The brand new single, “Honest Mistakes” by Americana artist, Kate Mills.
This is the
first single off of Kate’s upcoming, debut album
Artwork by: Hope Tree Entertainment |
“Honest Mistakes” opens ethereally, enveloping you in a warm space of spacey, chiming guitars. It offers the intimacy of storytelling during the verses and dynamically opens up to rich layering in the chorus.
She shared on Facebook:
This might not seem like a big announcement.
Maybe you even feel like this is a little anti climactic for all the build-up!
After
all there are almost 40k songs uploaded to Spotify everyday.
And you probably hear at least once week that
so-and-so has a new single out.
But that is not my story.
To me, this is a HUGE announcement I've been waiting to make for a long time.
But that is not my story.
To me, this is a HUGE announcement I've been waiting to make for a long time.
I haven't
officially released any new music in OVER 5 YEARS!
Release Date: 4 Oct 2019
Label: Kate Mills
Time: 3:37
Genre: Folk/ Country
Audio:
What was the overall writing process like for the single?
This song took a long time to write! The hook of the song, the line of the chorus that says, “I’ve lived my life in such a way that I can’t afford to make even honest mistakes” came first. But I didn’t really know how to develop it from there. Once everything happened with my family member going to prison, the song came together. I was able to really put myself in his shoes and tap into my own complicated feeling about the situation and put it into the song. And that really is the heart of it. People are complicated. We aren’t just good or bad, loveable or unloveable. We are all both, and I really wanted to get that across in the song. Read More HERE
This song took a long time to write! The hook of the song, the line of the chorus that says, “I’ve lived my life in such a way that I can’t afford to make even honest mistakes” came first. But I didn’t really know how to develop it from there. Once everything happened with my family member going to prison, the song came together. I was able to really put myself in his shoes and tap into my own complicated feeling about the situation and put it into the song. And that really is the heart of it. People are complicated. We aren’t just good or bad, loveable or unloveable. We are all both, and I really wanted to get that across in the song. Read More HERE
This New York City-based artist (full name Katie Miller Secchiaroli) has spent years living in the shadows of her dreams, working in a safe job as a Social Worker. Today, however, Kate steps forward with assured artistry, releasing a debut album that captures the warmth and orchestrations of her beloved era of 1970s Laurel Canyon singers-songwriters, while enhanced by today’s crisp modern production standards. Kate is a storyteller whose lyrics and emotional perspective are uniquely informed by schooling and time in the field of social work.
“Honest Mistakes,” is the first single to be
released from her upcoming full-length album. The song is masterfully
dynamic—intimate and personal during the storytelling verses and expressively
layered during the choruses. Conceptually, it’s a song about good people making
not-so-good life decisions, and grappling with feelings of regret. Here, Kate
poetically weaves in various observational stories from her life.
CONNECT with Kate Mills:
Genre: piano based singer/songwriter
Home Town: Bucks County, PA
“I have always been scared to say music is what I was meant to do,” confesses singer-songwriter Kate Mills. “This collection of songs, and this past year, have been revelatory for me to embrace a natural part of who I am.”
The New York City-based artist spent years living in the shadows
of her dreams, working in a safe job as a social worker. Today, however, Kate steps forward with
assured artistry, releasing a debut album that captures the warmth and
orchestrations of her beloved era of 1970s Laurel Canyon singers-songwriters,
while being enhanced by today’s crisp modern production standards.
Photo Credit: katemillsmusic.com |
Kate is a storyteller
whose lyrics and emotional perspective are uniquely informed by schooling and a
career in social work. “Many of the things I loved about social work are also
why I love music,” she says. “In both, it’s about creating a space where it's
okay to feel whatever we're feeling; a space for us to acknowledge and embrace
our whole selves, even the parts that are challenging. Both create connection.
With music, I feel like I can contribute more genuinely to that conversation.”
Kate has previously issued the debut EP, Little Bird (2013;
Tagged Pop; iTunes). She’s garnered critical
accolades from outlets such as Acoustic Music Scene, Women's International
Music Network, and All About That Music. Kate has been asemi-finalist in the UK
Songwriter Competition and asemi-finalist in the International Songwriting
Competition. In addition, she conducted a successful Kickstarter campaign to
fund her upcoming full-length.
