Jammerzine has an exclusive interview with Lizzie Edwards, front-woman of the mega talented Lizzie & the Makers. Having just released their new album titled ‘Dear Onda Wahl’, produced by Grammy winner Mario McNulty (David Bowie, Prince) and Cure guitarist Reeves Gabrels (Tin Machine, Bowie), Lizzie & The Makers have poised themselves on becoming, what I would consider, an ‘arena act’. Just listen to ‘Dear Onda Wahl’ (playlist below).

In today’s interview, we talk about the writing and recording process of the album as well as that original style that Lizzie & The Makers instinctively have plus collaborating with such external talent and what the future holds.

Check out our other features with Lizzie & The Makers HERE.

About Lizzie & The Makers

Lizzie & The Makers’ sophomore studio album, Dear Onda Wahl, embroiders their potent Southern-tinged rock with art-rock, dream-pop, and ethereal elements to spawn something alltheir own. Due in April, it’s one of those rare records that combines single-minded artistry with broad commercial appeal.

Created around the dusky yet soaring timbre of force-of-nature frontwoman Lizzie Edwards, Dear Onda Wahl was produced by Grammy winner Mario McNulty (David Bowie, Prince) and Cure guitarist Reeves Gabrels (Tin Machine, Bowie). Their influence, alongside the textured six-string and pedal-steel expressions of Edwards’ writing partner (and Gabrels protégé) Greg McMullen, ensure an intriguingly adventurous, hugely dynamic – and occasionally otherworldly – take on the traditional.

“We’re definitely rock ‘n roll … [But] it’s almost like when we wrote these songs they went through a David Lynch portal, and came out a little bizarre,” mulled Edwards. “So I think we’ve been on this kind of ethereal tear, but our group is really rooted in Southern rock, and some English rock.”

Atop granite foundations of AC/DC and Black Sabbath, NYC’s Makers layer the grooving rock of the Allman Brothers and Pink Floyd’s melodic psychedelia. But then there are lurking hints of blues/country rootsiness, and McMullen’s accomplished love of the avant-garde. Defying her constant comparisons to Janis Joplin, the classically-trained Edwards summons a heartfelt, nuanced mezzo-soprano shaped by Memphis soul legend Ann Peebles, Heart’s Wilson sisters, and jazz icon Billie Holiday. She’s assertive, yet vulnerable; defiant, yet proudly flawed.

Edwards and McMullen almost accidentally formed The Makers (named for Maker’s Mark bourbon) back in 2011, when the singer was scrambling to assemble a last-minute band for a festival at Pete’s Candy Store in Brooklyn, where she was sound engineer and McMullen was a regular performer.

“We played a couple of shows, just casually, and then Greg and I started to write together,” Edwards recalled. “It was just a perfect match, and our first song I think is still one of our best.” Lizzie & The Makers’ debut album, Fire from the Heart of Man, appeared in 2015, followed by the Meanwhile … EP three years later. A 2017 concert collection, Live at Rockwood Music Hall, conveyed The Makers’ famously visceral stage show. But Dear Onda Wahl, recorded at Mission Sound Recording in Williamsburg, both captures and compliments the band like nothing before. “Definitely the stuff has been written for performance,” offered McMullen, who has also played in Gabrels’ solo band and alongside Greg Dulli in the Twilight Singers. “It’s been adapted as to how we will record it.”

The Makers are rounded-out by seasoned sidemen with prodigious résumés: bassist Brett Bass (Gregg Allman, Bernie Worrell); drummer Steve Williams (Sadé, Digable Planets); and keyboard player Rob Clores (Black Crowes, John Popper Band).

“We’re more of a live band than necessarily a band that was over-produced or was dependent on sounds created in the studio,” Edwards noted.

From the opening, unearthly throb of “Lover by Proxy,” it’s clear that Dear Onda Wahl is something different. While the bluesy riff is familiar, its tortured tone is darker, more contemporary, and the perfect foil for Edwards’ emotive delivery.

“The textures are much more lush [on Dear Onda Wahl],” McMullen explained. “We were allowed to layer things, and this time in the studio we actually experimented so much more than we have in the past.”

Standout and first single “Mermaid” winds wistful melody through a delicately choppy guitar before blossoming into its darkly brain-staining hook.

“One of the main influences would actually be David Lynch,” McMullen continued. “Lizzie and I were equally influenced by what he’s accomplished with Twin Peaks, and that third season was definitely something that I think was on both our minds when we were writing.”

Dear Onda Wahl’s title track is a play on words originally written by Edwards as “Deer on the Wall”; a metaphorical letter to a mounted hunting trophy at the bar where she worked. It’s a funky, organ-flecked small-hours search for meaning in a tumultuous life. The record closes with the haunting, seven-minute “Mojo Hand,” soaked in McMullen’s borderline sci-fi sonic sorcery and Edwards’ enunciated occultic metaphors.

“There’s a lot of little outer-space, edgy weird sounds incorporated into this record that we didn’t completely embrace on previous records,” said Edwards. “And in general, as songwriters, we just evolve.”

Dear Onda Wahl will be preceded in February by “Mermaid” and its accompanying music video, with a special Lizzie & The Makers live stream to mark the occasion.

LINKS:
https://www.lizzieandthemakers.com
https://facebook.com/lizzieandthemakers
https://twitter.com/lizziemakers
https://lizzieandthemakers1.bandcamp.com/
https://instagram.com/lizzieandthemakers
https://open.spotify.com/artist/1rXVzDjpFee7mq0CSa1kwT?si=pjR-7KfwSNaQvRchyhpMGA
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXnW5aJz4VnA1bINks-BoIg

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