VIDEO VOYAGEUR: 3 Q’s with HAVILAH TOWER

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Sometimes, the most resonant songs emerge not from a single moment of inspiration but from a long, quiet process of rediscovery.

“Open Wide” is the latest single from cinematic folk-pop artist Havilah Tower, and it is one such song – a reflective and emotionally charged meditation on what it means to outgrow the life you thought you wanted. Tower explores the quiet reckoning that comes when ambition gives way to presence, and when clarity begins to form in the spaces we often overlook.

The journey to Open Wide began with an unexpected spark: an article about her alma mater, the University of Texas at Austin, hiring their first Songwriter-in-Residence.

That artist, Darden Smith, would go on to mentor Tower through a series of creative breakthroughs, helping her reconnect with her voice in new ways. What followed was a groundbreaking collaboration across borders – Tower and her longtime trio partnered with international music startup Hall Up to bring the track to life, working with UK-based producer David A. Griffiths and Hollywood engineer Adam Freeman to shape the sound.

“Open Wide” marks a shift not just in Tower’s sound, but in her storytelling. It’s the product of reflection, resilience and a willingness to see – and sing – the truth.

1.Tell us the story of this song, why did you choose to visualize this song specifically in this way?

Our newest single, Open Wide, is a cinematic folk-pop song that explores what happens when you’ve built up a “dream life” but it turns out to be different than you thought or want anymore. 

Open Wide is a raw, lyrical reflection on trading illusion for truth—and finding the courage to be honest with yourself on what really matters to you, which often are the simple things around you all along.

Or you can stream or buy Open Wide on your favorite music platform: https://distrokid.com/hyperfollow/havilahtower/open-wide

2. What was the inspiration behind this new video (visuals, storyline, etc.)?

For the Open Wide music video, we wanted to bring the core message of the song, showing the contrast of someone leading a seemingly successful life on the surface while also struggling.

In the music video for “Open Wide”, you follow a central character as she rises to fame through her music, a life she worked hard to create. Even though it all looks beautiful on the outside, she is struggling on the inside missing the core, fundamental things in her life she grew up like spending time with family, true connections with friends and a sense of herself.

Central to where we meet the main character in the story is an unraveling of this supposed “dream life”. It’s through this unraveling that she breaks through to something more meaningful, her own truth and direction – all things that take courage to embrace when you’re leading such a seemingly successful life. This shift plays out in the music video as a parallel between her adult self and her childhood memories that she starts to reconnect with. 

It’s a reminder that all the glitters is not gold, and that sometimes our hardest moments can be doorways into something more truer and more meaningful. Hence the lyrics: “Unraveling minds open wide”.

3. What was the process of making the video?

In making Open Wide, we wanted to push the envelope of leveraging technology to tell the story. We tend to embrace a “test and learn” mentality so we decided to leverage some of the latest AI tools, like Runway, and build out the narrative portion of the story, which involved a lot of hours of fine-tuning prompts and then of course, editing the clips to tell the story. Through this work, we built out the journey of our central character.

Simultaneously, we wanted to ground the video in this world with a performance from our band so we conducted multiple filmings in order to capture each of us to interweave throughout the video, mainly featuring Havilah Tower as the primary narrator who is singing Open Wide.

There is a subtle moment that happens at the beginning and end of the music video, starting off with what appears to be a forced smile but ending with a more real, authentic smile. The smile bookends the journey of going from a seemingly successful life to truer success of being connected to yourself and making choices that are actually fulfilling.

Find out more about Havilah Tower on her Website

Stacked with Swagger – Lil’ Red & The Rooster Deal a Winning Hand with “Stack ‘Em Up Baby”

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Lil’ Red & The Rooster’s latest single “Stack ‘Em Up Baby” is a whole vibe. A low-slung groove with a wink in its eye and a strut in its step, the track oozes vintage soul and playful cool while bringing something unmistakably fresh to the table.

From the opening piano flourish, you are unmistakably dropped into a smoke-filled jazz lounge where every note has purpose and every phrase is dressed to impress.

This is retro-modern blues at its finest. Jen “Lil’ Red” Milligan’s vocals glide with a feline style finesse – cheeky, sly and drenched in charisma. In this son, Lil Red is not just singing about stacking ’em up, she is the dealer, the mood-setter and the ringleader of this cinematic scene. Her delivery evokes the smoky sophistication of Rickie Lee Jones, with the soul deep phrasing of vintage jazz and blues greats, filtered through her own unique sass.

Pascal Fouquet, the “Rooster” in this bluesy power duo, brings his signature elegance on guitar.

His touch is tasteful and timeless, letting each note breathe and smolder, and skilled application of tone, groove and a deep understanding of the genre’s roots. His playing is the slow burn to Lil’ Red’s flickering flame, and together they create a dynamic that is impossible to fake.

