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Offline PANIC!  
#1 Posted : 19 May 2012 18:23:36(UTC)
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Break in the Clouds by Ryan Ross Hernandez

Release: May 29th, 2012
Recorded: May 2011 - April 2012
Electric Lady Studios
(New York City, New York)
The Village
(Los Angeles, California)
Genre: Folk rock, Americana, blues rock
Label: Studio60 Records
Producer: Ryan Ross Hernandez, Chad Fairweather



Background

Break in the Clouds is the fifth studio album by critically acclaimed American singer-songwriter/musician Ryan Ross Hernandez. It follows-up on his previous album, Running Changes, which despite being a commercial success, critics were mixed with their praise; while some reviews were glowing, calling it his "most adventurous", others called the album "safe" and noted that his vocals seemed to be "disconnected" from the rest of his body. Shortly after its release, Hernandez admitted that he thought Running Changes was not his best album; "I know I'm suppose to say the latest record is my best... bullshit. Let a Man Be Lost [his third studio album], still stands as my best album." It marks a change in Hernandez musical style, and incorporates musical elements of folk and country music, transitioning drastically from his famously known brand of blues-pop.

Matters of the Heart Hernandez' debut record, was an earnest acoustic-rock album from an up-and-coming young artist. Dark Secret Love dropped and with it came a more developed sound, featuring electric guitar riffs and a big rock band feel. After a short time of experimenting with his former rock band PANIC!, Let a Man Be Lost hit shelves. No doubt a soulful pop album, the blues influence of Hernandez favorites like Stevie Ray Vaughan, Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix, and Buddy Guy took a prominent step into the spotlight.

What followed was Running Changes a release many critics and detractors deemed underwhelming. This represented another experiment of sorts, as it was an attempt to capture that classic California rock feel, albeit with a touch of Ryan Ross Hernandez. Maybe that was the problem many critics had, as it didn't feel like a Ryan Ross Hernandez album – or at least that was the general consensus.

Let a Man Be Lost was a tribute to blues, Running Changes was a tribute to artists like Tom Petty, and Break in the Clouds is a tribute to folk, country and classic rock ‘n’ roll.

Contrary to rumors hinting otherwise, Break in the Clouds will be released via Studio60 Records. While the album will be available worldwide as a digital download, in a strategic move, suggested by Ryan Ross Hernandez himself, the physical CD version of it will not be released worldwide, only in select markets where Hernandez has a large fanbase. There will also be a double LP vinyl edition of the record made available in select countries.



Recording

Break in the Clouds was written and recorded entirely in the legendary Electric Lady Studios in New York City, a studio which was built by one of Hernandez' idols, Jimi Hendrix. In an interview, Hernandez stated that the studio was rented out by his record label for his use from October 2010 until August 2011, then once again from January 2012 to March 2012. Production of the album only moved to Los Angeles in April 2012, where the finishing touches were made, and it was mixed and mastered.



Singles

Fighting Shadows served as the lead single from the album, released on March 12th, 2012. Compared to previous singles by Hernandez, it only achieved moderate commercial success, reaching number four on the Top 20 Airplay charts in its second week, before quickly exiting the charts. A music video has been filmed for the single, and is expected to be released soon.

A day before the album is released, on May 28th, a second single will be released for radio airplay to Top 20, adult contemporary, and modern rock stations. It is yet unknown which song will serve as such single.



Track listing

1. California's Sweet Unknown
2. Keep Calm and Learn Yourself
3. Fighting Shadows
4. Show Me Something I Can Be
5. Christian Girl Getting Divorced
6. How a Man Grows Older
7. Moment You Get Around to Living
8. 'Til Love Come Knockin'
9. Gray Young's Freewheelin' Tale
10. Flowers and Paradise, c. 1968
11. Break in the Clouds
12. Another Shot of Whiskey (Drinking Song)
13. Architect of Dreams
14. How a Man Grows Older (Reprise)
15. She Wears Sundresses (iTunes bonus track)



Credits & Personnel

Edited by user 12 June 2012 05:28:35(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

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Offline asdf  
#2 Posted : 20 May 2012 03:09:23(UTC)
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OOC: Was wondering when you would start another one of these. Lol, looking forward to see where it all is going.
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Offline Famouss7x7  
#3 Posted : 20 May 2012 04:04:07(UTC)
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Brittany: You certainly have nothing else to prove Mr Hernandez, you've proven time and time again of just how legendary you, and your music is. And this well be no different. Cannot wait to hear the album.

Edited by user 20 May 2012 05:15:46(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

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PANIC! on 20/05/2012(UTC)
User is suspended until 16/05/4760 03:38:29(UTC) stephaniewazhere  
#4 Posted : 20 May 2012 05:25:47(UTC)
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OOC: I'm looking forward to this because I know you put so much effort into em, I honestly don't know how you do it, but they are always amazing to read :)
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PANIC! on 20/05/2012(UTC)
Offline PANIC!  
#5 Posted : 20 May 2012 05:28:34(UTC)
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Ryan Ross Hernandez sat down for an exclusive interview in an intimate gathering at the Clive Davis Theater in Los Angeles, where Hernandez spoke in front of two hundred attendees, composed of music critics and industry insiders, about his new album, the passions and influences that inspired the recording, and his career thus far.

