One of my favorite fan questions Iâve ever gotten was: âHow do you go from singing plain to suddenly sounding like youâve got an accent? And how on earth did you rhyme âpointâ with ârestaurantâ?â It made me laugh, but it also made me realize how much of myself is woven into little details like that.
I was born in Tennessee, and my dad moved us back and forth between Tennessee and Georgia until I was about nine years old. Then we picked up and headed west to Arizona, and thatâs where Iâve been ever since â right here in Scottsdale. But my heartstrings were pulled the most when I was younger, spending time with my Mawmaw. She grew up in McClellanville, South Carolina, around the sound of Gullah Geechee voices. I remember just listening to her, soaking up her way of speaking, the music in her words. Sheâd pronounce ârestaurantâ in this way that somehow matched âpoint.â It stuck with me. When I put it in a song, it wasnât just clever rhyming â it was my way of keeping her close, like a little love letter to her memory.
Music has always been there for me. I donât really remember a time when I wasnât singing. Country is home base for me â itâs the soil I grew up out of â but Iâve always been drawn to the ache of the blues and the raw energy of rock, too. I like to think what I make now is a blend of all those roads Iâve traveled, and all the voices Iâve carried with me.
Thanks to Luna Records, I finally had the chance to take these songs that lived in my notebooks and in my head and turn them into something real. Recording them felt like pulling pieces of my life together and setting them free. My hope is that when you listen, you hear a little bit of your own story in mine â the places youâve been, the people youâve loved, the parts of yourself youâre still figuring out.
At the end of the day, I just want these songs to feel like a conversation between old friends â the kind that lingers with you long after youâve said goodbye.