Good Life Project - MILCK | Not Quiet
Episode Date: March 25, 2021Connie Lim, whose artist name is MILCK, rose to widespread attention after a video of an a capella performance of her song "Quiet" on the street at the 2017 Women's March exploded into the public’s ...consciousness going viral and becoming embraced as an anthem for the movement. That moment and the impact and reach of the song led to a major record deal and collaborations as a songwriter that launched the career she’s been working to build for years. But that career almost never happened. MILCK grew up in an enclave of LA, the child of immigrants from China, and was drawn to music from her earliest days. She wrote her first song at 7 years old and studied classical piano and opera. Yet the pressure of intense perfectionism and the expectation she’d eventually leave music behind to follow the family tradition into medicine led her into years of profound emotional struggle. Eventually, she hit a point in college where she decided it was time to choose herself over the expectations of others, as well as the burden of perfectionism that had caused so many years of suffering and harm. MILCK left college and went all-in on music, performing as an independent artist for years, slowly building her name, before that fateful day in 2017 that changed everything. She’s now deep into writing, producing and performing her own work, while also writing with and for other artists and focusing on not just sharing her own creative voice, but also gathering community and shining the light on truth and inequity along the way.You can find MILCK at:Website : https://www.somebodysbeloved.com/Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/milckmusic/-------------Have you discovered your Sparketype yet? Take the Sparketype Assessment™ now. IT’S FREE (https://sparketype.com/) and takes about 7-minutes to complete. At a minimum, it’ll open your eyes in a big way. It also just might change your life.If you enjoyed the show, please share it with a friend. Thank you to our super cool brand partners. If you like the show, please support them - they help make the podcast possible. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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My guest today, Connie Lim, whose artist name is Milk, that's M-I-L-C-K.
She rose to widespread attention after a video of an acapella performance of her song Quiet on the Street at the 2017 Women's March.
It exploded into the public's consciousness, going viral and becoming embraced as an anthem for the movement.
That moment and the impact and reach of the song, it led to a major record deal and collaborations
as a songwriter that really launched the career she's been working to build for years to an
entirely different level. But that very career, this devotion almost never happened. Connie grew
up in an enclave of LA, the child of immigrants from China, and was drawn to
music from her earliest days.
She wrote her first song, actually, at seven years old and studied classical piano and
opera as a kid.
But the pressure of intense perfectionism and the expectation she'd eventually leave
that behind to follow the family tradition into medicine led her into years
of profound emotional struggle. Eventually, she hit a point in college where she decided it was
time to choose herself over the expectations of others, as well as the burden of perfectionism
that had caused so many years of suffering and harm. And Connie left college and went all in
on music, performing as an independent artist for years,
slowly and painstakingly building her skill and also her name before that fateful day in 2017
that would change everything. She's now deep into writing and producing and performing her own work
while also writing with and for other artists and focusing not just on sharing her own creative
voice, but also gathering community and shining the light on truth and inequity along the way. So excited to share
this conversation with you. I'm Jonathan Fields, and this is Good Life Project. We'll be right back. If you're at a point in life when you're ready to lead with purpose, we can get you there.
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I grew up with privilege, so I didn't quite understand the depth of how lucky I was to be surrounded by nature. And now I'm in touch with a community in Memphis where some kids have never seen like a hill, like a, like an incline,
a mountain. And so my partner founded this gym called Memphis rocks, and they're one of the
beneficiaries of the somebody's beloved fund, which we can talk about. But anyways, just meeting
other people who have not had the experience and access to nature and then like going to nature with them
and seeing the impact it has on just the whole spirit of a human being is really profound. So
yeah, I do think about that a lot. Yeah. It's amazing. I mean, especially,
you know, when I think about any, any major city, but, but also in LA in particular, you know,
you've got skid row, which has been there for decades. And as much as people have tried to
figure out how do we, how do we make this better, it's always
there.
And there's this weird tap dance that tends to happen in LA where you acknowledge it and
you try and figure things out.
And a lot of people try and support it.
And yet, to a certain extent, I think a lot of people sort of turn a blind eye because
they just don't know how to do something about it to help it also.
And yet, it's so vast. For those who don't know, Skid Row in LA is basically almost like a small
town. Yeah. And it's grown during COVID. Yeah. I can relate to the feeling of
feeling like a problem is so big and not knowing how to engage and be a part of a solution and then just not doing anything.
And I've done that in my life. I've driven by. And I was just listening to a podcast today about how
the change comes from within, from our individual lives. This really great poet writer, John White,
he was like, to reimagine society, we have to reimagine
ourselves. And one of my friends is actually working on a beautiful project where she is
telling the stories of people on Skid Row. And I hope that creates an opening for more understanding
and just like more engagement, you know, because I think paying attention is the first and essential
step towards helping is just paying attention. And like you said, it's like, sometimes we turn
the blind eye. Once we do that, it's like, no, we have to pay attention. Yeah, no, I so agree with
that. I think awareness is like the first part. Years ago, I knew a guy who at one point in his life was living with
homelessness. And then eventually, as things shifted in his life, he started to just go out
on the street and with a little handheld video camera to just talk to all these people who used
to be part of his community. And he called, and they call the project Invisible People,
because he said, you know, the biggest, one of the biggest things when he was on the street was that you were invisible to people as they walked by, you know, but intentionally invisible, because,
you know, if they acknowledged your humanity, and then didn't do anything about it, it creates this deep sort of ethical pain.
So a lot of people just pretend they don't exist.
That's a really powerful way of describing what happens when we walk on the street and pass,
you know, tragedy and not do anything about it. And sometimes it's not tragedy. I don't want to judge every story.