Break in the Clouds: THE INTERVIEW, PART ONE

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Thank you for joining us tonight, for not only sharing some observations on the new album, but also allowing us to hear some of it.

Ryan: It's my pleasure. There aren't many ways for me to get this album out to people since I can't perform, so I'm glad to be here.

For anyone who has followed your career and listened to the records you make, there has been a progression of really interesting things that you've done. I've had the privilege to be given a copy of Break in the Clouds, which I've been listening to the last three or four days. I'm curious to know where the overall feeling, the overall sound on this record comes from.

Ryan: I think that Break in the Clouds is probably a bit of a reboot. I don't think I had that step in mind. When you get out of high school, you kind of have this mastermind plan, we all have one. When I was in high school, I thought about the records I wanted to make, but you don't really have a dream or vision for record four or five. The vision becomes hazy after a while. I think that with my last four records I've gone into each with a vision of what I wanted each of them to be, and for the most part I'm happy with the outcome of each. I didn't have a next step for this record.

And I guess it ties in with not knowing the next step for a lot of things in my life. So it was interesting to reboot all of the music that I love or music that I've come to love since I made my last record. I just didn't like to think of myself as an artist already established, out at sea, just doing his thing. Somewhere in the middle of the Let a Man Be Lost tour, two years ago, I just had this flash moment while listening to some Bob Dylan tunes. Before that moment, I never caught the hook of Bob Dylan. But that's the thing with great music and great musicians, their waiting for you, you may not love them at one point, but one day given what happens in your life, they'll come in from waiting in the wings.

I felt like a kid again when I started to listen to Bob Dylan and really get invested in his music. I felt like I was fifteen years old again and listening to Stevie Ray Vaughn or Jimi Hendrix or Eric Clapton for the first time. This was while being on a tour I probably didn't love being on. I just needed to go home.

Was that during the Let a Man Be Lost tour?

Ryan: Yeah, I just needed to go home. A lot of times during that tour I needed to go home. If you track the time frame of all that happened in my life during the tour, it just made sense for me to go home. I had to reset. I remember being in a hotel room listening to music and I kept thinking to myself, 'why does the vital part of my career have to be over, if it's not the beginning part?' You know what I mean? Why do I have to make a sixth record? Why can't I walk down the street with a guitar? I wanted the beginning of my career back because I hated all this middle stuff. And I feel like I did get the beginning back. I had to wait until the end of the tour, and I went to Electric Lady Studios in New York City. This is where I have to show how thankful I am to Studio60 Records, because they rented out Electric Lady Studios for a year, we locked it out. That was from October 2010 to about this past August. And I was in there everyday, and most of the time I was alone. I wasn't really thinking about melodies or recording guitar parts, I mostly just wanted the studio to write songs. I wanted to feel confined, as if I needed to disappear into songwriting.

That's an interesting time pattern, because a lot of people would think you spent most of last year writing and recording your last album, Running Changes, but that wasn't the case, right?

Ryan: Interestingly enough, I began to write songs for Break in the Clouds, before writing anything for Running Changes. For about six months after the tour ended, I was focused on Break in the Clouds, or at least writing for the record that would become known as Break in the Clouds, but I felt like something was missing. I felt like between Let a Man Be Lost and Break in the Clouds, a record was missing. That's where Running Changes came in. I know I've talked that record down in the past, but I think Running Changes served its purpose. It's still not my best album, but I'm content with it being in my catalog.

What was the difference between writing songs for Running Changes, and writing songs for Break in the Clouds?

Ryan: Well when I wrote songs for Break in the Clouds, it was in complete silence. I was not a famous person writing this next record. I was letting the world forget about me. And I needed that, I needed to do it. I let everything sort of drift by me. It's a very scary thing to do. I'll never be able to explain how it feels like to say, 'even though all this feels terrible, I have to say goodbye to it, but I'll miss it.' Almost like this weird Stockholm syndrome. I told myself I was going to go home and basically become irrelevant. I'm going to basically flat-line, then restart my life.

Was it as much a reboot emotionally, as it was musically?

Ryan: Yeah, absolutely. Here's the thing, I had lived every dream I had by thirty-one, thirty-two years old. So I began faking new dreams on the spot. That's a dangerous to start doing. But at least I knew when I had hit the wall. I knew what I was doing for a very longtime. I knew how I was acting in front of cameras, during interviews, wasn't natural. There was something wrong with that picture. And then when I didn't know what I was doing, I never admitted it. And up until that point, over-thinking it was a very smart idea. It got me out of holes, got me out of situations, got me to confuse people. Until I hit the wall. Until I had this violent crash into adulthood. And for a while I didn't have anything to do, so I thought why not refocus myself and just go back to what I love doing? Why don't I just go back to spending entire days at home in sweatpants, writing songs? I put a lot of rules on myself while making this record; no drum machines, no easy way out, no loops, no humming, no gibberish, nothing that you can fool yourself into thinking sounds good before you've written a note.

These days any musician can walk into a studio, not have a band, just have a team of producers and engineers there, and in a matter of hours, boom! There's another number one hit.

We were speaking earlier and you told me that you didn't use a computer to write any of these songs. Did you go back to pen and paper?

