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Chit Chat: Merpire on new album Milk Pool, writing horny songs, and her 'chin music' guilty pleasure
Chit Chat: Merpire on new album Milk Pool, writing horny songs, and her 'chin music' guilty pleasure

ABC News

time04-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • ABC News

Chit Chat: Merpire on new album Milk Pool, writing horny songs, and her 'chin music' guilty pleasure

Merpire is charming us with a very accurate, impression of a crow. The occasion? The independent singer-songwriter's second album, Milk Pool. The impetus, however, is the lush flora and fauna surrounding her at the Pioneer Women's Memorial Garden, a location she hand-picked for this interview after describing the record as a "garden of possibility". As Merpire, Rhiannon Atkinson-Howatt is a well-connected figure in the Melbourne/Naarm music scene. She co-founded the COVID-era streaming event ISOL-AID, was one half of indie-pop duo Wilson's Prom, and lately seems to be the go-to name when touring artists need a local support act. As evidenced by her crow mimicry, she also has a great sense of humour, which feeds into songs that are at once playful yet mature, and very relatable. Those qualities are all over the new album. Like her 2021 debut, Double J Feature Album Simulation Ride, it exhibits her knack for hooky indie-rock that's emotive, memorable and comforting. To mark its release, we caught up with Merpire for a chin wag that took in second albums, horny songs, and "chin music". Milk Pool is a couple of things. It tells you my more serious side of approach to music, as well as humorous side. This is more for millennials and above, but if anyone remembers the episode of The Simpsons when they get a pool and Bart has broken his leg. He's sitting by the pool and he's asking, 'Sign my cast? Sign my cast?' And no-one signs it. And then Milhouse goes past and he goes to write his name but he's looking at the pool and writes 'Milpool'. That's just me. When I think too seriously about music, I have to counteract it with something that I find funny. So, there's that side of the album name. But then also it's representative of how approaching making music is for me, by reminding myself just to wade into the unknown, like a pool of milk. You can't see where you're stepping. It could be scary, but you just have to trust that you're gonna carry yourself through and find something to write. I love me some sunflowers. There's some happiness, a couple of songs that are more about being open like a sunflower and welcoming friendship. But then maybe there's some also dark-petalled flowers as well. Dark-petalled flowers!? I don't know my flowers, how embarrassing! Maybe dark roses. I think to be easier on myself, in terms of everything it takes releasing an album. From writing it and recording it, coming up with the visuals, maybe having marketing on board and radio, plugging it, all that kind of stuff. You're always learning how to do each of those things a little bit better, or more in line with yourself. Also, an approach I want to take once the songs are out is to really let them be however and whatever other people need. That might mean interpreting the lyrics or the emotions in their own way, and I think that's the beauty of music that I'm remembering. Favourite second album by another artist? Maybe Chutes Too Narrow by The Shins. Lots of good songs on the second album! Definitely the development phase. It makes it a bit easier the fact that when I write, I'm already dreaming up the scenes and what the visuals could look like. I do really need that time with the songs and to walk around gardens like this and just kind of soak up my surrounds. I love TV and movies; there's not a moment that goes by where if I'm with a friend, I'm like, 'Imagine if there was a scene just now and then this thing happened, and then, like, the camera came over here and we were like, whoa!' That's just how my brain works. It's easier directing videos when I can see angles and cuts in my mind. I think the hardest part though is when I have a limited budget, so then I have to limit the visuals. But that's also exciting to see what can come from almost nothing. I guess maybe it was a bit more of a tag line for people to be like, 'Oh, I better listen to this if it's the horniest song she's ever written.' And then with 'Bigger', even hornier, they're like 'What?!' That's how I wanted that to happen. So, it was a bit sneaky, but I always knew that. I found it easy to write about because I think as much as early crushes are so difficult and challenging, they're also so exciting. Especially for someone that writes. I was really inspired by the first fantasy novel that I read by Patrick Rothfuss, The Name of the Wind, from the Kingkiller Chronicles. If anyone wants to delve into that realm, not a particularly sexy trilogy of books. But there are little sexy moments, and that's kind of what inspired me to think back to having big crushes and all the feelings that happen around that. Chin music! [Laughs] OK, it's anything that requires your chin to sing like this [juts chin out]. Like the bands Live, Pearl Jam or Creed. [Begins singing the latter's hit, 'Higher'] The 'ers' have to be right there in the back of your throat. That's my guilty pleasure, rocking out to those songs. They're my karaoke songs every single time. That's chin music. Who's next? I would love to play with Middle Kids one day. They're on the bucket list. That's probably the top one. I would say. I'd also love to play with Angie McMahon again, also Julia Jacklin. And Armlock — they're really, really cool. Oh my goodness, there's so many! I recently did some backing vocals for Bec Sykes' album launch. I just hit her up on Instagram and said, 'Hey, I really love your songs. I'm always singing harmonies to them. I know you've got an album launch coming up. Would you be so kind as to let me sing some if you needed them?' It just so happened that her backing vocalists had gone overseas, so she was like, 'Yeah, please.' And it was such a pleasure. It's probably going to be dog related, or babies getting pushed over by a dog. Or it'd be something really unhinged like… Actually, I know! Someone had made an imaginary dream rollercoaster. It takes you through the whole ride as if you're in a seat. At the top of the video, it's got the velocity you're travelling at, slightly increasing it by the end of it. You're travelling at like, 10 Gs. Then, it's going crazy — it goes through the core of the Earth and it's just stupid. But it's very funny. Milk Pool is out now. Catch Merpire at the following dates: Friday August 15— Junk Bar: Turrbal Jagera Land, Brisbane Saturday August 16 — Lazy Thinking: Gadigal Land, Sydney Sunday August 17 — Smiths Alternative: Ngunnawal, Canberra Thursday August 21 — Merri Creek Tavern: Wurundjeri Woi Wurrung, Melbourne (sold out) Thurs August 28 — Merri Creek Tavern: Wurundjeri Woi Wurrung, Melbourne (sold out)

