Mackeeper Isn't Growing Up Just Yet
ABBY DILLINGHAM: How does being brothers as well as musical partners influence your artistic process?
MILES COHEN: When we write together a lot of the time we subconsciously pull from the same index of references — whether it’s music, movies, stories or whatever. Stuff that’s really specific and personal.
NICK HARWOOD: I think Miles influences me to write from a feeling of nostalgia. Not necessarily longing for the past, but feeling suspended from the timeline. But it also means we’re good at arguing so every idea gets stress-tested to death before it makes the cut.
Where was this EP born?
MC: An apartment, a back porch, an Airbnb in Virginia.
You both have varying tastes in music, are there any artists or eras where you 100% align (in your love or hate)?
MC: We both love folk music from around the world. World music, worldbeat, movie scores.
NH: I’m not sure there are any artists we hold in the same regard... maybe Kanye. We definitely share an appreciation for melody lyrics, songcraft in general and a distaste for wack garbage!
How do you know when you’re done with a song?
NH: When it starts getting worse.
When did you realize you could combine your different music tastes?
MC: It happened on its own. When we write together all of our influences naturally bleed together.
What’s the best and worst part of growing up?
NH: The worst part is making a decision...the best is having made it.
What’s something only your brother could understand?
MC: The old man who lived in our basement.
This EP revisits your past memories in a new light, are there any shared experiences you both looked back on when writing together?
NH: We didn’t really share a ton of formative experiences growing up, outside of family of course. It’s more like comparing notes on growing up in the same household. The same DNA, but living in two totally different universes.
MC: It’s more like pulling from similar emotional memories and a shared imagination rather than literal events.
What did you explore in this EP that you are most excited about?
NH: We really pushed ourselves to write in a way that makes it so that people can put our music on and feel like they’re not alone. Maybe they’re on their way to work and hate their boss or maybe they’re broke and don’t have a job at all.
MC: We like lyrics that feel anthemic, like you can get them tatted on your ribs and still believe in them 10 years from now.
Do you feel grown up?
MC: In general, no.
NH: More and more but not enough.
Head here to presave the project now.


