Ryan: No, no, I actually bought a typewriter. Their really cheap but really hard to find, their like a hundred bucks. I started typing three or four pages a night, I always wanted to go into the studio with something already on paper. I didn't want to guess on the spot what I was doing in the sound booth. One night I remember I sat in front of my typewriter and I typed, "I'm too young to write epilogues on my own death, it's twisted, but it's how I feel right now." I don't think I would have written that line in front of a computer. A computer can distract you too much and that's what I didn't want. I didn't want to be distracted by anything. You can be really honest in front of a typewriter because you don't see what you're typing. That's why I feel like with this record I was really confessional with myself, I wrote some lyrics that I never thought I would write.

How did it feel from going to be one of the biggest artists in the world, to as you put it, becoming irrelevant while you wrote this new record?

Ryan: I had a beautiful time writing this record. It was a beautiful experience when I was just left alone and forgotten about. There was no paparazzi's waiting outside my house anymore or outside the studio. It ended up being a very powerful thing and something that I will probably do for a very long time.

With your last couple of records, you've had an almost set band playing with, most of which your fans were use to seeing play on stage with you. How was the transition from playing with a band you knew really well, to making a record with other musicians you aren't accustom to playing with yet?

Ryan: Well I have to say that the band playing with me on this record, plays a huge part in achieving the goal I had for it. I've always a natural sound, and especially on this record, I didn't want to be in everybody's face, I wanted to kind of take a seat and see what the bassist, the drummer, the keys, what all these musicians can do with a song. I wasn't chasing a sound, I was chasing a feeling. Before I even stepped into a studio, I knew in my head how this record was going to sound. I'm such a people pleaser, that I want everybody in the studio to be enjoying the music. I even want the engineer to enjoy the music. So I want everyone who works on my records to enjoy themselves. I don't want session musicians to be whispering when they get out of the studio, "Hernandez is a fucking prick."

When you said earlier that you went into a rebooting while making this record, I would have thought that would have meant going back to the blues, which is one of the great places to reboot for power players like yourself.

Ryan: Yeah, but I think I'd done it. I had done it. Sometimes I feel bad I haven't listened to a Stevie Ray Vaughn record in a while, but then I realize, 'nah he'd be alright.' I just think that's the greatest thing about music. I mean I love being alive in this time because there's already more music out there that there will ever be made. You don't necessarily have to take what is playing on the radio or TV, you can go back and listen to great music that was made forty or fifty years ago. An album like All Things Must Pass by George Harrison, has been around since before my birth, yet I didn't get to it until 2008 or so. That's really exciting, so I started thinking about what else was out there that I hadn't gotten to yet. I've never been shy about saying, 'I heard this record and I want to explore what I might be able to do with that sound.' There is no doubt that I would love to write a song because of Neil Young's Heart of Gold, but not in its shadow. I'd love to write music because of a song I really enjoy. Maybe selfishly I want to have that same feeling in something that I play. That's okay. It's okay to hear a song and go, 'I want one of those.'

You mentioned Neil Young's Heart of Gold, I can hear elements of Heart of Gold, and that entire Harvest record. Were you listening to that record and other stuff by Neil Young?

Ryan: Absolutely! That stuff smoothed in and kind of just put its arms around me. And it wasn't just Neil Young, it was also Bob Dylan, and Joni Mitchell, and George Harrison, and Crosby, Stills, Nash. It was not only those sounds, but the feelings I got when I listened to the records by those artists that made me want to make this record, need to make this record.

You also learned how to play harmonica on this record, right?

Ryan: Yeah, I had to learn how to play harmonica. I think I learned it selfishly just because I really wanted to learn how to play Heart of Gold. But ugh... I had never played it before. I'm the kind of guy who's always going to need new colors to paint. Which really makes it difficult on a commercial side or label side, because you're really not sure what another one of my records is going to sound like, so it's almost like you're starting over again as an artist. It's not like you can just put the next record out by me, and people go, 'Oh! That's Ryan Ross Hernandez.' I like being the author of many kinds of different books, but the tone of my writing is kind of the fingerprint.

That's risky though, commercially, I mean you do that and you have a big seller, which you've had a number of.

Ryan: That's the alternative. You have a choice; you can either decide to move on gracefully before anyone asks you or say that the only way I'm going to identify myself is if I'm always the same. I'm not saying that one choice is the better than the other, because it's human choice and also scary as fuck. I will tell you that not being able to tour and not doing a bunch of promotional stuff, there are daily jitters, daily conversations about it. People are really outsourced, and I'm not saying they shouldn't be, I am too. It just comes down to whether people like it, people need it. It's scary. I think everyone who worked on this record, my management, Studio60 Records, were all worried and we have a right to be. When I'm touring, when I'm playing these songs for people around the world, you can ease your mind because we did a lot for this record even if it doesn't do well. That's not the case for Break in the Clouds. All I can do, I want to be here for a long time. Whatever my age and linings and experiences telling me that I should leave. That means right now not being in the top 10 or 20 of radio songs, but hoping that I transition to a more authentic place, to always be in an authentic place.