I'm trying to reassess how I value my time so that maybe I can not get stuck in the flow of
go, go, go. And of course, COVID has helped with that, helped many of us surrender. However, as people are wanting to
start being more productive or finding a new type of rhythm in this unknown, I think acknowledging
the fact that our time is commodified by this capitalist structure helps me to be like, okay,
do I want to participate that? And sometimes I find myself climbing the capitalist ladder, like wanting to be ambitious in certain ways. And so now I'm starting, I'm taking some
time right now to really address because I have done that. I have walked by certain moments and
certain people. And in my mind thought, I just walked by an opportunity to learn more about
humanity because I feel like I have to go get my own
life done and like taken care of and stuff. But like, how can I build a life where I have a little
more luxury to get lost in pockets of time with people unexpectedly? That's, I think that's the
next goal for me. And I'm starting to like restructure my whole career too around it. I've actually really, amicably and respectfully, I'm in the process of leaving my major record label deal because the weight of trying to live up to a certain type of number or certain type of streaming thing is starting to change me in a way that I don't think I'm, it's making me a better person.
I think there's some artists who can handle it really well. And I think I had just have to walk
a different path. Yeah. I mean, but how, how powerful it is to start to awaken to that within
yourself, you know, and also, you know, and, and so often, you know, like, I think that comes in
our lives when on some level we're brought to our knees, you know, it I think that comes in our lives when on some level we're
brought to our knees, you know, it's like, I keep trying to figure out, is there a way
we can get to this place without having to go through that?
And I haven't really figured that out yet.
Yeah.
I was just writing, I do like a newsletter to my followers and my supporters.
And I just said, I think I'm realizing that
suffering and growth are siblings and they walk hand in hand. So I've really felt some hard times
and I've had some really low moments this year and those have been the best teachers. And I
actually feel more free because I've had to question everything. Yeah. I mean, it makes a lot of sense. Like you,
on the one hand you wish it weren't so, but on the other hand, you know, thousands of people
have tried to figure out a different path. And I think every once in a while you stumble upon
something where it just like something, something really cool comes to you and just out of the
ether. But even when that happens, it's sort of like, you didn't move through these sort of like windows of stepping into the abyss before that, would you have been at the place where something just kind of seemed to come with ease even to start with?
Right. It's really well said. I wonder if there are moments where we can kind of dodge the abyss, but I haven't, I haven't found that yet.
Yeah. Cause you know, you want some struggles. Okay. But those moments of grace and ease are pretty sweet also. Yeah, they really are. Yeah. Um, but it's interesting that you're,
you're sort of, um, re-examining the relationship with sort of like the mainstream industry and the
way that labels approach their relationship with artists
and also set expectations for artists where there is a certain set of expectations
that the business needs.
And then sometimes, like you said, that aligns really well with certain artists.
But then others, it becomes this stifling thing that doesn't just affect you personally,
but it also affects your creative, your, your creative expression.
That's yeah.
I would agree with that.
I actually said that to the CEO of the label.
I was really frank.
I said, and they're so kind.
They're such good people.
It's, it's like so tempting to want to, you know,
talk about corporations being these like,
you know, bad organizations,
but oh man, they're just good people.
And I said, the pressure I am putting on upon myself
to keep up with the Joneses,
with my peers at this label,
is clouding my creative voice
and I can't hear myself as well.
And I've tried to find ways and maybe I'll grow and be able to figure that out later to balance expectations and my creative
voice. But I was like, I'm been, and to have a conversation like that
in the context of a corporation is very interesting and also has been well-received. So
it gives me hope, you know, and I still have so much respect, like you said, is just some artists do really well in that context.
And I'm kind of searching elsewhere and doing a project like building a fund around racial justice.
And I'm trying to understand my place as an Asian woman in a country that has a lot of tensions between white and black populations and, you know, native populations
and stuff, just understanding what's my role in this and how can I be a part of this conversation,
even though there's a lot I don't know. And yeah, that has sparked a deeper hunger for me to
understand who I am. What is my heritage? Like, what does it mean to be a Chinese American? And, um, that
journey is leading me elsewhere. So, yeah, I mean, what a, just what an interesting moment you're
in. I mean, it sounds like part of what's going on is not just wanting to pull back from the label
or the, you know, the capital I industry, but also just your own personal yearning for
this space to, for your own internal exploration about like identity and, and place in society
and the world and in your own life.
Yeah.
Identity feels like, I feel like my work to serve others will be more well-informed if I am just really grounded in knowing
who I am, where I come from, and what I stand for. And there's a tension. I rebelled against
my traditional Chinese parents' ways of life. And some of it was so that I could find my voice.
And some of it was because I was a teenager and trying to figure out what pieces of this culture are mine and what does it mean to be Asian American or Asian enough? Is it okay that I don't
know my language fully well, my mother tongue? Is it okay that, you know, there are parts that I
don't agree with, you know, just trying to figure out what that balance is and it's coming out in
song form. And I'm really excited to like do kind of like a longer collection of
songs to explore that question. Yeah. I mean, that's amazing. Your parents are first generation,
right? They were Hong Kong born and then came over here. So it really is, you know, for you,
it's sort of like you're the first US born generation in your family, which creates,
you know, very often just a lot of tension because your parents
are navigating culture that they weren't born into. And then you're navigating both this culture
that you were born into and their culture and their traditions and what they hope you'll become
and what gets passed on and the ethos that they grow up within the value system. So it's sort of like you've got a foot in two worlds, but simultaneously a foot in no world.
Exactly. Well said. And it's my friends and I who have the same experience. We talk about
creating that third culture, absorbing US culture, absorbing our parents' culture,
and coming in and making a mix. That's why Milk why milk my artist name is my last name backwards and my first two initials to kind of uh honor what i was given
but also to mix it up to make it feel right for me and it's what females provide to nourish and
fortify the next generation and within traditional um chinese culture not for every family, but for my personal experience, there is a sense of hierarchy
with gender. And I'm just very, I'm just so, I just know the value and power of the feminine
perspective. And so from the beginning, I've been, I just haven't really kept quiet about those things, which have disrupted
the norm of families, you know, culture. And so it's been interesting walking that line of like
keeping my own voice and honoring, honoring my family and also disappointing them too. I've had to learn how to disappoint people and remain true to myself.
And that's within itself.
I think that's universal.
Yeah.
