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Premiere: "suburbs" by Zeina

The video features Zeina alongside her mates coasting around their home base in Montreal. "It encompasses me and my progress in the sense that I always come back to my roots," says the artist.

 

Check out the video and inteview below.

Do you mind starting by telling us what your full name is?

 

I just go by Zeina. I like to be called that.

 

I see your Instagram is @zeinamates, but is it just Zeina?

 

It's just Zeina. Mates is kind of like my girl group. So, it's me and my homegirls. We got my girl Yoko, Megan, and there's more girls in there, but it's just like my crew.

 

Got it. I know that you're from Montreal, but can you tell us a little bit more about yourself?

 

Yeah, I was born in Brooklyn, New York, and I'm super happy that I was born there, because I can go to the U.S. as much as I want. So that's kind of lit. I used to go there a lot in summertime, 'cause I still have family there. But my parents moved to Montreal when I was two, so I barely remember life in New York. I grew up here until I was, like, 20, and then I ended up moving to Toronto for a year, LA for another year, and now I'm kind of here stuck in quarantine. But that's my whole life/area come-up situation. My parents are Lebanese, so I'm of Lebanese descent.

 

Do you speak another language other than English?

 

I do. In Montreal, we speak French here, and it's the first language. So I do, I just speak English, French, Arabic and Spanish.

 

Oh, wow okay.

 

Subtle flex, but okay. [Laughs]

 

Who are your biggest musical influences?

 

It really does change. So many things inspire me. Coming up, I used to like a lot of pop, just 'cause I was such a Disney fan. I used to love Disney so much, so obviously, growing up I was a fan of Miley Cyrus, the Jonas Brothers, Brittany and all things like that. But I kind of grew out of that. Then I started liking rap a lot, like Jay-Z, 50 Cent and things like that. Right now, my favorite artists at the moment are like Travis and Drake. But I had a really little rock phase too. Like I used to fuck with bands like Three Days Grace. All those things encompass what I've created for myself now.

 

If your music/sound were a food or drink, it would be a:

 

Hold up, I need to think about this one. What I'll drink when I go out, I'll drink a tequila pineapple. That's just my drink. That drink kind of makes me feel sexy, and at the same time, makes me want to turn up, get lit, gets me in my vibe.

 

Let's talk about "surburbs." In your own words, what is the song about to you?

 

I grew up in the suburbs. I'm not a city girl really, and then I kind of became a city girl. So it's encompasses where I started and where I'm at now. And I still know people in the suburbs, and I still have flings, let's say, with people in the suburbs. So, it encompasses me and my progress in the sense that I always come back to my roots. My friends are still in the suburbs and things like that. And I do have flings with people, so I'm saying like, "Oh, I'm gonna drive to you. I'm gonna come see you. I'm gonna spend a weekend there." There's a certain attachment to being in the suburbs, you know what I'm saying? Just because that's like my vibe.

 

Where was "suburbs" shot, and what was it like making the video?

 

It was shot in Montreal, and it's on a street called Chabanel which is like the fashion district of Montreal. The area's still coming up. It's not fully where it's going to be in a couple of years, but I think it's just a cool area. It's in the suburbs too.

 

The video was such a bitch to shoot, I'm not even gonna lie. Like it was still in mid-to-end of March. And it was cold. Like when I tell you it was cold, my nose was starting to lose sensation. But I was on the top of the car acting like it was fucking hot outside—it was not. But it really was a good time. I was a little bit tipsy off some wine, and we pushed through it.

 

Are your mates in the video?

 

Yeah, the only person who's not there is Yoko, because she was behind the scenes. But yeah, pretty much everybody in my girl group was there.

 

You write your own songs, including "suburbs," right?

 

I did, I did. I take pride in writing my own songs. I think it's a little bit of an ego thing, but I'm always down to collaborate. But for this one, it's all me baby.

 

When did you start writing music?