Fighting Shadows, the first single from this record, which I love. By this time I usually get really disgusted with the first single but it's a beautiful song and I wrote it probably a year ago, but I still love it. How can you listen to the radio, which I'm not hating on, but I think I should get out of the way and let other people have their songs on the radio, maybe for a while, or maybe forever. But how can you listen to the radio for an hour, and think that Fighting Shadows stands a fighting chance? It doesn't. It's not suppose to go there. I did that. I think you need to grow old gracefully and I think that my fans will follow, because their growing old too. I'm not exactly sitting here and trying to win over the crowd that listen to GirlSpice or Isabel or even the crowd that listen to Ellie-Grace Summers or Katie Coyle. I'm not making music for the mainstream pop audience or the teen audience either, which I'm guessing the lines blur but still. Whether this record gains me fans or makes me lose some, this is where I am in my life, I'm not going to progress backwards, there's no such thing.

One thing about a lot of these producers or songwriters that write these mega hits and their fifty-one years old, but their writing for an eighteen year old to sing.

Ryan: Yeah, and I think you can do it at thirty, you can get away with it, thirty-five, forty. I can probably get away with it if I decided to write a pop record at my age, right now at thirty-four. But then you find yourself not having done the required work you needed to do years ago, and now you don't know where to go from here. I've always, almost always, been pure at hear with my music. I'm excited to just go down the line. You're suppose to go down the line.
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Offline GirlSpice  
#6 Posted : 20 May 2012 07:16:56(UTC)
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Nadia: Considering I haven't been allowed to listen to the album yet, I guess I'm gonna have to hear it when everyone else does. *pouts* Although I'm certain it'll be worth the wait from the little bits I've heard here and there. The first part of the interview was also a really great insight into the making of this upcoming album, I look forward to seeing more! I think it also displayed how much you've grown up from, well, when I first met you really. Cute... nandez.
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PANIC! on 20/05/2012(UTC)
Offline Mckenzie-  
#7 Posted : 20 May 2012 08:46:38(UTC)
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Ryan: I have been looking forward to this baby now for quite some time. The fact that their will be traces of a harmonica present excites me to the point where I actually wish the album leaks early! No, that wouldn't be fair on a hard-working artist like yourself. I love when an artist is making music for themselves and their fans in mind, rather than hitting number 1 and being played in clubs all over the world. I feel like you have taught me so much without knowing, Hernandez. I consider you to be one of the greatest and most influential artists of the decade. Genuinely looking forward to this, I think I will appreciate it alot more now too.
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PANIC! on 20/05/2012(UTC)
Offline PANIC!  
#8 Posted : 20 May 2012 09:22:52(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: Famouss7x7 Go to Quoted Post
Brittany: You certainly have nothing else to prove Mr Hernandez, you've proven time and time again of just how legendary you, and your music is. And this well be no different. Cannot wait to hear the album.


Ryan: It should be like that, but how my mind works, I always feel I have something to prove to myself when I put out a new record. Thank you for the compliments. I'm very proud of this album and hopefully people let it into their lives.

Originally Posted by: GirlSpice Go to Quoted Post
Nadia: Considering I haven't been allowed to listen to the album yet, I guess I'm gonna have to hear it when everyone else does. *pouts* Although I'm certain it'll be worth the wait from the little bits I've heard here and there. The first part of the interview was also a really great insight into the making of this upcoming album, I look forward to seeing more! I think it also displayed how much you've grown up from, well, when I first met you really. Cute... nandez.


Ryan: Oh, you Queen of Pout, you. When you do it hear, I'll want to hear what you think of. Although if it's negative feedback, please keep it to yourself in respect to our relationship and its future or lack there of if you dislike this record. I'm still going to remain mum on the theme(s) of the record, until it comes out and people hear it. Yes, it's not growth anymore when you're 34 years old, it's just growing the fuck up. Which I needed to do. Okay, I ban you from listening to this record now.

Originally Posted by: Mckenzie- Go to Quoted Post
Ryan: I have been looking forward to this baby now for quite some time. The fact that their will be traces of a harmonica present excites me to the point where I actually wish the album leaks early! No, that wouldn't be fair on a hard-working artist like yourself. I love when an artist is making music for themselves and their fans in mind, rather than hitting number 1 and being played in clubs all over the world. I feel like you have taught me so much without knowing, Hernandez. I consider you to be one of the greatest and most influential artists of the decade. Genuinely looking forward to this, I think I will appreciate it alot more now too.


Ryan: Ahaha, I have teased it for a while now. I use to be very paranoid of my albums leaking early, but now I really just don't mind as much. If people listen to a leak and truly invest themselves in the record and enjoy it enough, they'll go out and buy it. I think every artist has to reach that point sooner or later, of not caring about charts or sales, I did the pop thing for as long as I could do the pop thing. A massive hit single doesn't have the substance that is found in a fantastic album. Wow, that's very high remarks, and I thank you for them.
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Offline genocidal king  
#9 Posted : 21 May 2012 03:00:15(UTC)
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Katie: Guess I missed all of this when you first announced it. I just know this is going to make me turn green with jealousy! Damn that stupid stupid sibling rivalry. We all know you got me beaten on that front though. But I don't mind. If anyone has to be so much better than me, I would rather it was you than anyone else in the world anyway! Cant wait to hear the songs Ryan, especially what you're gonna do with the harmonica! I like picking up new and interesting instruments too, so I like to see how you do it. I'm suuuch a copycat!
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PANIC! on 23/05/2012(UTC)
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#10 Posted : 23 May 2012 11:07:32(UTC)
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Break in the Clouds: THE INTERVIEW, PART TWO

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Break in the Clouds will be released right at the start of the summer season, which usually means for music, that very poppy and upbeat music is released. Do you feel the album can do well despite the fact that its release at a time when its all about big singles?

