Support our efforts, sign up to a full membership!
(Start for free)
Register or login with just your e-mail address
Pop / Rock 27 June, 2020

Marlana Shares 'I'm Good' Via BuzzBands LA, New EP 'At Least I Tried' Out July 24

Hot Songs Around The World

A Bar Song (Tipsy)
Shaboozey
242 entries in 21 charts
Espresso
Sabrina Carpenter
329 entries in 26 charts
Million Dollar Baby
Tommy Richman
183 entries in 21 charts
Houdini
Eminem
160 entries in 23 charts
Lunch
Billie Eilish
149 entries in 24 charts
Fortnight
Taylor Swift & Post Malone
221 entries in 25 charts
I Like The Way You Kiss Me
Artemas
336 entries in 26 charts
Stumblin' In
Cyril
273 entries in 16 charts
Grustnyi Dens
Artik & Asti
185 entries in 2 charts
We Can't Be Friends (Wait For Your Love)
Ariana Grande
247 entries in 24 charts
Too Sweet
Hozier
321 entries in 22 charts
Belong Together
Mark Ambor
191 entries in 16 charts
Gata Only
Floyymenor & Cris MJ
219 entries in 15 charts
Tu Falta De Querer
Mon Laferte
176 entries in 3 charts
Marlana Shares 'I'm Good' Via BuzzBands LA, New EP 'At Least I Tried' Out July 24
New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Today, Marlana has shared her latest single "I'm Good" off of her upcoming EP, At Least I Tried. "I'm Good" is a powerful, honest and vulnerable song on depression and speaking out against the stigmas that come with talking about one's mental health. The song premiered exclusively with BuzzBands LA praising, "I'm Good,' tackles the latter, a powerful memo-to-self that turns the typical response to the common question "How ya doin'?" on its ear."

On the track Marlana explains, "'I'm Good' is a song about depression, frustration and pretending to be okay for the sake of everyone else around you. After the death of my brother and sister, I changed. Those around me did too. People claim to like vulnerability, but in my experience, it just makes people uncomfortable. So I pretend that I'm fine even though I'm thinking about death 99% of the time."
At Least I Tried is set to be released on July 24th 2020 via Play Count Recordings, more information to come.

At Least I Tried- TRACKLISTING:
01. The Right
02. Midnight Special
03. So Bad
04. I Can't Wait
05. Bluff
06. I Don't Want To Fall In Love
07. I'm Good

As Marlana sat in the parking lot of an LA hospital and weighed a self-imposed stay in its psych ward, the multi-faceted musician laughed through a layer of tears and thought, 'Well, this is going to make an interesting song.'

How Marlana got here is deeply personal, a chain of increasingly challenging events: crippling waves of anxiety from constant touring and keeping her longtime band Milo Greene afloat in a failing industry; a complex love-and-loathe relationship with a close friend; and several deaths within her family. (Two of Marlana's siblings passed away at the same tragic age: 33.)
"I started working hard on solo material after I had a complete mental breakdown," she says. "I went home to my parents' place in the Sierra Nevada mountains and wrote for a few weeks after my antidepressants kicked in and I started functioning again. For years in Milo, people kept telling me to go solo and it finally felt like the right time."

The one thing Marlana learned from writing and wrapping Milo Greene's three LPs - especially 2018's highly evolved Adult Contemporary album - was how freeing it is to follow unfamiliar ideas through to fruition, no matter how strange they may seem at the time. Or as she puts it, "I love lots of genres, so why would I want to always write in the same one?"

The crucial detail many songwriters miss is an elemental sense of cohesiveness. It's the glue that holds any decent record together, and her aptly named At Least I Tried EP is no exception. While it starts with a wild-eyed swagger (the heated vocal harmonies and restless hooks of "The Right"), the record's tight-knit tracks slip into several other styles without losing its listeners along the way. Standouts include the gleaming lounge grooves of "Midnight Special," the chaotic funk chords of "I Can't Wait," and the full-on fromage of "Bluff."

The single that cuts straight to the heart of where Marlana's at these days is "I'm Good," however. As spry as it is on the surface, a closer look reveals incredibly relatable shades of darkness and light.
"It's a song about depression, frustration, and pretending to be okay for the sake of everyone else around you," explains Marlana. "After the death of my brother and sister, I changed. Those around me did too. People claim to like vulnerability, but in my experience, it just makes people uncomfortable. So I pretend that I'm fine even though I'm thinking about death 99-percent of the time."

At least she - and in a roundabout way, us - has music. It's something Marlana discovered at an early age and could always depend on.
"I always loved it," she says, "but I did not like to perform on demand. It always has to be on my own terms. I'm not the person at the house party with an acoustic guitar playing for everyone if you catch my drift."






Most read news of the week


© 2001-2024
top40-charts.com (S6)
about | site map
contact | privacy
Page gen. in 0.6107111 secs // 4 () queries in 0.0048031806945801 secs


live