Right.
I mean, isn't that the journey from childhood to adulthood, right?
You know, it's sort of like when you, when you get comfortable with the fact that you
will, and you have to, to a certain extent, disappoint your parents in order to honor who you are.
And maybe you get really lucky and that actually doesn't disappoint them.
But in some way, shape, or form.
I met very few people that didn't in some way feel like they were letting them down or just not the person that they expected or thought that their folks would be.
And if you're close to your folks, even if there's tension or angst, you know, like I think that still matters for a lot of us.
Yeah.
And I think I've seen like on your podcast, you've interviewed Glennon Doyle and she speaks about it really well and untamed.
Oh, and untamed.
Yeah.
I mean, like I can't remember the line, but she was like,
you become a mother or whatever it was when you actually decide it's okay to disappoint your
mother or something. It was something that I don't, I'm butchering the language, but
yeah, I read that and I was like, Ooh, yeah, that. Yes, that.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, so you're, tell me if I have this right. Your dad is a
physician. Yes. And it sounds like you're tracking in that same place. So when you end up, music was
a part of your early life and we'll circle back to that, but it sounds like, you know, there was
always this expectation that in some way, shape or form, or maybe I'm reading into that, that
you would follow in that, that you would
follow in his footsteps and you would sort of like land in the world of medicine too. So when you
first hit Berkeley, I guess you started it out and you were pre-med. Yes. Yes. It was a deep hope
for my father for me to walk in his footsteps and man, I used to torture me. And now I empathize with it so much because
he knew that that's what kept him safe in a culture, in a new world that he moved himself to
in the United States. He was like, okay, I'm going to hold onto my skills. That's why he told me when
I was younger, build a skill and serve society. And that's, that's the point of life and never
blame others for anything.
Take responsibility for everything.
Those are the kernels of knowledge that he planted within me that have shaped me deeply.
And I think his desire for me to be a physician was also my sister.
Since she was age six, she's older than me.
She's four years older than me.
And since she was really young, she knew she wanted to be a physician. And so she got into
med school at age 16. And so like guaranteed admission. Yeah. USC saw her talent and said,
you can come to college for free and you have a guaranteed admission to, into her medical school.
Okay. So lay it on top of your dad's hope. You have your older sister who didn't just go to med school, but at 16,
she's getting into med school. Oh my God. I know. I know. Um, and man, it's like we have,
my sister and I have a good relationship and I've always, I've always joked with her. I was like,
really, really? Do you got to just lay that on my, on my expectation bucket? But yeah, it's, it's funny now when I was going to Berkeley and I was pre-med
the first year and I just, I just couldn't, I was finding myself like feeling like I was going
crazy. I was like, wait, I'm thinking about molecules and I'm thinking about protons
and electrons. And that's, it's really interesting, but I don't know. Somehow it feels so, so, so micro
that my heart desires to think about feelings and emotions and how do I explain those things.
Those are quite a different landscape. So I didn't quite realize that music was my path.
I didn't let myself realize. my inner knowing new. I knew since
I was really young, but I thought that life was basically composed of moments where you ignore
that little voice that tells you to do something dangerous and just do the thing that is safer
because it will make your loved ones feel safer too. And so I then, I just couldn't handle it anymore.
Anais Nin talks about like when it's just too painful to stay as the bud and you just have to
bloom. And that's what I felt in my third year of college. I left my investment banking internship,
which I don't know what it was. I remember interning 12 hours a day, looking at an Excel
sheet. And I still, to this day, cannot remember what I was doing, but I, uh, I decided to leave
that internship. I called my parents and said, you know, I'm just gonna stay in Berkeley and
write music and leave my internship. And they were shocked, you know? So for anyone who's out there like thinking about doing something like
I feel you, I feel that, that pressure and that anticipation of needing to tell one's truth to
people they love dearly, you know? Yeah. I mean, I can't imagine what's going through as somebody
who's like, you know, as you've shared feels deeply, like when you're in the seconds and minutes
leading up to that phone call where you're going to pick up the phone and talk to your parents and
say, this is what I'm about to do. It must've been brutal. I have this stomach, like I have
acid reflux and I think I'm, I've been going to doctors about it. And most of it they say is
mental. Like it's an emotional
thing. So I felt that I actually had so much stress during that time that my acid levels
built to the point where like, I couldn't speak because the acid had burned my throat so badly.
So I actually walked around for a few weeks writing on a whiteboard, communicating to my
classmates and stuff, but I didn't know that's what was happening. And I was self-medicating too.
I was drinking and I'm smoking.
And because I just felt like I was constantly the quote unquote problem, like not fitting
into the safe lines.
So yeah, it was a lot.
Yeah.
I mean, were your parents aware of what was going on with you sort of earlier? Because I know
I've heard you describe sort of like your earlier years as like on the outside, you were kind of
like playing the role of the perfect kid and like, you know, popular and doing work and doing well in
school. And, but inside there was a certain emptiness building, which, you know, like you're
sort of describing the tipping point. Before you made that call, did they have any sense for what was going on? Or was
this sort of like completely out of the blue for them? I was curious about those.
My father, when I was, he said to me when I was maybe 10 or 11, I don't think he'll remember this,
but I remembered it. He looked at me and he said, when some people are too intelligent, they start to break societal norms
because they see things differently from other people. And he warned me against that. So I think
he knows, and he has that spirit within him. However, he didn't have the luxury to do that,
to really break norms because he was so intent on surviving in the United States. However, he didn't have the luxury to do that, to really break norms because
he was so intent on surviving in the United States. Like, man, he was a custodian. He was
a burger flipper and he worked his way through medical school. And he's quite a marvel within
himself. And to work that hard and intensely and has created this like really cautious energy.
And I think my mother also knew
that I had a fieriness to me
that they were just a little concerned
because, you know, I think
I also have to take back into context,
like, and I, you know,
I'm still researching this and trying to understand,
but, you know, during the cultural revolution in China,
artists were persecuted, books were burned.
