Creator to Creators S6 Ep 41 Mia Rago

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https://facebook.com/miaragomusic/https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC0qPjJewS6IkwKhD3oJAZKQhttps://music.apple.com/us/artist/mia-rago/1431625028https://miarago.com/https://music.apple.com/us/artist/mia-rago/1431625028With bass, bongo, snare and guitar, indie pop singer-songwriter Mia Rago pulls you intoher trippy, boppin’ little alt-pop love-gone-wrong song “The Shower.”And, it has a touch of the operatic, as Mia plays with her classically trained voice andinvites the listener to come play with her in the debris left from a breakup.“The Shower” releases on August 9.“It is playful,” she said. “Lyrically, it feels like one big run-on sentence, just the thoughtsgoing through your head, like, ‘What happened? What did I do? What did he do? Whatdid they do wrong?’ All this stuff that makes you feel absolutely crazy with a breakup.”From the start of this affair we were 25 years young And now I’m starting to regret what I said when I thought You’re the one who always calledThe only man of the hourAnd I still just can’t believe I think about youIt will be the second song to be released from her upcoming album — her debut —Wishing We Could Dream. More singles from the album are coming. The finishedproject, with 11 tracks, will drop early next year.The music video for “The Shower” will be released August 19.“I had some fun with the music video, too, like, stuff you do post breakup. You know,eating ice cream. Or just crying. But making it kind of fun instead of depressing and sad.I wanted it to be upbeat, musically, and I feel like we did, me and my producer, MeganMcCormick.”With the two singles from the album out this year, she is resuming a career path shestarted with the release of a five-track EP, A Sea of Darkness, in 2020. The pandemicand completing her degree in music interrupted.“The pandemic did hit right as I was releasing my EP, and then I was in school up until2022 getting my bachelor’s in music for vocal performance. That was my degree foropera.”Her post-college work as an operatic soprano includes performances of Puccini andVerdi in Italy and singing in master classes and coaching work. She has sung baroque-,classical-, romantic- and modern-era roles.But her road to 2024 and the beginnings of a serious music career began with adiagnosis of scoliosis at age 9 and surgery to correct it at 10. The titanium rodspermanently in her back and a long, painful recovery ruled out the sports and physicalactivity she had loved.Music became, as she says in her bio, the only thing she could rely on.And, in another twist, she grew up in the funeral home owned by her parents, who alsoowned a cemetery.“Although some people might think it’s very depressing to grow up around that, I feellike I have tried to appreciate life because I understand how short life is. And although Ido like the darkness of some of my songs, I try to highlight a lightness or a playfulness,like in ‘The Shower.’”Then there is the fact that, around the house, Papa sang Frank Sinatra and Mama lovedElvis.“I think of myself as an old soul,” she said. “I really love the older music, and I try toincorporate some of that stuff and some of that writing into my songs.”If some darkness is inevitable in her music, it comes in music that is beautiful andversatile. The five songs on her EP, for instance, have country, “Rose,” a song with anorchestral vibe, “Tension,” a rockish entry in “Alive,” and the very slow, moody,contemplative “Serendipity.”“Gone” is an upbeat tempo track that tells a story that is mysterious, ambiguous andchilling. Did she disappear or was she disappeared?All are beautiful listening. Mia Rago has a gorgeous voice, which she knows how to useand clearly loves to play with.The first track she released this year, “All of My Scars,” a song about her scoliosis, is analt-pop ballad of catharsis.All of my scars, all of my tearsGave me my pain and brought me hereThe stronger my spine, my body and soulMade up of bones with metal I’m whole“I think ‘All of My Scars’ was very therapeutic for me,” she said. “I got diagnosed withscoliosis at the age of 9, and to try to process that as a 9-year-old and then having thesurgery when I was 10 — it was not really possible for me to do, and I ended upprocessing it years later.”The years since A Sea of Darkness has been like a period of “research anddevelopment.”Going forward, she wants to develop — as long as I can — both her career in opera andin alt-pop.“My ultimate goal is to bridge the gap between my more indie-pop, alternative stuff andopera. They’re more closely related than we think. I incorporate opera in some of myperformances, and I feel that, especially on ‘The Shower,’ in the chorus, I was able tohighlight some of my vocal training.”Still, she says “indie music is a lot more freeing than classical.”“There’s more rules in classical, and it’s more of a challenge, which is what I like aboutit, but it is fun to be able to experiment.”Fans can only benefit from following her as she creates her bridge.Connect to Mia Rago on all platforms for new music, videos, and social posts.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/creator-to-creators-with-meosha-bean--4460322/support.

Creator to Creators S6 Ep 41 Mia Rago

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Creator to Creators S6 Ep 41 Mia Rago
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