As a performing artist, Kate has gigged around the country at
venerated venues, house concerts, colleges, and festivals. Select highlights
include Hotel Cafe in LA, Cutting Room in NYC, Montauk Music Festival, ASCAP’s
“I Create Music Conference,” Ladybug Festival, NJ Folk Festival, SouthEast
Regional Folk Alliance, and Musikfest.
Kate was born and grew up
in Philly. She caught the performance bug early on, and, by age 9, was
entrancing audiences in theater performances. Her debut was in front of 900
people as “Gretel” in The Sound Of Music. Kate went onto to enjoy multiple
musical theater opportunities, including appearing alongside Debbie Gibson at
the Merriam Theater in Philadelphia, and a performance at the Philadelphia
Thanksgiving Day Parade.
Her earliest music memories are of listening to Amy Grant. “I
was sure she was going to have me sing on a Christmas album,” Kate recalls,
laughing. She would go onto write songs during middle school and high school,
but, as she grew older, Kate felt shoehorned into a more practical life path.
She went onto prestigious University of Pennsylvania where she earned a
Master’s Degree in Social Work. Though Kate eventually moved away from a career
in social work, her time and study in the field made an indelible impression.
"Honest Mistakes" is the
very first single from an upcoming album.
Kate’s album captures character-building times of life. “After
spending some time thinking about the themes of each of the songs, it seems a
common thread is the idea of ‘reckoning.’ Often with one's self, but also with
grief and love,” she says. During the past 5 years Kate has a lot to reckon
with, both good and bad. In that time, she got married to her husband Joey, and
she was also diagnosed with Ulcerative Colitis which led to multiple hospital
stays over the past few years.
Select album highlights include “Honest Mistakes,” “Outrun The Night,” and “Fall Apart.” “Honest Mistakes” opens ethereally, enveloping you in a warm space of atmospherics and spacey, chiming guitars. “Honest Mistakes,” is the first single to be released from the upcoming full-length album. The song is masterfully dynamic—intimate and personal during the storytelling verses and expressively layered during the choruses. Conceptually, it’s a song about good people making not-so-good life decisions, and grappling with feelings of regret. Here, Kate poetically weaves in various observational stories from her life.
One emotional centerpiece
of the album is the anthemic pop-rock track “Outrun The Night.” The song opens with
an instantly familiar chant, then segues into moody and confessional verses
before taking off into the soaring emotionality of the chorus. Within the song,
Kate combines impressionistic images of a desert drive with personally
confessional lyrics. “This song is about the fact that we all have shadows—we
all can be monsters—and we can’t hide; we have deal with those aspects of
ourselves,” she explains.
“No Yellow Brick Road” is Kate’s Plan B song, addressing her
time studying social work. It’s a delicate and sweetly sincere country-tinged
track replete with golden harmony vocals and winsome pedal steel. “I joke at
live shows that it’s my ode to student debt,” Kate says. The boldly vulnerable
“Fall Apart” boasts Kate’s most rousing lyrics and richly impassioned vocals,
revealing the desire we all feel sometimes just to be a mess. “That song is
about giving ourselves space to feel all of our emotions, even when they aren't
pleasant,” Kate clarifies. “Fall Apart” was written after a bad flare-up from
Ulcerative Colitis that landed Kate in the hospital.
Her album was produced by Joey Secchiaroli who also played bass
and appears as one of the harmony voices on the recordings. Outside of the
recording studio, Kate and Joey are husband and wife. “He was the cute
guitarist in the band,” Kate laughs, recalling their first encounter, which, of
course, took place at a live show.
These days Kate is actively performing and recording, pursuing
the life she desired but struggled to embrace. “I think a big part of the
message of the songs and my journey from social work to music is not being
afraid of who you are, or your dreams, or even the complex feelings we all
have,” she says. “There is doubt, uncertainty, and there are no guarantees, but
there is no way around it, only through it. We can’t hide and be afraid.”
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