And then there’s the not-so-secret weapon – Grammy-nominated keyboardist Bobby Floyd (Ray Charles, Count Basie Orchestra, Dr. John). His B3 and piano work provide that plush, cinematic backdrop for this slow-burner, anchoring the whole production in something rich and luxurious. His presence is testament to the band’s commitment to real musicianship, deep soul, and that indefinable thing we call “feel.”

“Stack ‘Em Up Baby” leans into a nostalgic groove dripping with class and intention, much like the theme song to a 1960’s detective film that never got made but should have. There’s drama, there’s flirtation and there is an undeniable joy in how the band navigates the space between blues, jazz and retro soul. It’s as much a mood as it is melody.

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And this track kicks off off a waterfall release schedule, leading up to the release of the duo’s upcoming album called “7”. If this track is the opening move, consider us all-in.

7″ promises to explore themes of freedom and rising from adversity – core values that have always quietly pulsed beneath the surface of Lil’ Red & The Rooster’s work. But here, with “Stack ‘Em Up Baby,” those themes get dressed up in velvet, high heels and attitude.

Lil’ Red & The Rooster have never been content to just rehash the blues. They really embody the blues. And with this new era, they are showing that the blues is thriving and ready to seduce a new generation.

So go ahead. Put it on. Stack ’em up, press play and let this tune swagger into your soul.

Listen to “Stack ‘Em Up Baby” here

Find out all about Lil’ Red & The Rooster on their Website.

Stream music on Spotify and Apple Music

Reeya Banerjee Looks Back with Latest Single “For the First Time”

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Reeya Banerjee’s latest single For the First Time is a quietly stunning ballad that peels back the layers of love, memory and selfhood with grace and vulnerability.

As the second release from her upcoming album called This Place, the track stands apart as the emotional anchor of the record – a moment of stillness and clarity that reflects on a transformative chapter in the artist’s life.

The song unravels like a letter written years after the fact, soaked in the bittersweet glow of hindsight. At its center, For the First Time is a love song – not only to a partner, but to the version of oneself that emerges in the right place at the right time.

That place, in Banerjee’s case, is the Hudson Valley’s Mohonk Mountain House. It’s a historic and slightly surreal resort tucked high into the Shawangunk Ridge. It’s not just the setting, but a kind of co-star in the story, embodying both the eccentricity and emotional grounding that shaped her early adulthood.

Banerjee’s vocals are tender and unadorned, and she sings each line with clarity. With a warmth in her tone that balances out the melancholy of memories and the comfort of knowing just how far she’s come.

For the First Time is co-written and produced by Luke Folger, and it is an outlier on This Place. It’s a ballad amid more uptempo tracks, and yet it feels like the heart of the album. Folger’s instrumentation is rich in texture – shimmering guitar lines, subtle background harmonies and open, airy production that evokes starlit nights in the Catskills.

Lyrically, this song is packed with subtle emotion. It evokes the quiet revelations that define young adulthood: learning to love someone while still figuring out how to love yourself, finding home in a place you never expected, discovering a new version of your voice in the midst of gravel paths and gossip filled dining halls. It’s a coming-of-age story told not in big moments, but in the slow accumulation of small, meaningful ones.

In many ways, For the First Time feels like the spiritual successor to “Need You There,” a fan favorite from Banerjee’s debut The Way Up. But where that track reached upward with longing, this one looks inwards with a calm recognition. It hums softly in the background of thoughts, reminding you of the place and people who shaped you and the person you were brave enough to become.

Find out more about Reeya Banerjee on her Website

Stream music on Spotify and YouTube Music

Pete Calandra’s Latest Album “Night Mist” is a Tonic for the Modern Mind

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Pete Calandra’s latest release Night Mist is an album that doesn’t shout to be heard. It simply waits, patiently to be felt.

This eleven track collection is steeped in quietude, unfolding with the elegance of falling dusk and the emotional gravity of late-night introspection.

As both a skilled pianist and prolific composer across Broadway, film and television, Calandra brings a rare blend of technical finesse and emotional restraint to this work. It’s one that feels like a much needed breather in an overstimulated world.

Listen here:

The pieces on Night Mist are deceptively simple. On the surface, they present as minimal piano compositions touched by ambient textures and occasional soft orchestrations. But underneath that lies an exquisite sense of pacing and purpose. Tracks like “Whispers of the Dawn” and “The Heart of Mount Seleya” operate like emotional landscapes: sparse yet vivid, introspective yet expansive. And it is Calandra’s restraint, the space between notes, that becomes its own kind of melody.

What makes this album resonate so strongly is its consistency in tone without ever becoming over repetitive.

Each track brings a new shade of the same emotional spectrum. “Peaceful Valley” introduces cinematic string beds that evoke a pastoral calm, while “Autumn Nights” leans into the warmth of a felted piano to conjure a deeply intimate sense of place.