And so I think-
It was dangerous to be that person.
It was dangerous.
And I didn't really understand that till this year.
I was like, oh, right.
There was a historical moment that informed this fear that I understand.
So now it's maybe they've done the work so I can heal and return back to some of that
artistry and intellect that maybe for a few generations before me, that wasn't really
a luxury they could even visit.
So I'm grateful.
Yeah, because it's interesting because I was wondering, you mentioned earlier, you know,
in the beginning, you judged a certain lens from your dad.
But at a certain point, it switched to empathy.
And it sounds like, you know, sort of your deeper dive into understanding their context was maybe really helpful in that shift.
Yeah.
And through my siblings, too.
I think there's, I was talking to this Asian-American director.
She does a lot of stuff on Broadway.
And she says, like, the focus has been so much on our parents.
But what about us?
Like, what about our siblings?
And, you know, watching my brother and my sister navigate their own existence in this
third culture has helped inform me.
My sister has made choices to help honor a lot of the traditions of my family. And
my brother has kind of done a fusion. I've kind of, I've completely challenged most of them.
And so, you know, and watching my brother as a Asian male, which is a whole different experience
than an Asian female, John Cho talks about it really well in this podcast with LA Times. He talks about how his father,
John Cho's father moved here as a grown man. So he got to live in Asia in his formative years
and be part of the majority and not ever feel lesser than, but John grew up as a child here
learning some certain ideas. So I see that within my brother and my cousins and stuff. And so
that creates more empathy too,
because we're all kind of like, I mean, we're all figuring it out. And from
just my specific family perspective, my siblings have really helped me understand who I am too.
And we work really hard to empathize and be there for each other as we balance how to be
loyal to our family,
but loyal to ourselves. Yeah. No, I love that. It's really similar to Ram Dass' sentiment.
We're all just walking each other home. Ram Dass. Oh, blessed soul. Yeah. Yeah.
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Mayday, mayday.
We've been compromised.
The pilot's a hitman. I knew you were gonna be fun. January three years into Berkeley and you're like, you know what, I'm going to make a hard left turn here.
And music was part of your life, as you shared from the earliest days, legend having it that
you composed your first song, Healthy People at the age of ripe old age of seven and always
being a part of you.
And so was the immediate first step to just say like, there's this thing
inside of me, like there's the, I need to go into music, which had always been a part of you,
but you need to make it front and center as your full-time thing. And that was the immediate step
out. It was the immediate goal, but not the immediate step because I had to figure out how
to make a living in this world. And so there's that. Yeah. And so I actually leveraged my degree to get a tutoring job at an agency. And tutoring
is great because you just drive to the client's houses. You work with the students. And I loved
teenagers. I think it's such a rich age and middle schoolers. And so I would teach like
English, essay writing, math, and even got into, did I get into some Spanish? I got into some
Spanish for a little bit, but I was like, I can only teach Spanish one. And so yeah, I used that
as a way, but always in the back of my head, I was like, this is going to be the thing that helps me get to a place where I'm doing music full time.
And then I, so constantly every day when I went to work, I was like, I'm grateful for this gig to tutor and it's going to be in the rear view mirror to come.
I don't know when, but it will.
And so then I decided to do voice lessons and
voiceless. I started like just building more of my time with voice lessons,
songwriting lessons, because it felt closer to the craft. And then eventually I started playing
in hotel lobbies, singing covers, which really helps build thick skin because people are, you know, rolling around their suitcases, just trying to like get to bed so that they could go. Like then I kind of, I started learning what makes people
feel moved or where I started learning where my voice that most pleased others in those contexts.
And it helped me also gain respect for my career because I lugged my keyboard everywhere,
my stands. And I would sometimes create an elaborate setup
for a hotel lobby set.
But every time I unpacked my gear
and it can get tedious and it's heavy, the gear.
But I thought this is my prayer of gratitude
for being able to do this.
And one day maybe someone will help me, you know, uh, pack up
the gear and set stuff up and maybe not, but for now, this is all of this is to lead up to that
magical moment where I can sing, you know? It's like, that was your offering to the muse.
Yes. Yeah. Yeah, exactly. And like this sense of respect, like, okay, I really respect this craft and I want to give that. And, you know, it was just like recently Instagram messaging with a fan from Iran. And she was saying that women are not allowed to sing in public. And wow, what a thing to understand as I get to sing and speak my mind all over the place in the United
States. I know we have our problems, but there's that freedom to express ourselves that feels
really valuable. And I don't take it for granted. Yeah. I mean, it's not only is it sort of a living
laboratory for you as you're learning, okay, so where's the sweet spot between what I need to get out and what people want to hear?
You know, it's also this gratitude, like a daily gratitude practice to a certain extent.
Yes.
Yeah.
And the balance that you said between what pleases others or what feels true to me, that
intersection, I think creates some of the music that has resonated.
Like my music that has resonated widely is that perfect intersection where it's like completely my truth, but it also there's enough space for others to find themselves in it.
And that's really fun to write towards.
Yeah, I mean, I love that concept.
I remember a couple of years ago we had Andy Grammer in the studio.
I love him.
And he described a really similar thing.
He's like, you know, people thought, you know, when he pops onto the scene with like a huge
hit was like, oh, like out of nowhere.
But he's like, no, I was actually playing on the third street promenade in Santa Monica
every day for hours, for years.
And he's like, but it wasn't a burden.
It was this amazing
laboratory because I would just keep changing things up and I could see how people responded.
And it taught him to really navigate that sweet spot of what felt awesome to him, but also what
were people really responding to? And he's like, it was this incredible experience that just
informed him both as an artist artist but also as an artist who
could sustain himself I and I can hear that craft and that discipline and work in his music
and even how he shares on social media I'm friends with his wife Asia and I just think they're
a really beautiful pair of people like I just think they put a really beautiful pair of people.
Like, I just think they put really great energy into the world.
And I love that you said that he viewed it like a laboratory.