 

Oh my gosh, I started like when I was 16, around then, writing the most depressed shit ever—like cringe-worthy shit. Just because I was in school, and I was hella depressed about that. I didn't want to be at school. I wanted to make music, but I got stuck in the system for a little bit. I started writing when I was 16, but it was terrible, terrible, so emo, so sad. My writing got good around when I was probably 19, I would say.

 

Do you still have some of your earlier stuff that you wrote?

 

Oh my gosh, I do. But that is staying in the vault. That is not coming out. [Laughs]

 

Can you talk to me about your process a little bit? Like do you have, like, a songwriting ritual?

 

I do. I do. So, I'll go to the studio and lock in with my engineer. We'll just go through beats, and when something gets my attention, I'll go in the booth and just do melodies. I start off with melodies, and then I do, like, two takes of straight melodies for the whole song, mumbling words and things that don't really mean anything. And then, I'll come out of the booth and piece the song together. So like: "This melody is fire for the hook," or "this melody is fire for the verse." And then I'll put it all together into the song structure, and then I'll start writing. I don't usually like to write around people, because I sometimes get painted by what's going on and what people are saying. So, I zone out by myself. That's it.

 

Can you walk me through the process of how "suburbs" specifically came to be, and what it was like writing those lyrics?

 

Basically, I worked with this guitar player, and his name is Keith. He played me this fire guitar loop, and I was like, "This is so sick. This has given me the best vibe." So I hopped in the booth, I did what I do with the melodies and all that stuff. After I came out, I started thinking about what I wanted the song to be about. I was in LA and was feeling nostalgic. And then I was thinking about somebody I was seeing before in the suburbs and how they would complain like, "You're not hitting me. What's going on?" And I was literally just in the studio working on myself.

 

So I was just like, "How can I translate this into a song?" And then I kind of just did that. Basically, it was just my vocal on a guitar loop, and there was no drums. And then I linked up my boy LosHendrix, and he brought in paperboyfabe; they brought the song to life really with adding the drums and everything. And yeah, it ended up just being what it is. And that's the final product.

 

Is "suburbs" about anybody in particular?

 

Yes and no. Sombody in particular inspired me, but I took like little pieces of things that people would tell me when I'd be, like, missing my calls and things like that, and I just pieced it together. But yeah, someone did come to mind when I wrote that song.

 

As a listener, I feel like "suburbs" touches on trust as a theme. And a lot of your songs speak to trusting yourself, trusting others or a lack thereof. Do you want to talk about that a little bit?

 

Yeah, I mean, ain't no relationship that's gonna work without trust. And trust in who I am as well—I'm in the music industry, and obviously I'm going to be around a lot of people, and a lot of men especially. The person I'm with just gotta trust that I'm not gonna do anything to hinder the relationship I have with that person. There needs to be a lot of trust between somebody who's dating an artist, whether it be a guy or girl. So that's why I feel like I had to speak on it in a sense where I'm like, "Yo, that's me. I'm not going out. I'm not wilin'. I'm just doing what I gotta do to make it happen for myself. And it's not anything deeper than that if I'm not picking up the phone." So that's kind of the trust topic of the song.

 

And do you feel like your relationship with like trusting yourself and others has changed as you've been coming up as a musician?

 

I'm surrounded by really good people that keep me in check. I haven't yet, but I feel like if I start to slip up and not trust my gut and not trust what I'm doing, people will keep me in check and put me back in the right spot. I feel like my trust in myself has pretty much stayed strong throughout this whole process so far.

 

What else are you cooking up in 2020?

 

I'm going to be dropping a project. All these songs that I'm about to drop soon—I'm dropping "suburbs," and then I'm following up with another song. And these songs all belong to one project, and I be hoping that this project comes out in 2020. It's hard to tell with everything going on in the world how everything's going to end up panning out. But I really hope I can put out my project this year. I'm so proud of it, and I'm really excited for people to hear it to be honest. I'm really excited.

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