Ryan: Well I think there's always been a pattern in my music. The four album previous to this one have all been released in the fall, between September and November. I've never had a spring or summer release date for an album, but I think that people will come to it. I still haven't lost hope in people. I think that their are still people out there looking for music with substance, that comes from the heart. I know most of you sitting here probably think I hate the music that's playing on the radio or whatever, but I don't know. I just don't think you can be honest or sing with heart, when you're doing it over a drum machine or any sound coming from a computer.

A question that I believe most of us here and your fans most of have wondered, what is granuloma?

Ryan: It's fascinating how much you learn when you have it. It's an obstruction on the vocal process, which is basically connected to the vocal tissue, but not the actual... what the singer needs to be able to sing, it's just up top of it. And what it is, is a scar that doesn't get the chance to heal right and it keeps getting aggravated and keeps growing. If you can sorta picture an airbag on one side of the very top of your vocal chords, it's stopping the workable side where you actually sing from, from closing. So they can't actually vibrate against each other and make sound, consistently.

Are you in recovery at the moment?

Ryan: No, not yet. I'm just in a holding pattern until I can get the wherewithal and discipline back again. It takes a lot of endurance to go through a six to eight month period of extreme discipline.

We already know it prevents you from singing, but talking wise you sound fine.

Ryan: Well I haven't had the surgery yet. When I do have it done, there's absolutely no talking for the first month, and then there's probably just whispering for another month. And it also affects my diet most of all. You can make a list of all the things you enjoy eating and drinking, and most of those things you can't eat or drink because of acid reflux. But really everything you do can affect this because it's found in such an awkward position; talking, singing, laughing, screaming. And acid reflux contributes to this problem, so if you have a history of getting acid reflux after eating pasta, you can't eat pasta during the recovery time to be safe.

To be honest, that sounds quite miserable.

Ryan: The problem is that if I were to decide that this is miserable, then I'd be sentenced to be miserable for six to eight months. As both an artist and a person, I have to repurpose this. Where I know there's not a ton of different colors for me to paint with I have to figure out a way to find purpose in it, so I won't be miserable.

While recording this record, Break in the Clouds, did you know when you were singing, that something was off, something wasn't right with your voice.

Ryan: Oh no, I already knew something was wrong fairly early in the process. I battled through, tried at least, until I knew I had to go see my doctor. When I went to see the doctor, I saw this thing through the scope, the granuloma. I didn't see it as that big of a deal at first. I still continued to sing, but there are about three or four songs, the last few we recorded, that you do hear a rasp in my voice when I sing on those. But it's different from now and two months ago, right now I can't sing, I wouldn't be able to finish a note even. I've tried it just around the house and my voice is breaking a lot, I get this like cough in my voice.

Off stage we talked a bit about how you're now, with the vocal problems, a songwriter first. As a writer, how do these songs come to you? Do you sit down and decide you're gonna write a song today? Is it waking up in the middle of the night and writing a song that popped into your head?

Ryan: I use to think it was all spontaneous. Now I've realized that the stuff I sang on the spot, were actually ideas that had already come from other songs I actually sat down and wrote with the purpose of writing a song. While recording this record, I trained my brain to always sing words. I always had a few sheets of papers with lyrics in front of me when I was in the recording booth. I didn't want to mumble, I didn't want to hold notes longer than I needed to. I'm not exactly Mariah Carey or Michael Buble, I'm not trying to blow people away with my voice. I'm comfortable just having a voice to be able and sing these songs. The thing with writing this record, is that with each song I wrote, I had more confident to write the next one. I've never had that happen to me before, where I feel each song I wrote is good. On past albums, I felt as though for every good song I wrote, I wrote a bad one, and of course those never made the record but it kind of brings your confidence down when something like that happens. With Break in the Clouds, I don't feel like I wrote any bad songs. And I feel I can say that without sounding arrogant because this whole writing process was natural. I don't know if anyone else are going to like these songs, but I've never felt as pleased with a record as I do with this one. And since I can't do anything else during this forced break from performing live, I'm already writing another record.

Really? That's quite surprising since most artists would take a break from writing songs when they are just about to put a new record out.

Ryan: I've said this before and people take it as a joke, but I don't feel like I'm good at anything else but being an artist, or as good. It's difficult to start writing another record, it always is. You would think if you just finished writing a batch of great songs, that it'll continue onto the next one but it doesn't. I don't want to write second parts to any of my songs or records.

Well that's a risk, right? Since you're writing a new record so quickly, that the songs you write could just become extensions to the ones found on this record.

Ryan: I don't think it's a risk, I think it's perfect. There are still elements found on Break in the Clouds that I want to explore further. With this record, I wrote about twenty songs and it was so difficult to create a track listing. There were some songs that missed the cut, that I was married to, but no one else liked them. There was this song called Helpless Somebody, and I just thought it was the coolest thing. I'm fortune it enough to have a lot of smart and supporting people around me that hear me out. Everything She'll Ever Be, a song that I performed last year at the Chaos Awards, Studio60 Records loved. Everyone at Studio60 wanted it to be on this record, they all knew it was going to be a hit, I knew it was gonna be a hit, but it didn't have the same DNA as the other songs on it. Yet not once did Greg Walls or someone else come up to me and say or even suggest what I should do with my music. As soon as you put a big radio song on this record, everything else feels small. This album has a very set dynamic range to it, so when you put it on it may take you two minutes before you get an idea where this is going. From thereon, the sound is very focused. It's just a very consistent record.