Because I think that is one of the things I've noticed with some of the great people
I've worked with is that most of their focus is on how this is like an experiment or a learning
opportunity rather than thinking about the end goal or how it will be perceived.
Most of the greats are just curious, like the songwriters I've been able to work with and
producers, they're just curious and want to keep learning. And that's something that has helped me stay resilient
through this unpredictable journey called life and the music business.
Yeah. Which occasionally overlap. So you're playing around and sort of like racking up years, really figuring all this stuff out. Also,
more recently, you have a song called Black Sheep, which I thought was really interesting.
I was wondering if that song was really a reflection on sort of like that season of
your life and how you perceived maybe there were certain expectations about
you and then the choices you were making about the way that you were living your life.
You're so perceptive.
Black Sheep is definitely a reflection of that time and sometimes even now,
much less so because I feel like I've taken and maybe growing up,
that's the beauty of growing up is increased sense of
certainty within one's choices but yeah as a kid I felt like why do I constantly have to
disappoint or just push against what they want like it's almost as if I'm doing it on purpose
but I really I look back now I wasn't I was just sincerely doing my best. But there are times
where I was like, am I just like attracting trouble? Because for the sake of it, am I just
really that rebellious of a person? And so the chorus of Black Sheep was something that I wasn't
able to write until I was able to build my own home and like find
acceptance and love within myself. And I also was in a relationship where my partner really
accepted me for who I was. And I felt, oh, wow, I can build a home where I can feel like good in it,
you know, and feel right. And yeah, that song actually actually is is like not the most well-known
song of mine however when I get messages from people on Instagram or you know emails like that
song comes up a lot so I think it kind of hits people like the people who need to hear it
connect with it and then they like kind of stay on board and have supported a lot
of my other stuff. So it's a special one. Yeah. That doesn't surprise me because it's really,
I mean, like so much of what you write is it feels like you are, I never like to say giving
voice to, cause nobody gives voice to another person, but you're giving language to another
person's feelings in a way where they're like, Oh, that, you know, like, I don't know how to describe this or I don't know how to tell somebody this is what's going on inside of me.
But there's this song and there's both the melodies and the music and then the lyrics.
This explains what's happening, like not just what I'm thinking, but what I'm feeling.
And I feel like a lot of what you write does that.
That means a lot.
Thank you.
Yeah, I think that's the goal of many writers, like songwriters, like as we're growing up
and listening to songs and we ourselves didn't know how to express things.
And all of a sudden the song comes along and is able to express all the things and in a
way that's so powerful. And then I,
I toured with this singer songwriter. Uh, she's incredible. Her name's Jen Bostic
and Jen Bostic is a Nashville based artist. And I remember touring with her in our sedan.
We drove like from Nashville to New York and just played coffee shops, restaurants,
like whatever we could get our hands on. And her songs taught me a lot. She's based in country music. There's a lot of country tone
to her writing. And what I realized with her is that her songs felt like greeting cards to me
because they felt like they had such a point and intention that I could envision people sending her songs to their friends or loved ones to express something or to gift something.
And I told her that I was like, your songs are like greeting cards.
And I really like that idea because I want, I think with music, there's a value in creating something where then the person listening desires to gift it to someone else.
Then it creates that relationship.
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense to me.
I think it's an amazing gift when you do that.
And also when the craft meets the willingness and the empathy to understand what needs to get out,
which kind of brings us to 2015 for you. So you're sort of out, you're writing, you're performing, you of brings us to, uh, you know, 2015 for you.
So you're sort of out, you're writing, you're performing, you're playing, you're building,
you're doing all the stuff that, and, you know, and an artist does to like work to emerge
into the scene and support yourself.
Um, you penned this song in 2015 quiet along with, um, Adrian Gonzalez and and um aka ag does anyone actually call her adrian
um she actually she loves it when i call her adrian she's like you're my sister you call me
adrian don't call me ag she has like a rule so but yeah you're one of three people who gets you
like call me that yeah i actually wonder what she prefers with other people, but she wants me to call her
Adrian, which I love. Yeah. That's, that's nice. Um, so you write, you write this song and, um,
it's, you know, I know you've described it as, well, well, this was you really processing and
giving voice to, um, abuse and sexual assault when you were younger and finally saying, okay, this needs to get out.
Yeah. The song came from my subconscious doing its work in my dreams. And because I was healing
a lot of my broken narratives about myself, my broken narratives were I'm inherently bad, which
helped me attract bad energy, which is what got me in trouble. Like there's something about me
that's not worthy of good things because I'll mess it up. Like, and a lot of people feel this
way internally, unfortunately. And so when I started going to therapy and realizing it wasn't
my fault, like that concept, you know,
I think about Good Will Hunting, that movie where that scene Robin Williams is telling Matt Damon,
like it wasn't your fault. It wasn't your fault. Like really repeating that over and over again.
I had to do that with myself as well. And then that opened up everything because then possibilities
started emerging. Like, you know, when I said earlier in the podcast, John White
said, in order to reimagine society, we have to reimagine ourselves. I was in the phase of
re-imagining who I was because I had this whole crutch of a narrative that wasn't working for me
anymore. So in my subconscious, I started dreaming and started reenacting my younger self and some of
the things that she went through, but then changing it and some of the things that she went through,
but then changing it and saying all the things I had never said, but wish I had.
And so in one of my dreams, I, I like, I confronted my abuser and an enabler and said,
you know, this isn't right. I need help. And the enabler said, well, if you say anything,
you're going to make it worse. So just keep quiet for now. And then I said, well, I can't keep quiet. And I remember my dream looking at little me saying that. And I woke up with like goosebumps. And I said, oh, that was so intense. And then I went to the studio to meet up with Adrian. We had scheduled a session to write a song together. And I told her about this dream. And she said, oh, well, that's your chorus, you know? And I thought, oh, that's interesting. And in words, I can hear melodies because of how we
accent words. And I think I learned this from the Beatles. They always write things like
in a colloquial way, their melodies follow the accents of how we pronounce words.
So within I Can't Keep quiet had a melody already.
