Switched on Pop - What's to Love About Ed Sheeran? (guest Ross Golan)
Episode Date: April 6, 2017Songwriter Ross Golan comes over to start up a conversation, encouraging us to follow his lead and give Ed Sheeran's chart-annihilating record "Shape of You" a chance. Ross, a studio vet with multiple... #1 hits (including numbers discussed on this very podcast, such as Ariana Grande's "Dangerous Woman" and Selena Gomez's "Same Old Love") is the ideal guest to convince a skeptical Charlie and Nate that Sheeran might have a song handmade for somebodies like them. Plus, Ross takes us behind the scenes of his own podcast, "And the Writer Is...", in which the industry's best writers break down their trials and triumphs on the way to the top. Featuring: • Ed Sheeran - Shape of You • Justin Bieber - Love Yourself • Kygo ft. Ella Henderson - Here For You • Maroon 5 - Don't Wanna Know Check out And The Writer Is... With Ross Golan: http://www.andthewriteris.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Switched-Don-pop.
I'm songwriter
Charlie Harding, and I'm
musicologist, Nate Sloan.
And I am really happy
to be joined by
Ross Golan, who is a
hit songwriter, who's
written with folks
like Maroon 5, Justin Bieber,
Selena Gomez, Ariana Grande.
Welcome to the show.
Hello.
Wow.
I also feel like we should plug, you've got a great podcast called And the Writer
is where every week you sit down with an acclaimed and venerable songwriter to intimately
discuss what happens behind closed doors in the music industry.
That's right.
Yeah.
So we're so excited to have you in the room with us because, first of all, you just have
incredible experience with so many songwriters.
And if you look at a lot of the songs that we've covered on the show, either you or someone
you've interviewed on your show has probably contributed to that song. So you've got a lot of
insight into what's going on behind the process. And we reached out with a list of different songs
that we wanted to potentially discuss. And one of the songs that you pointed out was Ed Shearine's
Shape of You. It's been one of the most requested songs that our listeners have asked for,
and we've actually been really hesitant to look at it for a certain reason. So what I wanted to do
was to break down shape of you.
And in the second half,
spend time talking about your podcast
and the writer is.
Sure.
Yeah, absolutely.
Right on.
It might be ridiculous,
but background on Ed Sheeran.
So Nate and I actually have kind of intentionally ignored Ed Shearin,
and I had to look up Ed Shearin and figure out what is going on with him.
Interesting.
Why?
Nate, what are you think?
I think the probably simplest way to say it is that we haven't really been very excited
by a lot of the music we've heard from him.
So whenever we've gone to do a podcast,
he's never been at the top of our list
because we just didn't have that sort of visceral excitement.
He's a really interesting person.
I've only met him a few times,
but the first time I met him was backstage
at a concert in New York,
and I had just gotten off of a plane,
and it was probably, I don't know, midnight.
And I'm there with,
I fly in with a guy named Amar Malik,
who you'll see his songwriting credits all over the place.
And we were meeting up,
backstage at
I can't even remember
whose show it was,
but we were meeting up
with Benny Blanco
who has just recently
executive produced
this Ed Sheeran record
and backstage
was Jay Cole
and Skrillix
and we're all in a circle
drinking whiskey
and doing shots
of Jameson
and Ed Sheeran
starts freestyle
I mean
like what
playing with a little pedal
son
I don't give up
because I don't play your drum
I got to get to
The minute Ed starts freestyling is the minute you realize who Ed really is.
And as an artist, I've worked with a ton of people.
I don't know that many people who spit out that volume of interesting lyrics so quickly.
I mean, he's truly a savant.
And the more you get into it and the more you actually go and experience him live or you
experience him in person, that's when you actually understand Ed Shearren.
First of all, say, wow, what an image of all those songwriters and musicians hanging out together.
I'm the lowest on the rung in that room.
You know, it's just like jaw-dropping talent.
They needed you to make a mignon.
So that's why you were there.