The Art of Getting By, a song off your previous record served as the stepping stone for Break in the Clouds, so which song off this record is going to do the same for the next one?

Ryan: There's a song off this record called Moment You Get Around to Living, and I think that's the song that will open the door to the next sound for the next record. It's a freaky song, it's not like anything I've done before. The song is divided into three parts, none of which you would think they go together or should go together, but somehow it works. I wasn't sure if I could really get away with it.
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User is suspended until 16/05/4760 03:38:29(UTC) stephaniewazhere  
#11 Posted : 23 May 2012 11:39:24(UTC)
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Stephens Fierce: i loved what you said about the process of songwriter between records because it is something i could relate to a lot, as always i admire the way you speak on interviews.
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#12 Posted : 23 May 2012 20:44:21(UTC)
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Nadia: Believe it or not, I don't always agree with what my boyfriend comes out with in his interviews, but I do always respect his opinion. For most of the time, he talks a lot of sense! But damn, one whole month of no talking? But, but... who else am I gonna have banter with? :'(
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Offline genocidal king  
#13 Posted : 23 May 2012 20:55:00(UTC)
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Katie: Ryan looks almost drunk on this interview hehehe. Were you Ryan? It still makes me sad to hear of those vocal issues you have, but you know we all support you and it's all gonna be good when you get better. I can't wait to hear the new album. I know it will be my favourite of the year. You influence me so much that I listen to you more than anything else. Stop writing more records though :( Give us all a chance! Please.... :P
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#14 Posted : 24 May 2012 02:59:06(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: stephaniewazhere Go to Quoted Post
Stephens Fierce: i loved what you said about the process of songwriter between records because it is something i could relate to a lot, as always i admire the way you speak on interviews.


Ryan: Thank you. I think with most good songwriters, they don't wait until an album cycle is done to start writing for the next one already. Especially now that I'm not touring, I really have nothing else to do but just make the best out of this downtime by writing another record and find ways to make a completely different sounding record.

Originally Posted by: GirlSpice Go to Quoted Post
Nadia: Believe it or not, I don't always agree with what my boyfriend comes out with in his interviews, but I do always respect his opinion. For most of the time, he talks a lot of sense! But damn, one whole month of no talking? But, but... who else am I gonna have banter with? :'(


Ryan: You don't?! I'm highly offended right now, as my girlfriend you should agree with everything I say in interviews, even if it sounds absurd! Well thanks, you just saved yourself from getting dumped. Yeah, that's gonna be rough for both of us. I'm not quite sure how bantering will work for us when I'm unable to speak. Does the iPad have a bantering app? :(

Originally Posted by: genocidal king Go to Quoted Post
Katie: Ryan looks almost drunk on this interview hehehe. Were you Ryan? It still makes me sad to hear of those vocal issues you have, but you know we all support you and it's all gonna be good when you get better. I can't wait to hear the new album. I know it will be my favourite of the year. You influence me so much that I listen to you more than anything else. Stop writing more records though :( Give us all a chance! Please.... :P


Ryan: Haha, I wasn't drunk while doing this interview Kat. It was tiring though, it was like an hour long interview. Thank you for the support, I don't know how those months after the surgery are gonna be, but I'm thankful that I have people around me who care. Pfft... it better be your favorite album! I'm honored to hear that, Katie Kat. Nope, I'm not stopping until I win a Best Album award. You can blame Nadia for that. :p
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User is suspended until 28/07/4752 18:55:55(UTC) Walton  
#15 Posted : 24 May 2012 05:13:55(UTC)
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Ronnie Hamilton (8 Mile Rock): You're a fan of Jimi Hendrix as well? Cheers man! Anyways, I'm looking forward to this. The boys and I just wanted to wish you the best with this album. Later man.
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#16 Posted : 24 May 2012 05:40:09(UTC)
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Break in the Clouds: THE INTERVIEW, PART THREE

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How long do you have to go without performing? Since you said, you haven't had the surgery yet and the recovery period afterward is a long process too.

Ryan: Well I think it's a prison sentence or a field trip. The moment I decide to get the surgery, you still have to countdown about six to eight months. I will be getting the procedure done around September or October, maybe after my birthday in September. I'm just gonna write a record and enjoy being thirty-four years old, I don't want to entirely lose the rest of the year to recovery. At the moment, I'm in a really beautiful place. I feel extremely uncomfortable on stage, in front of people, without a guitar in my hands or a microphone in front of my face. I haven't done any talking, any interviews in two years, so I have to ease back into that. If I had my way I would just never talk. But I'm in a beautiful place, where I'm just floating for a minute. And maybe there's something to be written about during this time or heard or seen or met. I don't know. Of course, I hope every other record I put out I can tour with... but this has to mean something. I have to make this period of time in my life mean something.

What's beautiful about the place you're at right now in your life?

