You may or may not have come across singer songwriter Juliet Mc Conkey. If not, you’re well advised tracking down a copy of her debut album DISAPPEARING GIRL and giving it a listen. Since moving from the Blue Ridge Mountains in rural Virginia to Texas in 2018, she has established herself as one of the primary emerging players from a State that’s not short of gifted artists. She chose her career path under no illusions about the inherent obstacles and challenges that awaited her. However, based on her positivity, pragmatism and abundance of talent, her calling is most likely going to continue on its upwards path. We caught up with Juliet recently, having reviewed her debut album at Lonesome Highway.
Was the decision to relocate from rural central Virginia to Texas driven by an ambition to further your career as a musician?
Partly, yes. I knew that if I didn’t go somewhere with the intention of taking my music more seriously, I’d probably just piddle around and half-heartedly dream about it for too long. A musician enchanted with the mystique of Austin isn’t exactly a novel idea (laughs), but what I wanted to do was get out and play, so it sounded like a great place to do it. But I also had a fascination with that region of the world in general and a desire to go live somewhere I’d never been and experience some life. People from Texas really LOVE Texas. I thought it looked like a lot of fun, so I went and fell madly in love with it. Worth it a thousand times over!
What determined the choice of Texas rather than Nashville, Tennessee?
I just really wanted to live in Texas. The easy explanation I gave to (the many) people who asked me the same question was that I wanted to get out and play as much as I could and that I thought Austin was a better place to do that than Nashville. I feel that turned out to be true for me. But it wasn’t really about choosing one over the other so much as just wanting to go somewhere I thought I’d love living, regardless of career aspirations. I’d just graduated college with the realization that my heart was not in what I’d studied and a yearning to play more music but not really knowing where to start. I felt guilty for “wasting” a degree and was floundering around in search of some semblance of purpose. Somewhere in that headspace I got the idea I’d like to go to Texas and then I just decided why not. I hear people all the time saying “oh I wish I could go live/do/see this or that” but they never end up following through. I thought, ‘there’s no reason why I can’t do this’, so I did!
Was music part of your childhood and at what point did you decide to pursue it as a career?
Music was very much a part of my childhood to the credit of my father. He’s been a songwriter for his whole life and played in various great bands over the years. Most family gatherings still wind up turning into a jam session reminiscent of what I imagine the radio sounded like in the early ‘70s. I got a guitar and started writing songs around age 12 and though I dreamed of doing it for a living, I don’t think I really thought I could. I thought I wanted to be a physical therapist and planned to do just that until right around the time I actually had to make that choice and and I knew I wasn’t that passionate about it. I think I really decided to give music a shot because I didn’t want to spend the rest of my life wondering about it. I’m nowhere near it being a fully financially sustaining career (although in a twisted way it is technically my only job at this present moment due to Covid-19), and while that would be wonderful if it ever happens, I know I can be perfectly happy if it doesn’t. I’ll never stop making music because I love doing it. But I believe something that personal is done best on your own terms and I think I’ll be one happy 75-year-old lady if I can look back knowing I didn’t compromise in ways that made me unhappy. I have other interests too and I don’t mind working a straight job and making music too.
What music would you have been listening to as a teenager?
A lot of stuff that has since lost my interest (laughs), whatever was on the modern pop and country stations, which these days I can’t stand. When I got an iPod, my friend put his whole music library on there which consisted of a lot of Jack Johnson and Guster and many more I can’t remember. My first real introduction to country was the music of The Chicks (of the formerly Dixie variety) and that love has remained true. Through it all the music my parents raised me on has never lost its shine and is still a favourite now. Lots of the Beatles, Beach Boys, Sam & Dave, Diana Ross & the Supremes, James Taylor, Linda Ronstadt … I’ll stop or I’ll just keep listing. But my favourite radio station growing up was called Superhits 102.3 and it played all the hits of the 60s and 70s. My taste has changed plenty over the years but that stuff will always be timeless.
You made quite an impact in Texas in a short space of time. Did winning the Blue Light Singer/Songwriter Competition in 2018 in Lubbock, open doors for you?
It definitely did. The Blue Light is run by some really kind folks and it’s a tight-knit, supportive community. They gave me a lot of great gig opportunities following the contest and have just been generally very supportive. I entered the contest because I didn’t know any musicians in Texas and thought it might be a nice way to make some friends. Which was a tad silly considering Lubbock (where Blue Light is) is a solid 6-hour haul from where I was living in San Marcos, but it worked out and as a result I did end up connecting with a lot of wonderful folks making music in Texas.
