Q & A Brittany Howard
RollingStone India
|February 2024
'The route I'm taking to being a farmer is ridiculous," Brittany Howard says, sitting at the William Vale luxury hotel during her press trip to New York. She's fantasizing about a potential future, one where she would maybe own a farm like the one she grew up on.
-
It's one of many ways she can see herself adding to the list of non-musical hobbies in her repertoire since 2020: fixing boats, fishing. But don't worry, music is still at the front of the former Alabama Shakes leader's mind at 35. She has a new solo album, What Now, due out Feb. 2. She started working on it in 2020 while isolating in a rental home in Nashville. It's a testament to newfound patience that translates into some of her most grounded and reflective music yet.
You wrote this album during a time when you were still waiting to tour your 2019 solo debut more widely. What was that like?
Honestly, I kind of put that to the side. I just wanted to stay alive. So much was going on in the world... Black Lives Matter, a tornado where I lived in Nashville, helping people pick the pieces back up. Everybody was worried about their job security. I was sad about that, but as time went on, I was like, "Oh, this is actually pretty nice to not be on the road."... I was like, "What do I want my life to look like?" It was like a tiny midlife crisis. In those three years, I grew up a lot.
Did that time make you rethink how you approached music?
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition February 2024 de RollingStone India.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE RollingStone India
RollingStone India
KRSNA'S RAP LEGACY IS CALCULATED, NOT CHANCED
THE DELHI RAPPER HAS TURNED PATIENCE AND PRECISION INTO A CAREER BLUEPRINT.
10 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
KENYA'S PROTEST MOVEMENT IS CREATING SOME RADICAL NEW MUSIC
In the summer of 2024, protests in Kenya against an unpopular tax-raising proposal led to at least 60 deaths, mostly at the hands of police, according to a local watchdog group.
3 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
WHY THE GLOBAL FASHION WORLD NEEDS TO TUNE INTO INDIA'S HIP-HOP WAVE
From Karan Aujla and King, to Badshah and Raja Kumari, India's hip-hop artists are shaping style, identity, and consumer trends in a way that can no longer be ignored.
5 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
BADVILLAIN: “THRILLER' IS PROOF OF HOW MUCH WE'VE IMPROVED'
Badvillain shares anecdotes on their journey to self-expression, using 'Thriller' as a song to showcase their confidence, attitude, and emotional depth
2 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
LONG LIVE MAC MILLER YEARS AFTER HIS DEATH, I FINALLY GET WHAT MAC MILLER WAS SAYING
A REDISCOVERY OF HIS WORK SHOWS HOW HIS CATALOG HAS GROWN INTO A LIVING ARCHIVE OF VULNERABILITY AND HOPE
3 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
YOUNG ILL IS CARVING OUT HIS OWN LANE IN THE KOREAN HIP-HOP SCENE
Choosing connection over controversy, Young Ill wants his music to give hope, inspire individuality, and show there's more to Korean hip-hop than stereotypes.
5 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
Olivia Dean Adds Her Own Page to the Book of Love
The second album from this gifted British singer-songwriter pushes her music into an elevated tier.
3 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
HOW 'SABAR BONDA' CREATED A RURAL RAOMANCE STORY WITHOUT A SOUNDTRACK
DIRECTOR ROHAN KANAWADE OPENS UP ABOUT THE MAKINGS OF THE MARATHI ROMANCE DRAMA, WHICH IS SET FOR ITS THEATRICAL RELEASE ON SEPT. 19 ONWARDS
5 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
THE RISE OF KOREAN HIP-HOP AS A COUNTERCULTURE
BREAKING OUT OF SEOUL'S UNDERGROUND CLUBS, WE TRACE A JOURNEY DRIVEN BY CREATIVITY, PASSION, AND A REBELLIOUS SPIRIT THAT PAVED THE WAY FOR K-POP'S GLOBAL RISE.
8 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
WHAT DOES IT TAKE FOR AN ARTIST TO REINVENT THEMSELVES?
SINGER-SONGWRITERS LIKE ZOYA AND HANITA BHAMBRI ENTER NEW ERAS, ANYASA AND ZAEDEN CHANGED THEIR SIGNATURE SOUND, AND VINEET SINGH HUKMANI'S JAZZ ALBUM MARKS A DIFFERENT SONIC DIRECTION
6 mins
September - October 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