Exactly.
I hear what you're saying.
In a way, I feel like I like everything about Ed Shearin.
I like his live shows are simply jaw-dropping.
I haven't been there in person, but I've watched them online.
In interviews, he's like effortlessly charming and hysterically funny, and he seems really smart.
I feel like I like everything about him except his music.
So I'm actually glad to have this opportunity to go deeper into that terrain with both of you and see, see, you know, how we feel on the other end.
Yeah, I think part of what we're looking for is to help convert, not so much just convert skeptics, but to say that I think on first listen, I often just haven't paid attention.
Like the first listen, I'm like, oh, didn't catch me.
I'll go find another song for this week.
and I actually did finally go up and look at sort of just at Sherin's Wikipedia page.
I was like, wait a minute.
Okay, I know he's a major pop star, but the list of things about his background is insane.
From being discovered by Jamie Fox in a small LA club to writing for Taylor Swift,
touring with her, winning multiple Grammys, getting huge support by Elton John.
And I think I read that for his last, not the most recent album, but the album before,
he wrote 140 songs in order to pair it down to.
That sounds right.
Yeah.
So I honestly just sort of looking at that and then looking at some of his credits.
He's written for Justin Bieber.
The song we're going to talk about was originally supposedly written for Rihanna.
He's now acting on Game of Thrones.
Like this size of his stardom kind of really, I was almost starstruck just reading the Wikipedia.
And I thought, you know, one of the things that maybe we're guilty of is being too stuck in our taste.
And so what I wanted to do was take a second to listen to just a little bit of,
shape of you, uh, together and then break down what's going on.
Let's do it.
Right on.
The club isn't the best place to find the lovers of the bar is where I go.
Me and my friends sat at the table doing shots, stripping fast, and then we talk slow.
And come over and start up a conversation with just me and trust me, I'll give it a chance.
Now, I took my hands. Stop, I found the man on the jukebox and then we start to dance.
And I'm singing like, girl, you know, I want your love. Your love was
handmade for somebody like me
coming now follow my lead
I may be crazy don't mind me
say boy let's not talk
too much grab on my waist
and put that body on me
I'm coming now follow my lead
come coming now follow my lead
I'm in love with the shape of you
we push and pull like a magnatee
although my heart is falling too
I'm in love with your body
last night you were in my room
And now my bedsheet smell like you.
Every day discovering something brand new.
So one of my favorite books in the world is this book by Carl Wilson called Let's Talk About Love.
You read this one?
No.
It's a critique of Celine Dion's 1999 album, Let's Talk About Love.
The concede of the book is basically that it's not about Celine Dion.
It's actually about taste.
And he argues that so often,
critics use taste as a way to reinforce class structures around what is good and what is not good.
And he basically says that there's a major chasm between the perspective of critics on Celine Dion's
music and her mass appeal.
So I think in some ways Nate and I might be guilty of, as I was saying, sort of falling into
traps of our own tastes and upon first listen just being like, that song's not for me.
So what I want to do together is break down
What is working about this song?
So I just want to hear from your perspective.
What is so, what captures you when you listen to this tune?
Well, this is fascinating for a couple of reasons.
One is Benny, the guy who executive produced the album,
was our first guest on and the writer is.
It's a great interview.
And we were talking about this song and the release of this song.
And Ed knew through the process, he's involved.
Right now he's planning out the next album.
While we're analyzing this,
Oh, yeah.
I mean, the first four albums he essentially had planned.
Oh, my God.
You know?
So here we are working on this new album.
And to him, he's the one who said, let's go and release two singles on the same day.
Releases this and Castle on the Hill.
Right.
He says this and the label's like, no.
And he says, just trust me.
He's the one who has his finger on the pulse of what's actually working.
