Tommy Cash Dropped a New Single, but Who Really Gives a Shit?
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Over the last decade, Wilson’s music project has blossomed into quite an illustrious career, with her songs sampled by major artists such as Drake, John Mayer, and James Blake. But, what’s kept Charlotte Day Wilson going? She tells us it's her childlike ability to access her imagination and what she describes as a state of play.
“Not only in my career and in my life as a musician, but in the rest of my life, I’ve realized that I feel the most at peace when I’m doing things that I’ve always loved since childhood.” She remembers being a child and being able to easily delve into who she is at her core to create something new derived from the known. “I just remember being a child and being able to sit on a chair and completely transform myself and my surroundings, you know? I could go anywhere by imagining. I think we still have that — maybe we don’t have as much time every day to access that, but I’m lucky enough to be encouraged even as an adult and a songwriter to get to that place.”
“I’m in a pursuit of trying to not roll off my emotional edges. That was what happened to me in the middle of my career — I didn’t really feel much, and I think it’s because I was dealing with being a young adult but also the intensity of being thrusted into the public through my career. I was experiencing some insanely exciting highs but also some very dark lows. In all of that, I thought ‘Is this too much?’” Wilson has learned to undo all of that and has gotten back to a place of feeling purely. “It’s really fun to see what happens when you don’t criticize yourself.” This comes through clearly on Cyan Blue, with its dreamy sound that feels uniquely and exclusively hers.
What started out as messing around in the studio with friend and co-producer Jack Rochon turned into, “Oh, are we making an album right now?” With Rochon’s help on the production side, Wilson had the freedom to create an album that she didn’t have to overthink. Where she typically would be playing all the instruments and handling all the production, she had more time to dive into lyricism and work on vocals for the record. “As much as most people know me as a singer, that’s not the thing I think of when I think of myself.” Wilson was put into piano lessons by her parents from an early age and learned classical technique before experimenting with her own sound. She tells me that this album felt like the first time she could focus on her vocals as the centerpiece, honing on that as her instrument — an exciting unlock for the songwriter who has largely self-produced her previous projects: 2016’s CDW, 2018’s Stone Woman, and her 2021 debut studio album Alpha. On this new record, she challenged herself to let go of previous processes and set a deadline for herself and Rochon, finishing the album in just a few months.
Wilson tells us that when making the record, “it felt like we would go into our playroom and get our toys [instruments] out and laugh and throw things at each other and throw ideas on the wall and let whatever came out stick on the wall and not feel like it needed to be anything different than how it came out naturally.” (I wish all jobs felt like this. Maybe she’s onto something.) With Cyan Blue, “first thought, best thought” was the approach, and Wilson and Rochon let themselves discover the outcomes of creating freely without criticizing themselves in the moment. The result is a deeply smooth 13-track album with Wilson’s ethereal, soulful vocals and expressive lyrics that feel distinctive but somehow don’t give away too much. Wilson writes songs in a way that doesn’t “edit the feeling” as she describes it — a mixture of deeply personal yet not overt. If there’s anything we can learn from Wilson and her creative process, it’s that our imagination never leaves us, but rather, it’s up to us to let go of inhibitions and tap into our childlike wonder. She’s definitely onto something.
Cyan Blue is out now on XL Recordings.
Blu DeTiger — Do you know Mitch?
office — Of course.
The other night, I had this big album release party and he was there.
Yeah, I ended up there briefly with my buddy Harrison. We were at our friend’s birthday and he was like, “Do you want to come to Gonzo’s with me?” And I love Gonzo’s, so of course. Didn’t see Mitch, though.
You guys probably got there a bit later. But you didn’t say hi!
We didn’t leave for Gonzo’s until 1 am, so we were super late. I didn’t see you — I was in the back studio with my buddy Lucas. We were noodling around on the bass and guitar. You set those up, right?
Yeah, I wanted to have jam vibes at the party. And I was having fun. I thought it was like, the most fun party ever… Shit, do you know Cassie and Liv? And Caitlan? She styled my album cover. I was in the first issue of office.
Oh my god.
I was street cast when I was like, fifteen, at Afropunk festival, and they were like, “I’m shooting for this magazine.” So, full circle. I’m glad you were at the party.
It’s weird how we’ve never crossed paths before. Gonzo’s is such a good place to hang. The cheetah carpets are so hot.
It was so hot in general. I was like, “You guys gotta turn the AC up.” But it was fine. It was the best DJs, who were actually just old friends from New York who’ve seen me grow up since I was seventeen and DJing in the city. They were all at the party, which was another really cute full circle moment. They’re such a supportive and sweet cast of characters.
How’d you meet everyone?
I don’t know — I was just in it. I just knew them because I’m like, cool, I guess. I don’t know. I just know everyone from music and the city and going out and whatever. Growing up in New York, you just kind of meet everyone.
Where are you now?
I’m in LA, but I grew up in New York. My parents are still in the city, so I go there all the time. I hadn’t even been to LA until I was nineteen. I’ve been playing in New York since I was seven — my first ever gig was at CBGB.
You were seven and playing CBGB?
It was through School of Rock, which was this after-school thing every semester. There would be different shows and they’d be tributes to different artists. So the first time, it was Rolling Stones, and you’d practice the songs for a few months and then have the show at the end of the semester. And the shows we did were always at CBGB. But yeah, I got that New York blood in me.