Ryan: You know, I'm finding beauty in simple things again. Which I don't think I've felt in a number of years. I chuckle when I think about it, it's a bit embarrassing I guess, but I'm gonna say it anyways. A few nights ago I was playing guitar in my room, in front of a mirror, pretending he was on stage again for the first time. I find that to be beautiful and vital because that makes me human. I feel like I'm seventeen again and I have this intense passion, undying desire to be on stage playing music but not being able to, so I'm up at one in the morning in my room playing guitar, the same way I would play it if I was playing Madison Square Garden.

On a song off this record titled How a Man Grows Older, you kind of accept the fact that you are thirty-four years old, an adult. Why do you think it was important for you to write songs like that? There's quite a few songs on the album that talk about growing up and the passing of time.

Ryan: I was twenty-eight for four years, until I was thirty-four. It's going to sound corny, but something happened where I just feel this capacity to love more and just to be happy. Like, I know I can't be happy this way, but what are other ways I can be happy? I think I'm going to be really happy moving away to somewhere that isn't Los Angeles or New York, and just writing songs. Even if wherever I go I have to be alone, I'll find beauty in that.

Where are you thinking about moving to?

Ryan: Montana. It's a beautiful place and I was in town for just one day with a few friends, and that same day I called a real estate agent and told her that I had to see a place there. And you'll have it, the very first house she showed me, I fell in love with.

Wow, Montana. That's a long way from New York City and Los Angeles.

Ryan: That's its charm!

What are your plans if you decide to move there?

Ryan: I want to build a recording studio. I want to find out where we can get the best ambient and bass sounds in a house. So I'm going to dedicate myself quite heavily into the creation of a recording studio in my Montana home. Things are always going to draw me into having to travel to New York City and Los Angeles. We just recently moved the headquarters of Liberation Records to New York City, and Studio60 is in LA. And a lot of my friends live in those two cities and I don't know anyone in Montana so I'm just entering a new phase in my life. We'll see where it goes from there. I'm going to seclude myself for a bit, and just see the world pass by me. Even in Montana I'll wake up every morning, hang out, write songs, play guitar, cook myself dinner, and go to sleep again. The important thing is that wherever you are, you should wake up happy and go to sleep happy.

Well that's pretty cool building a studio from scratch.

Ryan: Yeah. I want it to be up and running fairly quickly because it adds pressure to me. If the studio isn't done yet I can say, 'oh there's no need to write songs today, the studio's not running yet.' But with it all set up, I know that I have to write songs and be sure to use the studio well. It'd be pretty bad if I had a studio in my house, yet I wasn't using it. That's something that when young songwriters ask me for advice, the best advice is no excuses. It doesn't matter if you don't have a record deal yet, or if you don't have a band, or the microphone you want, or the guitar. It's very important to wake up and write.

What's the key to finding the happiness you have in your life now?

Ryan: Always enjoy your life, always find ways to be happy even if it means being alone. I think it's cool not to be happy in your twenties. When you're in your twenties, that's when you gotta get stuff set up. But only a period of your time can be setting it up, you don't want to look back at your life and see that you've spent more time setting up than you have living it. There's a song on this record that's kind of like a letter to myself to remember that I'm not twenty-eight anymore, nor I am fifty. So I had to find some middle ground to it. Part of me is glad that I'm not touring because I can stay in this very creative place. When you go on tour you can't really be that creative because you never stop.

Going back a step to the point where you spoke about how you see your life in Montana, do you read a lot?

Ryan: I fall asleep when I read. That's why I've stopped buying books, I have a pile of books I've bought throughout the years and I haven't read one of them. I'd much rather write than read. I guess when I'm unable to talk I will read more, e-mails mostly.

This is one of the few interviews you will be doing for this record. How are you approaching doing interviews again? I know you took quite a long break from them.

Ryan: Yeah, yeah, since 2010 I haven't done any interviews. With doing very few interviews, I don't have to put on a thicker skin. I'd rather have thin skin, feel sick to my stomach for an half hour, and be sensitive. My biggest problem was when I decided to build a defense to being sensitive. I never stopped and said, "Wow, this really makes me feel uncomfortable." But instead I would say, "Ryan Ross Hernandez doesn't get uncomfortable." Even if he's not behaving the way he wants to. I get to just stay a writer.

We know Break in the Clouds will be released on May 29th, we know you're going to begin working on another album this summer. Are there any other music projects that you're working on?

Ryan: Not at the moment. I think it'd be really cool if I got a call from someone not asking me to sing, and just wanting me to play guitar on one of their songs or records. I will find some project where the guitar playing side can come out more. I still want to make a collaboration album with a female artist, I think that at some point of my career that will happen. I love structuring and layering songs around female vocals, so that will happen one day.

I recall that last year we heard about a record that you and Katie Coyle were going to make together.

Ryan: We were pretty serious about it, but our schedules just didn't work in our favor. I'm not completely writing off that project because it might happen somewhere down the line. She has a very long career ahead of her so we'll have a lot more opportunities to make it happen in the future. It's just not happening now.

When do you expect we'll see you again performing live?

Ryan: I'm hoping to be on the road this time, next year. Hopefully by then I have two records that I'll be able to play live, Break in the Clouds, and the next LP following it. It's okay to miss shows, it's not okay to miss chances to write songs or about a time in your life. Thirty is when you figure it out before you owe it to yourself to be happy. I expect at some point, pretty soon, to start having an interdependent relationship with a woman. I finally figured out how to do it, did a lot of homework on that end. I gotta put my skills to the test soon. In their thirties it's the apex of having something to say and knowing how to say it. You might learn how to say it before you have something to say, and you might have something to say after you've forgotten how to say it. I'm still sharp as a writer and now I have more depth I can get into. So I don't want to give the year up to not speaking or not being able to write.