It's sort of what you were talking about where Celine's releasing songs and choosing to release songs
because she knows their first.
fan base loves it. She's not really concerned about what the critics think. She's releasing gold and
platinum records because that's the process. This song in particular, he wrote with Steve Mac,
along with two other songs that day. And when they did it, they thought this was going to be,
they actually thought this was going to be maybe a little mix song. Like Steve loved it. And afterwards,
they went back and they said, well, what do you think of this? And Ed was like, I don't know, maybe it's more of
that. Right, because it has a different sort of feel than Ed Shearn is known for. It's not so much
the acoustic guitar feel. It's a sort of a dance number. Right. But the thing is that what
Steve's great at as the producer of this song and what he's great at in general is that he knows
how to, the tracks are minimal. Yeah. So there's not a, there's not so much going on that you can't
just hear the song and the voice is what really matters. Yep. The club isn't the best place to
find the lovers of the bar is where I go.
and he worked on the track and made sure the track was as good as it could be.
I actually think maybe some of the other songs that they did that day may have also been cut by other artists.
But this one they knew was a special song.
They just didn't know necessarily where it would go.
And you'll see with writers throughout the process of an album,
they'll choose their single partly around, you know,
if everybody wants to cut this song.
Yeah.
then at some point they may just say,
I guess I should release it.
So, you know, I think that, you know,
this song in particular, what I like about it
is that it's super patient.
It's really patient.
You know, to wait after the one on that pre-chorus
is what makes that pre-chorus work.
Because of the one,
that break,
it allows us to get sucked in for a second.
Right.
Which is the only reason why, you know,
the chorus,
really pops the way it does is because of the patience going into that pre-chorus.
I'm in love with the shape of you.
We push and pull like a magnet do.
Although my heart is falling too.
And then supporting that lyrical or the rhythmic patience,
there is just a really slow build, right?
We have a single riff throughout the entire song.
That's right.
The sort of Klimba feel.
Which is really hard.
It's hard to write a songs where each section has dynamics and they're unique,
while the track doesn't really slap you in the face.
Here's the chorus.
You know, it's a lot of voice.
And his voice sounds amazing on this record.
This is where upon listening multiple times,
I realize that this isn't a departure for Ed Shearren,
but it's actually very much his kind of song.
So I think people are deceived by the sample that runs throughout, right?
That looping, funky sound, this thing, right?
Yeah.
So when you hear this, you're like, oh, this could be a Diplo track, right?
Sure.
But then what you get immediately after are acoustic guitar drumming.
And Ed Sheeran is known for his live show where he loops himself over and over and over again.
And in many ways, this song builds almost like a solo song that he's looping on his guitar.
And each element comes in slowly and then drops back out as if he's hitting a looping pedal.
Yeah, you can see Best in the Grammys this year.
He was there and he did it.
did it live and you can see what he's capable of there.
Oh, yes, it's remarkable.
And then even just the flow of his words is very normal for Ed Sheeran.
You have a lot of lyrics happening really quickly with a lot of syncopated rhythm.
And it works really well with this track,
but it's something that he does just as well with a strumming acoustic guitar.
So I think he's actually really taking his style of a life.
performer, his style as a lyricist, his style as an acoustic guitar player, and he's just giving you
something slightly different, this little loop. And for most listeners to think, oh, this is a total
departure, but it's actually very much in line with everything that he does. Yeah, and in a way,
shame on the artist who just releases the same song over and over again. You know, the guy who
releases, if he comes out and he releases A-Team again, my guess is we're all going to say,
he already did this and he didn't do it as well as 18.
I applaud an artist, especially of the magnitude of Ed's career right now.
Not only does he release it, but the idea was that when he releases,
he's going to release Castle on the Hill at the exact same time.
Which is a totally different song.
Totally different song.
And it allows his fan base to say he didn't leave us completely.
So he's really smart in making sure that that other song will keep the wolves at best.
Right. While Shape of You might climb up the top 40 and bring in new listeners that might otherwise not have paid attention a la me and Nate.
I've heard that this song was not even going to make the album.
Really?
Yeah. There are some songs that are on the cusp of, well, it doesn't make sense in the album, but it's such a good song that maybe it should be the single.