And then the song just like started just blooming before our eyes. And I delighted in the whole
process because I just broke all the rules. And I was like, I don't care. I'm just going to like,
just going to write what I want. I'm going to write the lyric woman, because even though like,
I not trying to leave men out, but like in this moment, I'm just going to declare that for myself.
And, um, yeah, I'm going to talk about not spreading my legs and different things like
that.
And who cares?
Like whatever.
And it just felt so free.
And as a result, after we wrote it, I felt like this tension released from my body that
I've been carrying for 14 years.
So, yeah, I was curious about that. Like when, when you,
it's almost like on the one hand, you're creating something and simultaneously exercising something.
That's a good way of putting it totally. And that's after I wrote that song, you know,
it brought me a lot of opportunities because it went viral a couple of years later. But I was on tour with Ani DeFranco and I told her, man, quiet. This song brings me into situations that make me really nervous. But I have to grow into those moments. And like this song is teaching me how to not keep quiet because my instinct is I want to. And she said, well, you're writing yourself into existence. I was like, oh, that's such a good phrase. She just said it casually over like a glass of beer.
As Ani does. It's like, if you're hanging out, you have to keep a notepad all the time.
Yeah.
It's like, wait, what was that?
Yes. They have so many gems that she just drops. And like, I'm, I, that one really stuck with me
with her, like ocean eyes, like her deep, like wisdom filled eyes. Like she told me that. And
now I do that. Like, and I think most writers could relate to that and, you know, or artists
in general, we create things that we aspire towards and then we sometimes get to become them.
I love the way you put that. That makes a lot of sense. And also when Ani says that to you,
you know, it's interesting because probably a lot of other people could have said a really
similar line to you, but because of, you know of who she is and you know what she's been through and how she has
essentially created herself and her process of becoming, it's sort of like, okay,
the messenger here is worth believing.
Ani DeFranco is definitely a messenger for many of us, just delivering the truths in such a beautiful know, because she's built it from the ground up independently.
I mean, Righteous Bay Records, you know, she's done incredible things, you know, both in the music side, but on the business side, it's, it's,
it's unreal, you know, what she's created. It's really amazing.
Yeah. Like the musical Hadestown, right. That was also part of Righteous Babe because she
has that artist who created that whole musical. It's really powerful what she's built.
Yeah. It's amazing. So you write this song in 2015 and then you're sort of performing it. But like
you said, 2017 becomes this moment, you know, the women's March, I guess you see it coming
and you're like, okay, so this song and this moment, something special has to happen around
it. And it has to happen on this day in a public way. I felt this, it was very visceral. That's
why I like when, when younger
songwriters and artists asked me like what they should do, it's like, don't worry, just like keep
writing and keep showing up and pay attention, pay attention to how your body feels in certain
moments. Um, when I was watching Trump get elected and at the end of 2016, I felt this heat in my body.
And it was a similar heat that I felt when I wrote Quiet.
It was like the similar sense of like power within myself.
Like I'm going to say something about this.
And so then I decided to match them up.
I was like, if these feelings feel so similar, then I'm going to somehow match this up.
I didn't know how I was going to do it. And then eventually through brainstorming with friends
like Krista, she created the pink pussy hats. She is a visionary in many ways. And she envisioned a
sea of pink hats. And she did this during Thanksgiving, this idea, and she created
really easy knitting template. And she was like, that's my vision. I was like, oh, it's so cool. I was like, I want to share my song, but I don't know how to do it
yet. And so I was like, but you know, what's interesting is that I've always loved harmony
and I've always, it's always healed me singing with other people in harmony,
acapella groups and choirs and all that. I was like, what if I created a wall of sound?
I've always admired public art, street muralists. And I thought, what if I can make a street mural,
but it's just sonic? Because if it was just me and a guitar or me passing out CDs of the song, like the experience isn't there. And I know us humans love a good experience.
So I started recruiting singers to come together. Some people I didn't know just cold emailed
singers and sent them the song. So do you want to harmonize on this? And, you know, all the stars aligned and I bought a ticket with my little bank account,
bought a ticket for me and my friend. And we decided to go and embark on this journey.
And, uh, we led these women in harmony and it was such a powerful experience.
And it was one of those things where it was like realizing in the moment, oh, this is
cool. Like we don't know each other, but we're creating something that we all deeply know about,
which is this desire to be heard and seen. Yeah. The Apple Watch Series X is here. It has the biggest display ever. It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever,
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Mayday, mayday.
We've been compromised.
The pilot's a hitman.
I knew you were gonna be fun.
On January 24th.
Tell me how to fly this thing.
Mark Wahlberg.
You know what the difference between me and you is?
You're gonna die.
Don't shoot him, we need him!
Y'all need a pilot?
Flight Risk.
It sounds like there are like 25, 26 of you
performed at a handful of different times.
And then as you're having this feeling,
this moment from the inside out,
filmmaker Amaharel happens to capture,
I guess it was on her cell phone, right?
Yeah.
And then posted on her account,
and the video of this thing just explodes and the song really
becomes an anthem.
And I remember the first time I heard it and I was like, I'm somebody who responds really
deeply to music, to melody and to lyric.
And I was just like shaking.
Oh, wow.
And it was incredible.
Because it's not just for me. Cause I think everybody
feels that at some point, but also in the context that it was being offered, I was like, how many
women and girls have I known? And do I know in my life that have been feeling this and that have
kept quiet and I have been completely unaware. And so it just like, it started something
spinning. And I think, you know, that landed for so many people and it's in all different,
really personal ways. Thanks for sharing your experiences that that's very moving to hear of,
you know, men experiencing the song and empathizing with the woman's experience.
And then I have also heard from men
who have experienced similar things
and feel themselves within it too,
which gives me a lot of hope
because there's such similarities between the genders
and there's so much common ground we can work off of.
It's like just putting in the energy to communicate those nuances is what we're learning to do.
And it's tempting to be quick and assertive with our messages on social media.
I hope there's more of a movement towards nuanced conversation in social media and in real life.
