New York University: An Interview with Upright Man
A college scholarship to NYU was all it took for a few guys
to start making music together.
Aidan Dolan somehow managed to convince his high school to
let him apply a year early and was originally accepted into the jazz program
before switching to classical composition. Nick Katz was also accepted into the
classical composition program but left after a year. Max Yassky stuck out the
program and received his degree.
“Here’s to not having student loan debt,” Katz said.
“Here’s to student loans,” Yassky countered.
From their initial meeting to the formation of something
more permanent, the guys said that Upright Man formed itself to a degree. Their
relationship as friends as well as musicians was built on the fact that they
saw each other as peers and were all in the same headspace of letting
everything flow naturally.
“Because of the relationships we had built with each other before the band was formed, we were already very aware of each other’s individual voices as songwriters, composers, and players,” Dolan said. “Instead of [doing] it on our own as individual songwriters, we saw a lot more value in the chemistry we had built and knew that we could all keep up with each other musically, no matter what direction we took the band.”
“Because of the relationships we had built with each other before the band was formed, we were already very aware of each other’s individual voices as songwriters, composers, and players,” Dolan said. “Instead of [doing] it on our own as individual songwriters, we saw a lot more value in the chemistry we had built and knew that we could all keep up with each other musically, no matter what direction we took the band.”
By being in that same headspace, their writing chemistry was
equally as natural. The “lightning in a bottle” that Yassky refers to it as is
the real piece of Upright Man that sets them apart. Each member clearly
demonstrates instinctual habits that stem from their time writing together. “We’ve
definitely gotten more comfortable with our individual strengths and weaknesses
as writers and found ways to contribute and allow the others to shine,” Katz
said.
Also part of their natural progression is their sound, which
compliments their varying tastes. This comes from their advantage of knowing
how to communicate with one another. They aren’t afraid to voice their opinions
or concerns, and in turn that creates a sound that satisfies everyone. That
comfort level with each other as songwriters shows on their self-titled record
due out August 18.
It started with a few college scholarships, but grew into so
much more. Upright Man may have some student loans to pay off, but their
initial payoff comes from releasing this record.
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