And that happens on a regular basis because you have a collection of the core eight, nine songs that make up the album.
And then you're trying to figure out what are the best songs that.
have the best shot.
And he decides to go with Shape of You.
And I know there were some opponents to that song being the single.
And it's that thing of, and he knows this, that if it works, and radio does respond to it,
then it's fair game for whatever he decides the second, third, fourth, fifth single is.
Oh, interesting.
Because he then depicts, he's the one is dictating the how radio,
programmers are choosing the next single.
And if they fall for a shape of you, they're going to fall for the rest of the album.
And it worked.
It's a brilliant strategy.
Wow.
And it's a lot of strategy on that side.
That's, you know, I'm thinking about what you've said and maybe now can credit Ed Shearron
a little more with being, having a very productive mix of being like at once very calculating
and at the same time kind of spontaneous.
Like these anecdotes, you know, of like having the control over his.
his release strategy and that kind of calculation at the same time, the spontaneity of busting
out a freestyle.
Maybe we hear both of those in his music.
Like I'm thinking about this song now in terms of what Charlie was talking about, the way
it's just like filled with lyrics that sound at once very conversational.
Ah.
And very natural.
Yeah.
And at the same time, you think, no, he really carefully selected where each of these words go.
and as you were pointing out, like, where they go in terms of the rhythm of the song,
giving a pause on the first, on the downbeat.
So maybe, maybe I'm starting to see, like, maybe that's kind of part of the secret of his success
is that it's like sound, it's very calculated, but sounds very casual at the same time.
Last thing I'll say before we get into the song, because I know we need to do that.
But, you know, his ingenuity in something like love yourself, which is conversational and is so
colorful, his ability to write that record.
And that's an Ed Shearren record.
It was the fact that it was mean that he didn't want to release it.
The fact that it was not, yeah.
I mean, otherwise, I'd be an Ed Shearin record.
Oh.
Oh, baby, you should go and love yourself.
So he's still making sure that he puts out records that are primarily a positive
message or they're a colorful message?
Well, that gets us into maybe
the song, the opening lyric is
the club isn't the best place to find a lover
so the bar is where I go.
The club isn't the best place to find the lover
so the bar is where I go.
I think it's a really great line
because first it references the tone of the song, right?
This is a club song.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
But it's also subverting its own expectations.
Perfect.
And the idea of, man, I'm not having a good
time dancing on the floor, I'm just going to go hang out my friends at the bar and have a drink
is immediately recognizable, right? Like, anybody can grab on to that. Like, oh yeah, I know how that
feels. And so it has that conversational feeling. And it's actually why upon further listening to
this track, I was grabbed by it. Yeah. It's smart. I mean, you'll start realizing as we go
through all these lyrics that none of them are by accident. Right. It's the little details. It's when
you say, you know, your love was handmade for somebody like me.
You know, I want your love.
Your love was handmade for somebody like me.
The word handmade for somebody like me is actually way more descriptive than we would
probably give it credit for it just listening and pass.
You know, like, you would just listen to it.
And you'd say, like, whatever you would say.
I guess there are a million ways you could say that in it.
I don't know if I've ever heard that in a song.
I don't know if I've actually ever heard your love was hand, you know,
Your love was handmade for somebody like me.
I don't know if I've ever heard those words before in a pre-chorus.
And when you think about it, how many of those moments does it take to make a song unique?
And already, he's starting off with this strong line and that song's in the pre-chorus, you know?
Yeah, that handmade line really stood out for me the first time I heard it and kind of is like in some ways the linchpin of this whole song.
Because I think if we get into a little bit why we also.
take issue with Ed Sheeran.
Part of it would be a certain
what we perceive
as a certain genericness
in some of his songs.