Yeah, that would be nice.
I feel like we need that so deeply right now. Everything is so short, soundbite, emoji,
like superficial that, yeah. But I think sometimes you need experiences and sometimes a song is an
experience that breaks you open. It's just there's something that happens where
you're like oh i i am in some way i'm seeing myself and i'm seeing the world and i'm seeing
those around me differently and it opens you to it like it plants the seeds of desire for a more
nuanced way of being with other people in the world. That's a beautiful way of putting it. Yeah. You're definitely a great writer. It comes through in your podcast. I love it.
So not only does this thing express so much, but it becomes this huge thing, which draws a
ton of attention to you. So on the one hand, it's this beautiful work of art and it's a beautiful
offering and it's a moment in time. But also all of a sudden there's all this industry interest
and commercial interest, which for you who've been out on the road working and working and
working for years, I'm curious how you experienced that moment as an artist and as a professional, putting in the time and
doing your laps. And all of a sudden this explosion of attention happens to you. What's that like for
you on multiple levels? Yeah. The explosion of attention, because the explosion came from something so organic and so visceral for my own healing. The attention was a form of
healing within itself because it reminded me that if I speak out my truth and if I use my art to
heal the things I need to heal my personal life, it could heal others in this magnanimous way that
I can't even imagine. And that's exactly what happened before my eyes. And I was very moved
by that. And it taught me a lot about life, about persistence. And it also helped reaffirm my inner knowing that I had this inner voice that I needed to listen to.
And it also affirmed this, like we were talking in the beginning of this conversation, the suffering and the growth go hand in hand.
All the years of being misunderstood or not finding a place in the industry built to a point where I created my own
space. And I think that's the most gratifying thing. And I'm still working on that, like
building my own space also, then it creates, and then to every light there's shadow, right?
And so on the other side, the attention and the expectations started heightening. And so I started focusing a lot on the major label deal
I had signed and the numbers. And then, you know, as we talked, we're kind of going full circle now.
And it kind of took me away from myself in a bit because I was trying to climb another ladder. and now that I'm taking some time to like reflect on the past four years I realized that
I can let go of all of that because the truth of what quiet brought to me was that it was just
about healing and the people so if I continue to show up and write that from there and offer that
and focus on what is happening in the world,
it will all make sense. And what I've realized, like I said, time and intention is I want to build
so that I'm paying attention to the things that I want to pay attention to.
What what's happening in the news, what's happening in the world, allowing myself to
digest it in a way without like, you know, freaking myself out too much and then letting
myself process and write the songs and offerings. I think it's been an interesting journey and it's
really meaningful to talk to you about it now as it's been this four-year journey. And now I'm kind
of returning back to what that truth was because it was like just me singing on the street with 25 awesome ladies,
you know? So it's like returning to that process of just like the sacred prayer, right? Lugging
the piano and setting up the piano and setting up the microphone and being grateful, like,
oh, I can sing because some women in some countries can't sing yet and so we got to write those songs to
impact that movement you know yeah i mean i thought it was really um i love that sort of
like full circle awakening to um you and you end up releasing um an ep this is not the end i guess
it's 2018 2019 2018 right yeah 2018 yeah. I thought it was really interesting because you chose to cover a song, which is like really
close to my heart, Ooh Child.
You know, five stair steps back in 70, but the version that has been in my life since
I was really young was the 71 version that Nina Simone did.
You know, I grew up with my parents filling the
house with Nina Simone and all this really, and that song was like on rotation regularly. And
so I just loved the song. And then I heard your cover and I was not only do I love the way that
you do it, but it was also really interesting to me that you chose of any cover that you could
have put on the album. You chose that song.
Yeah.
It felt like the universe was conspiring with that.
Cause Alma Harrell and I had conversations and she really wanted me to sing
it.
And,
and almost her else,
a woman who like changed my life with her video recording.
So once I started singing it,
I was like,
Oh,
this is really healing.
And the DNA of the song is astoundingly groundbreaking. So once I started singing it, I was like, oh, this is really healing.
And the DNA of the song is astoundingly groundbreaking.
It seems very simple, but what it's doing instrumentally is brilliant and out of the box.
So it's symbolic in a sense, like to be able to say, Ooh, child, things are going to get easier. We want to do incredible groundbreaking work, like the groundbreaking chords and music that is
structured in a song in order to deliver something that feels easy for others. Like
that's service to me. You know, I really love that. Yeah. I mean, I, I love that you sort of,
like for all the reasons you shared that you, you felt like this was a song that needed to be offered. It's interesting. When you sing that song, when you sing other songs, if I hear you, there's something that happens. I've seen you on video a few different times. And it feels like you go somewhere. And I'm a huge blues fan. And I remember seeing like Stevie Ray Vaughan, you know, when he got lost in the music, he wasn't on stage anymore.
There was the physical meat suit of Stevie on stage.
He was utterly somewhere else.
And it was like there was something coming from him, but there was also something moving through him. And I was curious whether you have a sense when
you're not just writing, but actually performing how much of, or maybe when you're writing also
of some mix of, yes, there's something coming directly from me through my direct experience
of life, but there's also something that feels like it's moving through me.
I love that you asked that because the older I get,
the more tapped into the power that comes through me.
I actually felt it when I was younger too.
There are certain songs that I write that when I'm writing
that it just feels like I'm following something.
I'm following an energy that is guiding me
and it's pretty effortless.
And then sometimes some
songs are different because the universe is working through me in nudging me to keep showing
up, even though I don't see the evidence. Like recently, I just wrote a song that started off
quite odd. And I was like, this is an odd song, but I said, I'm going to just come back tomorrow
and see what happens. And then it started moving. So I'm learning as I get older as a writer to like, just keep showing up.
Something will happen if I just let the forces work through me and not make it about me.
When I'm singing is the same way.
When I'm singing on stage, I feel like one, I'm finally home. There's like some sense of calm that happens with me, like that I am trying to access more in my day-to-day life because I don't think it's healthy for me to be so anxious all the time. So I have my hands on the keys and I sing.