My first bass teacher was from School of Rock — I was learning on this little short-scale. Being able to play with other kids is really important, especially when you’re learning an instrument. It’s a conversation — you’re learning how to converse with other musicians by playing and improvising — as opposed to just playing in your room practicing. It’s totally different.
Nowadays, when musicians get big, they get big as individuals and then they’re like, “Now I have to learn how to be in a band.” It’s kind of backwards.
And it’s so important, especially for bass. It’s all about fitting in the music with the other instruments.
So you started with bass and have been there ever since?
Yeah — obviously I sing now, and play guitar and produce and all that other stuff, but bass was my first love.
How’d you learn all that other stuff?
I guess if you’ve been playing music forever, you can kind of grasp guitar from bass. And everyone has a voice, of course, so I just started singing. But I didn’t really get into singing and studying my own voice until I was seventeen, when I was ready to make my own music and put out my own stuff. So, that came a little bit later to me. But it’s all music — you just pick things up here and there. Once you have your head around one instrument, it’s easier to transfer your music knowledge and theory to other instruments.
That’s so true — I tried to learn bass when I was younger but it was too big for me — too heavy. So I had to get one of those ¾ guitars and honestly, just from picking up the bass first, I was playing the guitar like a bass. How’d you get into writing?
I guess I was always kind of writing. I was in bands growing up ad we’d write together, but I started writing songs for myself was at seventeen. I was nineteen when I put out my first song under my name. It’s kind of funny, because growing up, singing and playing guitar and singer-songwriter stuff — that wasn’t my thing. It kind of came to me later in life, and you can hear that in my music. I always approach things from the bass and the groove, and all the rest kind of falls into place.
The bass is really underappreciated.
Tell me about it.
I think a lot of people forget that the bass isn’t just root notes — I mean, you of all people know what I mean.
That’s what I’m trying to do with my music — just showcase what the instrument can do and bring it to the forefront and inspire people to pick it up.
Growing up, would you only play with the other kids from School of Rock? Or would you also play with adults?
I was always the young one in the group because it’s harder to find bass players anyways. Especially good ones. So when I was in middle school, I was playing with high school kids. And then when I was in high school, I was playing with all the NYU kids and they’d hire me to be in their band for their showcase or whatever, and I would make like, a hundred bucks or something. I was always kind of with the older kids. And I was DJing from a really young age too. I started DJing when I was seventeen and I was DJing with like, thirty-year-olds.
The DJ scene is really funny, especially when you’re B2B with someone who’s been DJing for longer than you’ve been alive.
Oh totally. It’s really crazy. But that’s also how you learn — playing with other people, seeing other DJs work and learning their technique or style or whatever. You’re always picking bits and pieces up from different place.
It’s funny — I’ve been into music since I was really young. I was seven or eight and listening to the Rolling Stones and the Beatles, so I have this vast music knowledge so I can hang with the bros, I can hang with the old heads, I can hang with anyone. I have a lot of music knowledge that also comes from DJing, because when you’re spinning four times a week, you got to know all the hits from every decade. You have to know like, every song ever. You’re a taste maker, so you have to know all the cool shit. So DJing was really important for expanding my music knowledge.
So, All I Ever Want Is Everything — what’s the story?
The story? The story is just that it was time for me to make an album. I had an EP before that, and these past few years I’ve been touring a lot and writing between all these shows and festivals. It was just the time in my career — I had to put out a full body of work and that’s what this is. It’s about the past few years — growing up and the transitional phase of becoming an adult and ups and downs and life and all that shit.
I’m a producer on everything but I worked alongside a lot of cool collaborators. Uffie is on a few songs — she’s a legend.
I saw her at Dorian Electra.
I love Dorian — they were at my LA release party. We went crazy.
What was the difference between the New York and LA party?
It’s so different. The New York energy is so different. LA — the party only goes until 2, dies out at 1.
Were you recording with a full band? Or is it just you on everything?
It kind of depends on the song. Obviously, I’m singing and playing bass on everything. My brother Rex played the drums on a lot of the tracks and he played a little guitar, but I played a lot of the guitar as well.
Do you prefer doing it that way? Where you’re doing everything and putting it all together at the end?
Yeah — if it’s my album and my name on it, I’d rather do everything I can. I want to feel like it’s coming from me.
Do you find there’s a difference in what you’re putting out when you’re in New York versus LA?
For sure. Anywhere you write, it always feels different — just different energy. I wrote most of the record in LA, but being from New York and growing up there, it’s like that saying, “You can take the girl out of the city but you can’t take the city out of the girl,” whatever the fuck that means. It’s kind of true. No matter where I am, I still have the New York edge and grit. In the production, you hear the broadness and grittiness of the sounds being used. Are you from New York as well?
No, I’m from Ohio. I grew up in Cleveland but my parents are back in Columbus.
That’s sick. I played a show in Columbus and a festival in Cleveland.
The house shows are awesome in Columbus, but you can understand why I wanted to not be in Ohio, right?
Of course. New York is the best city in the world. It’s the dopest.
You’re gonna say that to all the LA people reading this?
Yeah. I don’t mind. I say it all the time. It’s where I’m from, it’s in my blood.
What do you want people to know about you?
Just listen to the album and you can figure it out from there. Come to the show.