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Getting Sick with Sabrina Fuentes

 Last week, Fuentes further proved that point, releasing her latest album, Makes Me Sick, Makes Me Smile under the Pretty Sick moniker under her new London-based label.

 

Though Fuentes’ band has been classified in categories such as “‘90s grunge” and had many a Riot grrl group used as a reference, Pretty Sick’s sound is anything but derivative. There’s definitely an always welcome touch of Courtney Loven here, but the emotions and stories Fuentes has put into this album are all her own. I got into feelings, fears, and the Foo Fighters with the artist in our conversation, below.

So how do you feel that the move from London to New York affected you? Has there been a creative shift with that physical move?

 

In a lot of different ways! My label is here. I signed to a label after living here for two or three years and so creatively, my work process is different because before that, I was self-managed and self-releasing everything, and kind of only doing music when I had time for it between modeling and school. And now music is my full-time job, which I am super grateful for. And London is a place where you just have a lot more space to yourself than in New York, so I just have more space to think about my craft. I developed this whole album in London. It was a super long process, and it became my full-time job because I'm no longer in school. I don't really model that much. Music is what my full-time job is. So I was just waking up every single day going through my routine, thinking about writing more music, going through the songs I already had, making so many lists, showing music to all of my friends, and whittling down these lists. And then basically, trying to put an album together out of 40 songs over the course of a year.

 

Yeah. So what's your routine when you say you've got your routine?

 

I mean, I don't have as much of one now as I did then because that whole year was just about this album. And so I'd wake up, have a tea or a coffee because I habitually quit coffee for three to six months at a time and then get back on it. I just go upstairs and would have three different notebooks where I was planning the same thing, writing out those plans for a few hours, and then listening back to all the music that I have. So this was 40 songs, 45 songs at the time and counting because I kept growing and writing more.

 

What do you feel makes your music different?

 

I remember I read a good amount from young creatives talking about how they fear they'll never make anything original and it's just never been anything that really concerns me. 

 

Creating out of fear is never the move, anyways.

 

Yeah, yeah. Exactly. I just don't feel like I'm ever going to be happy with anything I make if I'm constantly worried if anyone has done anything similar ever before. And so, I don't know, I just like to make stuff because it feels good and make stuff because it helps me express myself, more than anything. It's the best and only way I know how to communicate.

I think maybe what makes it different from some other rock music that's coming out right now is it really doesn't take itself too seriously. I feel like I poke fun at myself a lot throughout the songwriting process and poke fun at my peers. While I'm angry, I have a lot of other emotions that go along with that. And while I might be in love, I'll have a lot of other emotions that go on with that. I don't like to deny that one or the other. I think that they can coexist in songwriting and they definitely coexist in my life. So maybe that's what makes it different? But ultimately, I don't think any music is that different from the next, you know?

 

I feel like it's about finding a balance between being in your personal experience and in those basic human emotions everyone can relate to. Do you feel like your work is super personal and focuses on things that you're going through? When you're on stage, do you feel like it's you or it's a stage persona?

 

I think it's all really personal and all really vulnerable. I'm pretty terrible at communicating in my personal life and so this is kind of the only way I can do it. I feel like that's why I started making music when I was a kid. It's always something I wanted to do because I have a love for music. But when I started writing it wasn't because it was something I thought I'd be good at. It's just because I didn't really have any other way to express myself. All of my music is really personal and extension of myself. For a long time I didn't even really think that I would share it in a very public way, especially not something like for a long time, I was like, "Oh, I'll just play cafe gigs and sing my song for the rest of my life, even if I have other jobs." But it being on the internet was something that terrified me because it's so permanent, and committed, and once it's out there, it's really out there. Going all in with music as my career choice and as what I do as a person is really nice for me because it's just me being as much myself as I can, more even than in my personal life sometimes. So it's really vulnerable on stage, offstage, recording, every step of the process.

What was the first show you ever went to?

 

Well, the first show I ever tried to go to, my mom tried to take me to a Camp Rock Today Show thing in New York and she was like, "We're not fucking waiting in line for this," and we left. The first show I actually ever went to was a concert the Foo Fighters organized as a fundraiser for this studio that was closing where Nirvana recorded Nevermind, the Bee Gees recorded, Stevie Nicks recorded, and all these other iconic bands recorded. Everybody who had ever recorded in the studio got together and did a tour together. Stevie Nicks and the Foo Fighters, Cheap Trick… and they all played their big three hits. And then whenever they weren't playing their big three hits, they would pick up an instrument and play for the next person who was going to play their big three hits. I was on my dad's shoulders, and I was like 11 or something.

 

That’s crazy. Speaking of icons, the references that are thrown out around your sound and style tend to be kind of a throwback. Do you feel like you have a sense of nostalgia for a time that you weren't alive for?

 

I think most of my creative influences are from the past, but I don't really know if I have a nostalgia for it. What I have nostalgia for is more feelings, and parts of my life that went quite smoothly, were very easy and I felt carefree and joyous — without it having to try to be. I don't really feel like I have nostalgia for even the aesthetic or visual aspects of that time in my life. It's more just the way that I felt. So not really, but I draw mostly from older influences and stuff like that, stuff that I wasn't alive for or from alive during.

 

What's your favorite track on the album?

 

Probably 'Drunk' at the moment. 'Drunk', 'Heaven', 'PCP'. I'm really proud of my screaming on 'Drunk' and I like the song structure of it. Normally, I write really straightforward pop structured songs.

 

Cool. And what are you most excited for in regards to touring?

 

I feel like I get a lot of energy out every single night, so I can kind of turn my brain off otherwise. I've never toured America or the U.K., so I'm going to see a lot of new stuff for the first time. I also read and write a lot, so I always feel like I'm kind of doing productive internal work on myself. I function quite well on the road. I feel like it grounds me a bit, in a weird way, even though it feels like it probably shouldn't.

 

Yeah, well then you're on the right career path.

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