But that line cuts through in such
a powerful way because you're right
it is unique
and a little familiar
but also unexpected. So yeah
I think I like that you highlighted
that line. It seems like an important one. Yeah, it's
even in the rhyme scheme in the chorus.
for him to, I'm in love with your body,
and last night you were in my room,
and now my bedsheet smelled like you,
every day discovering something brand new.
I'm in love with your body.
For him to essentially not make it rhyme with,
I'm in love with your body,
and have it tie it into every day discovering something brand new.
I always thought he was going to go and rhyme with body.
Right.
You know, but instead he goes,
I'm in love with the shape of you,
which is actually more of like a Nashville stuff.
rhyme scheme. Oh, yeah.
Which is really interesting. To me, that was a really interesting choice that may have
happened in the moment. I'm not saying that was necessarily deliberate, but that's a really
smart rhyme scheme because you're expecting it to rhyme my body. At least I was. Yeah.
But because it rhymes, it's not wrong. It's just a choice. So I like that. And again,
remember, when you're listening to A-Team, let's go back to the beginning because I think if
you judge Ed Sheeran on this and his whole career on this, or even
you know what's the what's the record that he won song of the year for thinking out loud yeah thinking
out loud like that's like a stream of consciousness not only is it you know it's it's everything that's
antithetical to my career as a as a professional songwriter you know but then you go and you hear
what he can do on something like love yourself and you realize that sometimes he's intentionally
speaking off the cuff and the reason why his fan base loves him so much
is that it sounds like that kid who is the best guitarist singer-songwriter in your dorm.
And you don't feel like this guy is, he's not a product.
He doesn't look like the product.
He doesn't sound like the product.
And he deliberately releases songs along the way that can keep you guessing whether or not he's the guy in the dorm or he's Taylor Swift.
And that's like, and Taylor Swift is also good at that.
But those are super deliberate writers who are doing that on purpose.
It's a clever double act to be able to sustain like that.
I agree.
I like how you say he keeps us guessing.
And perhaps that's what makes this song particularly powerful.
We've established that it runs on a loop of the exact same chord progression throughout.
You have underlying throughout most of the song,
the Columba sound and the acoustic guitar drumming.
They drop in and out a little bit here and there.
Calimba, incidentally, the sound of 2016, as we were told by Gray in our last episode.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, it's already, this is the pinnacle of it, you know.
You're talking about 10 years ago, people are using Shorty in every song, you know,
or you start using the word swag in a song, or you have dubstep bridges.
Everything had a dubstep bridge, whatever that is, you know.
This is the same sound that you hear in, you know, don't want to know.
I don't want to know, no, no, no.
We're taking you home, oh, oh, oh, my loving you so, so, so, so.
The way I used to love you know.
It's basically the manifestation of what Kaigo did last year.
And this is the pinnacle of where it enters the pop zeitgeist.
It's also the things that a lot of labels are already like, yeah, we already have it.
Well, so if it is so established, I think this is exactly the point.
It's what he does with it and makes it different and where he subverts our expectations that makes it work.
Well, because it doesn't work with Ed Shearer.
Like, who would have thought it sounds, you know, it's like a remix of an Ed Shearin.
Yeah.
If Ed Sheareran is successfully both establishing something where our expectations are set and then subverts them,
where in this song, musically, do you feel like he's playing where their expectations really successfully?
Well, I mean, you've realized, obviously you guys.
on the same page with this that
being a writer
isn't being an illusionist.
So the fact,
it's what I was saying right from the beginning
that you kind of have this wordy verse.
Sort of rapish.
You know, it's reminiscent
of kind of that
early 2000s kind of like
what you dance to in your
fraternity or something like that.
It's kind of like it's got like
a biggie light kind of vibes.
And then I think that pre-chorus, you have been, it's rapping stuff, and then
honey's play me close like butterplate toast from the Mississippi down to the east coast.
And then I think that pre-chorus, the fact that it comes in late, that's sort of going
from the verse and you have this wordiness and then purposefully giving that space before the
first line of the pre-chorus is really the example of writing at your best.