Do you think you'll ever retire from making music?

Ryan: I feel that in my thirties is when I'll create my best work. I hope it never happens, but if that sort of spirit ever leaves me, I'll have as much music as possible to draw on and look back at my life.

Well I've listened to this record about five or six times, and I was left very impressed by it. Especially the emotional depth and honest lyrics. With some records you can tell that there's a false side to them.

Ryan: I've made those. I've gone through that phase.

I guess most musicians do, but this is a great record. I'm really impressed by it and I think this style of music works really well with you.

Ryan: Thank you, thank you.

I think we should end this off with one question that isn't very serious, I know the internet is wondering this. What's with the hat?

Ryan: Ah, yes. The hat. I felt like I needed something to hide under. I'm still not sure why it's such an issue. I quite like it, I think it's a very nice look.

It's a great hat, large hat.

Ryan: It's a large hat. It's a commitment, that's for sure. I've started to wear stuff just because I like it. I don't care what the internet thinks about my hat or my hair or my look. I've noticed that people these days don't quite bully you, but they're looking to see if they can bully you. So they can be like, with a smug face, "what's with the hat?" All you have to say is, "no, I really like it, it's quite nice." No one is gonna say, "no, I don't like it, it's not quite nice!" They go, "oh, it's cool man, it's cool."

I really want to thank you on behalf of everyone here. You said you weren't doing many interviews, so we all appreciate you taking the time to join us here tonight.

Ryan: No, thank you and everyone else who has come across the country for this. I appreciate you for putting up with my ramblings.

Do you have any final thoughts or remarks?

Ryan: The thing I keep thinking is that you pick any artist you like, they might have been gone for six to eight months, but it doesn't feel like anything. I just hope that it doesn't feel by the time I get on stage. There's a ton of artists right now who aren't working on anything, and by the time they get on stage you go, "oh great!" I'm hoping that by the time I start playing again here in the states, and play shows again in the UK, and Australia, and Japan, that it feels like a short period of time. Time is a very forgiving thing. I'm hoping I'm on the forgiving side of time. I'm looking forward to a year from now being back on stage and still feeling like I'm needed.

We all hope it's sooner than later. We wish you the best of luck with the surgery and the recovery period.

Ryan: Thank you. Hopefully next time you all see me, I'm on stage with a guitar in hand, performing, instead of talking for an hour.
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Offline genocidal king  
#17 Posted : 25 May 2012 00:13:14(UTC)
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Katie: You know, I really wish that album had worked out. I still hope that we can do it some day. Obviously we have never talked about the concept to anyone, but it is so far removed from anything that has ever been done in terms of just what it would be that I still think we owe it to the world to have our joint idea come to fruition one day. I sincerely, really hope that we get the chance to do it.
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#18 Posted : 25 May 2012 02:39:57(UTC)
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Five day's mate! Really looking forward to getting a copy. Would ask for you to send me one but the postage out here to Sao Paolo is insane! Was discussing with the wife that we should get in touch with you see if you were interested in writing something, but you seem pretty active at the moment. Give us a text or something when you're free and we'll have to catch up.

Lots of Love,

Ben
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Offline PANIC!  
#19 Posted : 25 May 2012 03:04:35(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: genocidal king Go to Quoted Post
Katie: You know, I really wish that album had worked out. I still hope that we can do it some day. Obviously we have never talked about the concept to anyone, but it is so far removed from anything that has ever been done in terms of just what it would be that I still think we owe it to the world to have our joint idea come to fruition one day. I sincerely, really hope that we get the chance to do it.


Ryan: I mean, I'm sure one day we will catch up and at least discuss it further. I'm in the middle part of my career and you've just started your own, so there will come other chances for us to get together and write some songs. If we ever put the record out with that concept we've discuss, I think people will definitely be blown away by it. I feel like I don't owe anything to the world at the moment, but making a record together definitely still interests me. It's something we will discuss somewhere down the line, I'm sure of it.

Originally Posted by: Aj Go to Quoted Post
Five day's mate! Really looking forward to getting a copy. Would ask for you to send me one but the postage out here to Sao Paolo is insane! Was discussing with the wife that we should get in touch with you see if you were interested in writing something, but you seem pretty active at the moment. Give us a text or something when you're free and we'll have to catch up.

Lots of Love,

Ben


Ryan: Ben! I thought you had gone on a bender and moved to some small village in Africa. Luckily, the album will be released in Brazil, I've never toured down there, but apparently I have a fanbase down there which is news to me. At this time I'm a bit busy with promoting the album, which just means talking more since I can't perform, but I will be writing throughout the summer. I will definitely keep that in mind, I'll call you when I'm done with this promotional tour.
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#20 Posted : 25 May 2012 23:36:53(UTC)
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Katie: Wonderful! If I ever get the chance to fully work with you, I'm sure it will be the highlight of your career...I'm only joking big bro, but I know it would be the highlight of my career. Hopefully the opportunity arises at some point down the line. It would mean an awful lot for me to even record in the same room as you.
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