, his high register towers over the bluesy guitar of the title track “Mood Swings.” He adds, “In a
nutshell, Mood Swings is about a guy with ups and downs and his relationship with mental health.”
On “Hero,” co-written with Young Blood cohort Dan Auerbach [The Black Keys], his croon rises over
acoustic guitar towards a fluttering crescendo. The song tells the story of “a free-spirited young girl who’s
not looking for a man to be her hero.” The same naked emotion defines “Delilah” where he depicts “a
coming-of-age tale about learning how to love and how to allow yourself to stay still long enough to be
loved.”

Given his personal challenges, his success is all the more impressive. King is a GRAMMY® nominated
fourth generation musician from Greenville, SC, who started playing guitar at 8 years old following in the
footsteps of his guitarist Father and Grandpa. Logging thousands of miles on the road as “The Marcus
King Band,” he established himself with unparalleled performance prowess and a dynamic live show.
During 2020, he linked up with Dan Auerbach and cut his solo debut El Dorado, garnering a GRAMMY®
Award nomination in the category of “Best Americana Album.” In between packing venues on his own,
he performed alongside Chris St ...

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