I'm in love with the shape of you
We're pushing pull like a magnet do
Although my heart is falling too
I'm in love with your body
Last night you were in my room
And now my bedsheet smelled like you
Maybe they discover in something brand new
Just when you're waiting for that song
I mean that's a lot of dead space
It's a lot of dead space in the middle of a pop record
Come in now follow my lead
I'm in love with the shape of...
To have what is that?
I mean, I guess the line before it ends before the one.
That comes in on, what, beat three?
So you're talking about a whole measure of just kind of like nothing.
Yeah, three long beats.
Well, actually, then you have the...
Yep, you have a little lead in.
That was super smart.
It gives...
I always talk about how we have to frame things.
We have to frame titles.
We have to frame sections.
And he's so well frames each section in this.
You know what the verse is, what the pre-chorus is, and what the chorus is.
and you are dragged through it whether you like it or not.
Right.
Even the fact that you guys aren't into it,
you still at the end,
it doesn't matter whether you like it or not.
You still ended up listening to the whole thing
because it's super well crafted.
Again, I think part of the reason why I jumped into this thing,
that's not for me is I think when I first heard that,
the first loop, I was like, I'm not interested.
But then I listened all the way through.
And then I went and recreated the entire track
and tried to break down every little piece.
There's so many pieces which are so intentionally assembled.
to get you from one section into another,
or to make you hear a section in a new way.
All these moments where there is spaciousness in his vocals.
Part of what's happening is there's also these wild polyrhythms happening
with a triplet feel in that main line,
which is then being supported by or augmented by synth strings
that pop up and are kind of in the background
and give you something to just pop up on that last beat of the triplet.
So in the Kalimba, you go, da, da, da, that last note,
note, he'll add a little
strings that pop up
over it. And so it's just constantly,
each time that it comes through,
it's in a new context, even though
it's fundamentally so simple.
Yeah.
And each time that he goes into a new section,
we get, whether it's a,
he adds an analog bass,
he adds sort of a bigger, thicker bass,
he adds that, those synth strings,
there's subtle clapping
with lots of reverb,
and each time
it feels like you're listening
to the same thing
but it has a totally new context
so I think those rhythms
and how they support each other
really reinforces that idea
that he can leave spaciousness
in his vocals
because there's something
which is going to catch you
you're going to dance to.
Yes, it does seem like
the further we dig into this song
the more there is to laud here
but gentlemen
at this point I have to say
it is time to take our commercial break
so when we return more
with Ross
Golan. Stay tuned.
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Welcome back to Switch on Pop. We are here in the studio with song.
songwriter extraordinaire Ross Golan.
Not only does he write number one hits for artists like Ariana Grande and Selena Gomez.
He also has an awesome podcast where he talks to other songwriters.
It's called And The Writer Is.
Thank you.
So you have the opportunity to talk to songwriters all the time.
Both as a career songwriter, you are constantly collaborating.
It's not the individual genius writing on sheet paper anymore, right?
But that even ever existed is a mess.
But it was so that was collaboration.
I want people to look up the Brill Building.
Yeah.
Which pre-1964 was essentially a bunch of, you know,
mostly two-person writing teams that really were shaping pop music.
And they would go and they would have these cubicles essentially with a piano.
People would walk in and they would say,
what if you do that?
What if you do that?
And in that era, I have this debate a lot because,
I'm part of the Grammy board, and we talk about these kinds of things.
You know, there was an era where the guy who goes,
do, do, do, do, do doesn't get songwriting credit.
You know, the guy who goes, do do do do do, do, do is playing bass in a bar in Toronto right now
to make a living, even though he wrote the hook on two number one songs.
So when you see a list of writers, we're making up for the faults of all the generations in, you know,
Motown side.
And that's not Brill-building those two songs,
but where they weren't giving songwriting credit
to the people who were actually writing some of the main themes in songs.
Right.
So we're a different generation where collaboration is essential in what we do
and we actually give credit.