I had my baby at 48 through IVF. Being an older mom has so many benefits.
I had my baby at 48 through IVF. Being an older mom has so many benefits.

Yahoo

time14-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

I had my baby at 48 through IVF. Being an older mom has so many benefits.

Rene Byrd is a 49-year-old singer-songwriter in London who had her first baby at 48. She had held on to hope for a baby throughout her 40s, undergoing IVF for over two years. Being an older mom has had several benefits, like financial security and contentment. This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Rene Byrd. It has been edited for length and clarity. When I turned 40, I went on a seven-day retreat full of meditation and massage to fall in love with myself. I'm a strong believer that to find love, you first have to love yourself. I had wanted to settle down with someone and build a family, but it just hadn't happened. Three years prior, I had frozen my eggs because I knew that I wanted a family someday. On the retreat, I felt deep in my spirit that I would one day find my person and hold my child in my hands. I wouldn't give up hope. Returning home, I continued dating, but it wasn't until a chance meeting at a bar that I finally found the man who would become my husband. I hadn't quite turned 41, and he was 34. I remember not wanting to scare him off by talking too much about my desire for kids, but we did have discussions about the future. When love started to bloom between the two of us, we started looking at what our options were for having a child together. After trying holistic methods to no avail, we decided to go down the IVF route. I'd heard horror stories about IVF — that it was never straightforward — but as I already had my eggs frozen, it was the best option for us at the time. Two-and-a-half long years later, I was given the news from the IVF clinic — I was pregnant. I fell apart, phoning my husband to tell him we would be having a baby. Throughout my pregnancy, I remember being scared of what this new life as a mother would look like. I had little panic attacks considering how different life would be, as compared to the decades of life without a child. And then I felt guilty, telling myself I had waited so long for this. There was a lot of grappling with these thoughts until I realized my child would just be an extension of me. Once our little boy, Crue, was born in November 2024, I felt ready for his arrival in theory. Having spent years hearing from friends with children, I had an idea of what to expect. Even still, those early days were a lot to deal with. All these things were being thrown at me about what I should and shouldn't do with a baby. I joined online mother and baby communities and in-person baby groups, finding my tribe of mothers like me, ones that were "older." There is a stillness within me that grounds me as I take care of Crue. I have this playbook of mothering, developed from years of research and observation, that has given me assurance that even when things don't seem to be going to plan — like breastfeeding or sleeping — I was OK, and so was he. Having built up financial security, I didn't worry about how I was going to provide for a baby. Established in a career, I could plan for all baby-related expenses, including IVF. And since I had gotten so much out of my system in my younger years — corporate working, parties, nice restaurants — I felt content to settle in at home with my baby and husband. I never feel like I'm missing out. The only concern I've heard quietly whispered in different circles is that of my health. I know that as I get older, little issues with my body could pop up — issues that I might not have had as a younger mother. This has forced me to look after my body more than I ever have so that I can fully enjoy time with Crue as he gets older. Becoming a mother had always been a dream of mine. I trusted the process, holding on to hope, and although delayed, my dream finally came true. Read the original article on Business Insider

What questions do you have about Billy Joel's diagnosis, normal pressure hydrocephalus?
What questions do you have about Billy Joel's diagnosis, normal pressure hydrocephalus?

CNN

time26-05-2025

  • Health
  • CNN

What questions do you have about Billy Joel's diagnosis, normal pressure hydrocephalus?

People in entertainment Getting older Music DementiaFacebookTweetLink Follow Singer-songwriter Billy Joel's upcoming tour dates have been canceled as he seeks treatment for normal pressure hydrocephalus, a condition that affects the brain. Symptoms might resemble dementia but it can be treated. What do you want to know about normal pressure hydrocephalus? Share your questions with CNN below.

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