The ambient title track, “Night Mist” blends light electronics with improvisational phrasing, perfectly capturing the album’s thesis — serenity in the unknown.

Though best known to some for his work behind the scenes, including more than 100 film scores and music for global events like the FIFA World Cup and Kennedy Center Honors, Pete Calandra’s voice as a solo artist has become increasingly distinct over the last decade.

Night Mist builds on the aesthetic developed in ambient-forward albums like First Light and Carpe Noctem, but it lands with much more maturity and emotional clarity.

In an era defined by speed, distraction and technology burnout, Night Mist feels like a defiant gesture — an insistence on presence, on listening slowly, on valuing space.

It’s not just a collection of music, but also a gentle journey inward.

Connect with Peter Calandra via:

Website / YouTube / Spotify / Soundcloud

“Save the World” by Madame Z – A Hymn of Hope in the Face of Planetary Despair

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In a world overwhelmed by environmental catastrophe, humanitarian crises and collective heartbreak, Madame Z emerges with a brand new single that’s as musically gripping as it is emotionally necessary.

Called “Save the World,” the single was released intentionally on Earth Day, 20th April, and it’s a powerful, aching anthem that channels personal grief into a global plea for unity, compassion and action.

Listen here:

It opens with a haunting and sparse arrangement that immediately places the listener in a contemplative space.

There’s a steady, pulsing undercurrent, like a a heartbeat, that anchors the track from the start, a subtle metaphor for the planet’s own fragile rhythm. Madame Z’s voice enters with clarity and conviction, rich with emotional texture. And it’s the vocals that elevate everything – a soulful delivery, blending vulnerability and strength into each line. This is not performative pain, but a lived experience transformed into melody.

Written during a time of profound personal overwhelm, the song grapples with the heavy realities of genocide, war, famine, ecological collapse and the slow poisoning of the earth’s most basic life sources: air, water and soil.

But rather than becoming mired in despair, Madame Z creates something rare. It’s a protest song that is simultaneously a mantra for survival. “Save the World” is steeped in sorrow, yes, but it is also a vessel for change.

The song strikes a good balance between introspection and uplift – its layered instrumentation with guitar, atmospheric keys and percussion has a tribal feel and builds gradually, creating a sense of momentum. By the time the chorus fully blooms, the listener is immersed.

But “Save the World” is not just a general statement. It is also intimate. Madame Z is able to make something deeply political feel personal. It’s as if you are listening in on a whispered conversation between her and the earth, or between her and her own soul.

For those who know Madame Z’s earlier work, particularly her debut album ”Down the Rabbit Hole”, this track continues her signature style – unflinching emotional honesty, poetic lyrics and a commitment to turning lived experience into a form of healing.

Her background as a fierce advocate for women’s stories, especially through deeply personal tracks like “Unwanted”, is present here as well reminding us that caring for the earth and caring for each other are deeply connected acts.

In an intense political and cultural moment filled, “Save the World” is a song that cuts through the noise.

Keep up with Madame Z on her Website

Stream music on Spotify and Apple Music

After Hours Alchemy in MASSEY’s latest single “3:00am Funk”

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In the quiet chaos of 3am when bars have emptied, streets glisten with after-rain shimmer and the city feels like it’s catching its breath, MASSEY drops a groove that captures the electricity of that fleeting in-between hour.

“3:00 AM FUNK” isn’t just a vibe. It’s a fully formed nocturnal world built from rhythm, introspection and soul.

Listen in here:

It all opens with a steady, low-slung pulse courtesy of Charlie Wooton’s bass and Doug Belote’s hypnotic drums. Together they work to create the heartbeat of the song, which is measured, magnetic and endlessly listenable. This is a groove that knows how to hold space without rushing forwards. It invites you in and makes you stay.

Guitarists Peter Oravetz and Daniel Groover add fire and texture — dueling one moment and swirling the next — creating a mood that shifts between a swagger and a dream. Their use of reversed guitar loops gives “3:00AM Funk” a psychedelic hint. The 504 Horns (Jason Parfait on saxes and Ian Smith on trumpet and trombone) burst into the mix with brass lines that flash like headlights. All bold, stylish and unmistakably alive.

But “3:00AM Funk” doesn’t just skim the surface of party scene; it digs deeper. MASSEY sings about late night wandering, social saturation and emotional absence. Of longing for something genuine in a world built on performance. And yet, the song is not cynical in any way. It does hold space for beauty too. For those fleeting moments of eye contact, laughter or vulnerability that pierces the surface.

The accompanying music video, which was shot on the vibrant pulsing streets of Denver, matches the song’s mood perfectly – part fever dream, part soul search:

With “3:00 AM Funk,” MASSEY gives the listener a soundtrack for dancing and for feeling. For when the party fades and the questions echo louder.

Find out more about MASSEY on his Website

Stream music on Spotify and Apple Music