Grace Pettis – Photo credit Nicola Gell Photography

Video Feature & Web-Exclusive Interview
Artist:  GRACE PETTIS

Video:  “Drop Another Pin”

GRACE PETTIS FEATURED AT BRAVERY ON FIRE: A BENEFIT FOR WOMEN’S CANCER RESEARCH—THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 AT 8 PM EASTERN

Grace Pettis will be featured this Thursday, September 24 (8 PM Eastern) at Bravery on Fire: A Benefit for Women’s Cancer Research. Rachael Sage, a self-described “cancer thriver” will bring together a powerful group of performers for a great cause—to raise funds for Foundation for Women’s Cancer. The livestream will feature Grammy winners Paula Cole and Lisa Loeb, Tony-winning Broadway actors Megan Hilty and Alison Pill, musicians Jill Sobule, Kyshona, Heather Mae & Crys Matthews, Grace Kelly, Toby Lightman, Gaby Moreno, Fiona Harte, dancer Abigail Simon and more. 100% of all proceeds will be donated to Foundation for Women’s Cancer.

The livestream will be overseen by Grammy and Emmy-winning music and television production company StreamTheory and livestreamed at BraveryOnFire.com, as well as Facebook Live and YouTube.

Sage says, “As a recent cancer thriver, this issue is very close to my heart, and words cannot express how much it continually concerns me that women and their loved-ones are often embarrassed to even discuss it. Most people tend to be uninformed about how wide-reaching these cancers are—across all demographics and worldwide. Every 5 minutes we lose a woman to gynecological cancer, and annually, that number is over 33,000 women a year. Prevention and early detection are still the best cures and the mission of FWC is leading the way.”

Grace Pettis – Photo credit Nicola Gell Photography

Drop Another Pin” is a visually lyrical song with an infectious groove and a radio-ready vibe. You can’t help but smile and sing-along as you are moved by the story Grace Pettis weaves across the map.

Pettis is one of the featured artists who released her new single/video this week: “Drop Another Pin”—a visually lyrical song with an infectious groove and a radio-ready vibe. You can’t help but smile and sing-along as you are moved by the story Grace Pettis weaves across the map. An award-winning singer-songwriter from Austin via Alabama, she’s been characterized as “a little bit folk, a little bit country/Americana and a whole lot of soul.”

In between recording her forthcoming debut album for MPress Records and hosting/playing on a multitude of virtual concerts, she has been actively advocating for racial justice. The powerful song “White Noise” was recently released, with all proceeds donated to Color of Change, an organization devoted to racial equality. Along with Rebecca Loebe and BettySoo, Pettis is also a member of the Americana/folk-pop trio Nobody’s Girl.

We talked with Grace Pettis about her passion for songwriting, the intricate way she weaves a story, what inspires her creative process and what keeps her honest and hopeful in these unique times.

GRACE PETTIS Interview
with M Music & Musicians magazine publisher, Merlin David

Tell us about one of the songs you will play at the “Bravery on Fire” benefit.
I will play my new single “Drop Another Pin.” As a kid, we moved from place to place every few years and back and forth between divorced parents’ homes. Both parents are nomadic, so while growing up I traveled to a lot of places. I’ve chosen a nomadic profession myself. So maybe change is comforting to me. (Laughs) At some point in my adult life, I came to the realization that the main constant in my life has been movement. That’s where “Drop Another Pin” came from—trying to make sense of that incessant motion and trying to find a fixed point in the center of myself, in the moment, wherever I happen to be.

What did you learn about yourself while recording this new album?
It’s the first album I’ve ever made exclusively with women and non-binary folks. It was a conscious choice that started as a thought experiment and became a statement. I thought I was making the statement for other people—for all the women and non cis men in my industry who go underrepresented, underpaid and unseen. Turns out, it was for me too.

Did you notice a difference in your approach in the studio?
When I walked into the studio that first day and settled into playing and working with these incredible Nashville badasses, I realized this was going to be the first solo album I’d ever made where I wasn’t the only girl musician in the room. Even when recording with my all-female trio, Nobody’s Girl (with BettySoo and Rebecca Loebe), we’re outnumbered. That’s the industry standard. Most of us are completely unaware of it. We’re just fish swimming in water—we don’t see the water, at all. Being in a majority female session, as opposed to majority male session, allowed me for the first time to feel like just another musician in the studio. It was incredible. I was able to fill my own shoes a little better. I felt more confident as a vocalist, songwriter, bandleader and artist.