So rather than looking at a song, oh, yeah,
they only needed two writers to write this song
and you see all those memes or it'll be 20 writers on a Beyonce song
and they'll show two and they'll somehow say like this is better.
No, no, no, no.
Those two guys stole a bunch of ideas by the 11 guys who were actually writing a lot of the music.
And you could look at it like that too.
And this is coming from the guy who's writing almost all the lyrics and melodies and sessions.
So you've expanded this collaboration beyond just the songwriting room.
You're now taking that collaborative songwriting process into a larger conversation.
You have a podcast called And The Writer is.
And it's an interview show where you talk one-on-one with other songwriters who are
I imagine are both part of your songwriting network, which is an ever-expanding intersecting
circles of other songwriters. And you start to see one songwriter participate in this with
this other person and they're all linked together. I wanted to ask you about what kind of things
come up between two writers that's different than, say, when a songwriter goes and talks to Terry
Gross. I like the U.S. I have a question because I think that's the real difference between what we're
doing and what you get on NPR. And the reality is that one is all songwriters have.
have gone through a little bit of the same process.
We all wanted to get in the music business.
You know, songwriters were either trying to be artists or they want to be artists still.
Right.
So most of the guys have either been in bands, have had record deals, they've worked with bands.
So we have this similarity there.
But in the real human sense, we spend hours and hours together.
We eat meals together.
Yeah.
We eat.
We all know when our families are sick.
When it's my wedding and half the people there are songwriters, it's not because, you know,
and you're talking about we have a bunch of number one writers and Grammy nominating,
Grammy winning producers at our weddings.
It's not because we're trying to network.
It's because when I need, when I'm in a session, we're really telling each other what really matters.
Yeah.
And we're there to hear all of it.
the darkest and the happiest.
I mean, you know, talking about the guys from shape of you and you're like, you know,
you can hear in the Benny, the executive producer that you'll, if you listen to that,
you can hear one, we've been close for a long time, but his story's incredible.
You know, you're talking about a guy who wrote an I kissed a girl at 18 years old.
And that was not, he had at before that had already had number one songs.
You're talking about a guy who essentially lived on the streets in New York because his mentor passes away and he's looking for a place to live.
And you're like, this guy's journey is incredible.
That interview had me totally, I was totally raptured in it.
His story is...
Yeah, like, how are we supposed to be friends?
Like, how am I?
I'm just an overgrown kid from the suburbs of Chicago who was Steve Mack.
You know, when I go to London, Steve, the producer of Shape of You know, I tend to write mostly with Steve when I'm there.
So we go and we spend, you know, I get a hotel that's only three stops away from, you know, from his studio.
And we spend a lot of time just the two of us in front of a piano, you know, and it's just the two of us talking about life.
I've gone to concerts with him and his girls, you know.
I know about his family.
I know these guys are not.
just to everybody else, they're writers, and to us, we're family.
We're literally going through this grind together because we have to.
It's just this huge network of friends and family, which is different than that previous
generation.
You know, when we talk about all those songs that had only two writers on it, man, I wish I
was back then.
I'd be a lot more wealthy.
but in a practical sense
there was a lot of animosity in that generation
and there were a lot of bullies in the music business
and right now there are no bullies
you have to be nice
you have to be friends
because word travels really fast when you're a dick
so everyone wants everyone's friends with each other
and this podcast to me
I have this book that everybody signs
that I work with
and there's 400 names
it's everyone from like bon jovi to you know david geta and then it's everyone from lamont dozier to
max martin and to me it's like i want to go back and i want to sit there and talk to these guys
about how is it possible that i'm sitting in a room with savin kotecha who wrote into you who
i you know when you guys did that savin's this guy who was born in a conservative indian family
in the middle of conservative Texas.
And he happens to write songs in his room
because he loves it.
He writes a song and he sends off this song
to like a competition.
He ends up getting this weird deal with in Nashville.
The song ends up making it to the ANR for Backstreet Boys
and he almost had a 100% song on Millennium
until his parents said,
no, no, you made a deal with somebody in Nashville.
