Frogtoon Music

Artist Biography For Brent Cowles

A Few Years Ago Singer-Songwriter Brent Cowles Had No Idea He Was Stumbling Toward A Deeper Self-Actualization And The Record That Would Likely Break His Career Wide Open. The Most Meaningful Relationship Of His Life Was Dying And So Was The Band To Which He’d Given His Everything. Rudderless In Self-Doubt Cowles Narrowed His Focus To Zero In On His Music – Moving Into His Truck For Five Months Reevaluating His Artistic Pathos And Surrounding Himself With Community In His Adopted Hometown Of Denver. As Cowles Reordered His Headspace His Music Began To Fall In Line. A Poignant Shared Moment With A Respected Friend And Colleague Helped Point Cowles In A New Direction And It Wasn’t Long Before He Traded His Acoustic Guitar For An Electric And Charged Forward With The Renewed Sense Of Purpose And Energy Found On Cold Times Cowles’ Amped-Up Solo Debut For Dine Alone Records Out April 28 And Produced By Joe Richmond Of Churchill . But Before Choosing To Release Music Under His Own Name Cowles And His Profoundly Soulful Voice Wooed Audiences And Industry Alike As Frontman Of Indie Folk Troubadours You Me & Apollo. The Band’s Buzz And Timely Aesthetics Made Them A Top Draw Throughout Colorado Rock Clubs And It Wasn’t Long Before They Were Being Booked By The Lumineers’ Agent At Paradigm Talent Agency And Opening Multiple Gigs For Brandi Carlile And Touring With Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers. But As That Chapter Slammed Shut 27-Year-Old Cowles Not Only Went Electric For The Songs That Would Become Cold Times He Dug Deep Into His Vocal Chords To Find A New Persona – That Of The Rare Rock ‘n’ Roll Frontman Whose Nuances Behind The Mic Still Allow Him To Create A Genuine Connection To His Fans. Cowles Had Already Felt Himself Veering Away From The Country-Tinged Folk Music Of You Me & Apollo And Advice From A Good Friend Helped Seal The Deal. “I Was Talking With Nathaniel Rateliff After A Night Sweats Show And He Told Me ‘Listen Man. There Have Been A Lot Of Guys With Acoustic Guitars Who Have Been A Huge Influence On Me But Get An Electric Guitar – And Start A Band.’ Ever Since Then That Rock ‘n’ Roll Side Has Been Pouring Out Of Me And It Feels Right.” While The Cold Times Referenced In The Raucously Soulful Title Track Are Intensely Personal The Song’s Sentiment Has Taken On An Entirely New And Expanded Meaning In A Post-Trump America. “I Feel Like We’ve Been Forced To Choose Sides And That’s Creating This Wall Between A Lot Of People – People Who I’ve Had Relationships With For A Long Time And There’s Now This Rift Between Us That Wasn’t There Before ” Cowles Said. “It Has A Lot To Do With What’s Going On In Our Government And Around The World Because Of Course There’s More Happening Than Just What’s In Our Backyard. “It Feels Like The Times Are Cold. And The Only Way To Get Through A Period Like That Is To Feel Cold Together And Acknowledge That It Feels Bad And Things Need To Improve. How Else Can You Get To The Next Step If You’re Not Talking About It?” For The First 16 Years Of His Life Cowles Spent Three Or Four Days A Week At His Pastor Father’s Nondenominational Churches – An Experience That Left Him Cold On Organized Religion But Inspired By The Many Church Hymns That Surrounded Him. It’s A Backstory That Helps Make Sense Of Songs Like Lead Single Lift Me Up A Roadhouse Rager That Tips A Hat To Cowles’ Long-Held Stubbornness – “My Mama Said I’m Unavoidable ” He Snarls Several Times – Before Erupting Into A Gospel-Inspired Bridge That Takes You Straight To Church Before Diving Back Into The Grit. The Song Was Revelatory For Cowles. It Marked The First Time He Had Ever Connected With That Musician-Specific Desire To Make People Move. “I Remember Thinking ‘I Can Make This Loud As Shit And People Are Going To Want To Move To It’ ” He Said. “And That’s Not Something I’d Ever Thought About Before.” Elsewhere On Cold Times Cowles Experiments With Dynamics And Levels. In Maybe We’re Fine Cowles And His Otherworldly Vocal Gymnastics Are Anything But Unsure. Cowles Shows A Tender More Vulnerable Profile In 9th And Lafayette Which Intimately Documents A Break-Up That Taught Cowles To Love Himself. When He Sings “I’ve Come To Live And Die At 9th And Lafayette ” He’s Talking About A Tumultuous Rebirth – Set Inside An Apartment He Shared With His Ex In Denver’s Cheesman Park Neighborhood. “One Of The Things That Influenced This Record The Most Was Honky Château That Elton John Record Because It’s Just So Groovy – Especially That First Song Honky Cat ” Cowles Said. “There’s Just Something About That Record. I Listened To It On Repeat For A Long Time When I First Started Doing This Rock ‘n’ Roll Stuff.” You Can Feel That Jittery Revisionist Groove In Hold Up A Song That Evolves Into A Chorus Of Hallelujahs That Push Hands To The Air And Hairs To Stand On End. While Cowles Isn’t A Believer In His Father’s Faith They Still Share A Deeply Close Friendship – And The Singer-Songwriter Clearly Feels The Spirit Of Rock ‘n’ Roll Music. Happily It’s A Mutually Beneficial Relationship. “Music Has Definitely Saved My Life Before – A Few Times ” Cowles Said. “I Struggle With A Lot Of Things The Kinds Of Things Everybody Struggles With And If You Can’t Talk About Those Things In Some Capacity It Can Be Detrimental.” Brent Cowles And His Four-Piece Band Will Play At South By Southwest In Austin Texas And Treefort Music Fest In Boise Idaho In March Before Setting Out On A West Coast Tour Behind Cold Times Which Will Be Released April 28 With A Show At The Hi-Dive In Denver Colo.

50 Top Music Tracks For Brent Cowles - Frogtoon Music

50 Top Music Lyrics For Brent Cowles - Frogtoon Music

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