Who originally inspired you to write songs?
My Dad, Pierce Pettis. I grew up with his music. As a kid, I thought he was the best songwriter in the world. I still do. I thought, “Well, if he can do it—maybe I can too.” I wanted to at least try.

Grace Pettis at Cedar Creek Studio

What songwriting tip would you like to offer?
My Dad said “save everything. When you’re starting out, you think your songs are terrible—save them anyway. Fill up notebooks. Write it all down. You’ll be a better songwriter years from now, and you can go back and mine those notebooks for inspiration. You can re-write those terrible songs and salvage whatever was working. Craft can be learned but inspiration is like gold. Save every single song idea you have.” I tell this to teenage songwriters. We feel things more intensely at that age than we ever will again. Nothing hurts like that first heartbreak. We can reanimate those feelings years down the line when we actually know how to do them justice—if we save the idea. So never throw anything away.

What instruments/equipment can you not live without?
I need a guitar in my hands to write a song. Sometimes, I’ll get an idea when I’m away from my guitar. But even then, I’m imagining the chords and itching to get home with guitar in hand to finish the song. I have a Moonstone guitar. It’s a gorgeous instrument. More importantly, it’s my instrument. There’s nothing like playing my own guitar. There’s no place like home.

What other tools do you use?
I use voice memos for songwriting ideas and Evernote to save lyric ideas. Save your ideas in the cloud, so if you lose your phone you won’t lose years of ideas. It’s happened to me before and it’s tragic. I also use a Focusrite Audio Interface, combined with a Yamaha Mixer and an AKG Condenser Mic—for making demos, my live webcasts and recording podcasts. My USB 3.0 Lightning Hub is indispensable—because my MacBook Air only has two USB ports. It’s a small, silly thing, but it’s a lifesaver.

Photo credit Jenn Grinels

Any other essentials?
My manager recently got me a deal with Fender amps. I love their little Mustang LT25 amp, combined with a (borrowed) Epiphone electric guitar. I bought a great drafting chair from Amazon—a desk chair with wheels. I can change the height and it can go pretty high, plus the arms fold back, which is important for playing guitar. A good desk chair can change your whole life—happy back, happy life. (Laughs)

Any accessories?
I use Elixir strings. I love Kyser capos. I picked up my first Kyser capo at Camp NashBill from Bill Nash, who has MS. Late at night, when I was stumbling around the Kerrville Folk Festival campfires (an incredible community of songwriters), looking for Camp Nashville—I stumbled onto Camp NashBill. Bill plays with Kyser capos—the shortcut ones which cover three strings in the middle. I combine it with a regular Kyser and it gets all these wonderful sounds. It was my first experience. I like the way those capos feel.

What is the best advice someone has given you?
A while back I was complaining about something—some career hurdle or why I felt stuck. My very kind, always supportive, sweet-to-the-core mother uncharacteristically cut me off and said, “Grace. You have to be unstoppable.” That really hit home. She wasn’t diminishing the struggle or making light of it. She was pointing out the obvious: There’s always going to be something in my way. Everybody has hurdles. I’ve had my share and I’ve also had many fewer than others. I can’t let that stop me from pursuing what I want out of life. Moments come and go. I have to seize the moment I’m in and not let anything (even a pandemic or the voices in my own head) keep me from reaching my own potential. It’s a privilege to have the opportunities I have. I can’t waste them.

Grace Pettis with Calloway Ritch

Do you have “pinch me” moment?
I once opened for Jimmy Webb. That was a pivotal moment. He was unbelievably nice and signed my songwriting notebook.

In this unique socio-political time, how do you remain hopeful?
I’ve been writing a lot more socially-conscious songs lately—a natural byproduct of being more aware. Plenty of other artists are focusing on writing exclusively happy, positive, uplifting songs. Songs you can dance to. Songs that make you smile—that’s important too. I’m not that kind of songwriter, but I respect that calling. I write from wherever I happen to be. If I’m happy, I write a happy song. If I’m sad, I write a sad song. If the world is on fire, so are my songs. They’re fairly candid that way. Not always toe-tappers, but I come by them honestly.

Where can new fans get more info and stay updated?
www.GracePettis.com
www.patreon.com/gracepettis
www.facebook.com/gracepettismusic

Instagram: @gracepettis
Twitter: @gracepettis
www.youtube.com/GracePettisVideos

Grace Pettis in Parteen, Ireland

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