You can't do that.
At 17 years old, he almost sold 25 million copies of a song.
So how does this kid in a conservative family in Texas,
who's a first-generation American,
how does he end up in Sweden?
How does he then marry a girl,
end up as a vocal coach on X Factor in the UK,
where he is the opportunity to break one direction,
which then brings him to L.A.,
where he then ends up being a big part of Max Martin,
Right.
Publishing company.
Yeah.
How is it that that guy who I've been friends with for years, you know, I write
Dangerous Woman in my car, you know, spend a month on that chorus, bring it into my friend
who's who I write almost everything with.
We rewrite the song, you know, put it all together.
Yeah.
And we show, show Sovin.
And even though at the, this time it was with another artist, Savin's like, let me play it
for Ariana.
He plays it for Ariana.
Ariana comes upstairs and says,
can I please make this the lead single?
I'll make this the name of my tour and my album
if you just let me have a chance.
Yeah.
So we give her the chance and she kills it.
And so my life has changed
because an Indian guy from Texas
finds his way into the same family that I end up in.
Like that's what that podcast is about.
I like that you call it a family because not only are your stories interconnected, because you all depend upon each other, but in the songwriting process, you have to have such a deep level of trust because you have to be able to say, your chorus doesn't work.
You're going to scrap that.
We're going to do this.
Okay, cool.
Oh, but your idea, no.
Well, let's work on something together.
You're constantly having to be vulnerable.
You're having to give up ideas.
You're having to present ideas.
And you have to be in a place of both having complete buy-in around the vision of what you're not.
you're producing, but also no attachment to what's happening as it's going.
Yeah.
Imagine these artists who are all over TMZ, who are all over the world, and they have to walk
in and they have to tell me their deepest, darkest things that are going on.
You know, like these people are really brave in many ways, and they're having to walk in and they
have to go and they have to tell me about what they're really dealing with.
And they have to trust me.
Yeah.
You know, I always say if you want to know what it's like to write a song, to be a professional
writer, walk in a room with people you don't know, sing at them, and then ask what they think.
Yeah, for sure.
You know, I mean, I have to walk in and every single time, I mean, I was with a major artist last night,
and it's still the same thing.
It's like, okay, I had this idea.
Is this any good?
Yeah.
You know, for all angles.
I mean, we're all like that with each other.
And it's like, I have no idea.
I mean, imagine just walking into any room.
room and sing it with at whoever the people are in the room and just you'd be nervous i don't care how
many times you've done it i don't care how many times you think you've had a hit song like it you're just
a kid in their car thinking of a concept and and working through a melody and being like i don't know
it's good and i guess the and the writer is what's so exciting about it is that we talk a lot about
process and how people write but the people who write these songs
are just fascinating.
Yeah, there's some really great stories in there.
Yeah.
So if people want to go listen, they should find it.
iTunes, anywhere you find your podcast.
iTunes, Spotify now.
It's basically anywhere where we can find podcasts.
All of our handles are at
and the writer is or I'm at
Ross Golan and
yeah, there you go.
Awesome. Well, it was such a pleasure having you on the show.
Really excited to break down those songs.
I definitely am a bit more of an
sheer and convert both for his
sheer talent that, as,
incredible to hear about. And also, as I listen more to his tracks, I find I am more drawn in.
So thanks for breaking it down with us. Yeah, of course. Thank you guys. Yeah, thanks for us.
Switched on Pop is produced and edited by me, Nate Sloan, and him, Charlie Harding. Bill Lance is our
incredible editor. You can find more episodes of Switched on Pop and whatever podcast listening device
is your method. And you can go to our website, www.Switched on Pop.
dot com reach out to us on twitter or facebook at switchdown pop we love to continue the conversation big thanks
to luke harris who does all our design and we are proud members of the panoply network stay tuned two
weeks from now more deep dives into pop hits as always thanks for listening