You also earned opening slots for Kelly Willis, Jamie Lin Wilson, Jaime Wyatt and LeAnn Rimes. Apart from the exposure these slots would have afforded you, what did you learn from playing in the same shows as artists like these four?
I learned what a pro looks like. They’re all artists worth looking up to and those that I had the pleasure of meeting were so gracious to me. Especially Jamie Lin who’s gone out of her way more than once to help me out. I felt incredibly fortunate to have been able to share a stage with them.
Much of the material on your debut album DISAPPEARING GIRL appears to describe characters and events from your life in Virginia. Had you written much of the material prior to moving to Texas?
None of it actually (laughs), it was all written within the first year and a half of living here and consistently spread out within that time. River Run was the oldest I think and Like A Rose the newest. But you’re definitely right that much of it is influenced by my upbringing, directly or indirectly. Intentional or not, I think your roots are gonna find themselves woven into your art.
Are the individuals and happenings fact or fiction?
Both. Individually and mixed together. DISAPPEARING GIRL is essentially all true and came about while pondering what makes people bad people. Hung The Moon is completely fictional. Good Times is inspired by an old co-worker and imagination took over from there. I guess most of the songs are born of observation and subsequent thought, which usually winds up somewhere between fact and fiction.
You hooked up with Scott Davis to produce the album. How did that come about?
I first met Scott very briefly when I opened up for Kelly Willis and he was playing in her band. The more musicians I met in Austin, the more I realized how much everyone deeply respects Scott. He’s not just one of the most talented people I know, he’s one of the all-around best. I loved the sound of Jamie Lin Wilson’s JUMPING OVER ROCKS and once I learned he produced it, I got the idea I might like him to do my record, whenever I felt I had a record to make. At least a year after that, James Steinle helped me actually sit down and hash it out with him, and in few months, we were in the studio. I trusted him completely and got out of the way (laughs). He assembled the wonderful group of Steve Christensen, whose studio we used and who engineered and mixed everything, Richie Millsap on drums, and Trevor Nealon on keys. And Scott multitasked everything else. They never made me feel like the absolute rookie that I was, I consider myself mighty lucky to have worked with them.
The production focuses very much on your vocal with the instrumentation complimenting your voice rather than competing with it. Were you particularly seeking that balance in the recording?
To me that’s a testament to the players ability to emote along with the lyrics of the songs. Scott is an incredible songwriter and understands the importance of words so he’s not just gonna make noise for the sake of noise, he’s intentional. Richie’s percussion in I’ve Got A Dollar sounds like sticks on a plastic bucket because he listened to the words. All three of them are wonderfully tasteful players who know how to add to the story without drowning it out.
The album thankfully avoids slipping into country/pop crossover territory. Were you conscious to avoid it heading in that direction or was there a temptation to look for a more mainstream sound?
I told Scott from the beginning that I was not at all concerned with fitting any sort of genre mould and quite honestly wouldn’t mind if we happened to do the opposite. To quote James (Steinle) when asked what kind of music he plays: “I just write songs, man.” I’ve got these songs, they sound how they sound, let’s make ‘em pretty and not worry about anything else. We made a real melancholy batch of tunes and while I couldn’t be happier with how they turned out; I understand if they’re not everyone’s cup of tea. Maybe my next record will make you dance a little faster, but I don’t worry about that too much (laughs). We all agreed it’s best to just give the songs what we thought they needed.
Given the lack of opportunities to perform live at present, we’re you tempted to delay the release until a degree of certainty returned?
Not really. I initially wanted to release it in May 2020 but that was before I knew how long it would actually take to get all my ducks in a row for a release. Looking back, I was comically unprepared for most aspects of what it takes to put out a record. Live and learn! But in the grand scheme of things, nobody knew who the hell I was, so there really was no reason to put it off.
I believe you’ve packed your bags and are enjoying an alternative lifestyle in the medium term rather that sit around waiting for normality to revisit us?
Yes! Super excited about it. I moved in with James in Austin in July and after a few months of sitting around wondering what to do, we decided to get out of town for a while. We’ll be spending extended chunks of the next year or so with family, doing some work on his family’s ranch in New Mexico and my family’s fruit tree nursery in Virginia and wherever else we might end up. Hopefully a little bit of normal works its way back into the world, but we’ll just take it as it comes.
Interview by Declan Culliton