Like there's something about my body needing to focus on the rhythm and the notes of the
keyboard that occupies a lot of the mental energy I have so that I can just float.
I'm surfing something else with my voice because my voice is able to move without much thinking. My hands can
too, but they're not as, they don't have as much dexterity as my voice does. So I kind of do
whatever I can to allow my voice to find the wave. There's like a wave and I surf it, you know?
That sounds amazing. You feel that also. I saw the tape of you with doing the
massive and stunning acapella version of Quiet with Choir, Choir, Choir, which was what,
like a thousand people in a warehouse or something like that?
Yeah. Yeah.
With like one guitar, your voice on stage, and then all of these people. And it was breathtaking.
And I was like you you seem like
you just went somewhere oh yeah we all went somewhere and it was this magical thing and I was
bawling the whole time when they were rehearsing I was sitting in the set of the stage and sometimes
I'd pop out and like sing with them and I was just like crying the whole time because it felt very elevated. The energy was because I mean, it was things like 1300 Canadians just gathering in
a room because they're like watching what's happening in the States and they're, you know,
singing in, you know, with this urgency and this hope. It was so magical. Yeah. Special time.
Yeah. Really powerful. Not even being there, but just witnessing it was
incredible. You're, as you've kind of shared, like a lot of, there's a really strong sense
of service in your work also. And you're somebody who feels deeply, you know, more recently,
somebody's beloved, you know, is something that turns into this offering for you, which grows from first music into effectively a movement.
Tell me more about this, sort of like how it emerges.
I wrote Somebody's Beloved.
I wrote the first part of it by myself, and then I invited my friend Adeo Marchant to finish the song with me.
His artist name is Bipolar Sunshine. He's this
incredible artist. And the song birthed from me paying attention to, as many of us did,
to the resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement and listening to Tamika Palmer talk
about her daughter, Breonna Taylor, in this interview, I just started bawling my eyes out because she was talking about how Breonna Taylor learned to walk at nine months.
Her mother knows all these intimate details about Breonna and seeing the wonderful human that she was. And then I thought about George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery. I thought about how my participation
in the ladder climbing of this U.S. structure currently caused harm to people who get harmed
by the system. And I didn't fully realize how I was participating. And also seeing some of the
anti-Blackness, even within Asian culture, and really wanting to be a part of the anti-Blackness even within Asian culture and really wanting to
be a part of the change because there's the younger generations that understand the truth
that we're all humans and we're all worthy. So Somebody's Beloved came about and I started
writing the verses and I was really afraid to share it actually because I didn't want to literally center my voice around something that
is about black culture and about the U S history. I just, I didn't have clarity and I had this
moment of fear. And then I was like, you know what? I'm either going to not release this to
avoid any possible like damage that I might do from my blind spots or just go for it and then learn.
So I invited Adeo Merchant to bring his perspective as a Black man into the song.
And he added this depth to it that I think the song needed.
And we reference, actually, you mentioned Nina Simone.
We reference Strange Fruit, which is, you know,
originally sung by Billie Holiday, then Nina Simone.
And so he brought those lyrics into the song, which I'm eternally grateful for.
And as I started working on the song, I realized that I was going to be releasing this song that's addressing something so sacred and important.
And I'm releasing it through Atlantic Records.
And I was like, I want to challenge the profit structure of this song. And so I had meetings with the label and my
team and we found a way for us to funnel resources away from the company to seven organizations that
build power around racial justice. These organizations look at
racial justice through the lens of LGBTQ, through feminism, through mental health and through
incarceration reformation. And they're incredible organizations and people can learn about it
on a website we built, somebodysbullup.com. And it kind of tells the whole story and it has
resources. Actually, people are kind of curious.
How do I get involved with anti-racist work? How do I be a part of the solution? We have done our best to create a loving energy with the website, the visuals and all that, and just invite people
in. I did a version of the song with Amanda Gorman and she wrote poetry over the song and
she said, it's about calling people in
versus calling them out. And I totally agree with what she said, because I witnessed our country go
through a surge of shaming and guilting. And I understand the origin of that because it's hurtful,
harmful, and there's so much pain. and shame and guilt are useful in a sense of
a short flash of it to help us recognize we need to change direction. But for sustainable change,
I think having creativity and love be the fundamental ingredients is going to help us keep doing the work because it will feel
energizing and feel healing to continue to do it. And I want to do this work for the rest of my life
now that I understand what the structure is and I'm having more awareness. So I hope that the
song and the fund and the website all kind of work to invite people in. And I've gotten messages
from like Asian women who didn't know how to speak out about it or didn't know how to get involved.
They're starting to like find themselves because they're seeing an Asian woman do that and talk
about anti-Blackness and talk about how we're part of the problem, but also potential solution. So it's been a really educational
process. I'm learning as I go and I've probably made mistakes and have had blind spots as I've
gone, but you know, I'm totally open to learning. And so, um, we just did a campaign. We raised,
um, enough money in December and January to write $10,000 checks to each organization.
And I've also gotten my friends at Procter & Gamble who are such good people and they
want to do better work. And so they've actually been in contact with each beneficiary and they're
fulfilling a list of their needs. So like feminine hygiene pads to laundry detergent,
different things like that.
So it's really cool to see.
We hope, you know, I'm not doing this by myself.
It's with a group of people who are really passionate
about doing this long-term work.
So we're just trying to do the little bits that we can
and, you know, we'll keep learning as we go.
Yeah. that we can and you know we'll keep learning as we go yeah it's um there's so much that's
sort of like is coming full circle with your music your your empathetic heart your desire to
to not just express but uplift and um and bring in and invite in um feels a good place for us to
come full circle in our conversation as well. So hanging out here in
this container of good life project, if I offer up the phrase to live a good life, what comes up?
To live a good life is to
boldly decide that you deserve to design your time the way that you want. I think that's a good life.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you so much for listening. And thanks also to our fantastic sponsors who help make this show
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