BMP (Buffalo Music Players) Podcast
We interview artists, musicians, actors and poets, among other creative types, as well as organizers and socio-economic players, in the greater Buffalo and Western New York region. BMP podcast is Buffalo
BMP (Buffalo Music Players) Podcast
BMP (Buffalo Music Players) Episode 33: Addisyn Logan
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Addisyn Logan, a Buffalonian and a musician, takes inspiration from artists like Taylor Swift and Fleetwood Mac as a singer-songwriter. From a family that values music, Addisyn said as a youngster, she was afraid to sing in public.
That did not last.
These days Addisyn has been playing around town and shared a bit of her life at the BMP studio (which in this episode is a table at The Caffe at Amy's). Take a listen and let us know what you think!
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It's the B podcast. If you are just no matter just a player, well helped you welcome believing gatekeeping. We all got a way of helping Avengers. To be quite honest, don't got a job. Look in there, prospect. No, for the park. I'm not just not. I'm so pretty for that. I'm finna make a kill. If the rooking can do it, I sure can. I've never fucked the school, so I've got the upper hand. If the rogue can do it, I sure can. I've never fucked a stool, so I've got the upper hand.
unknownIt's the B and B pocket. It's the B and B.
SPEAKER_01This just then, a double scoop of bad news.
SPEAKER_02Man, life just isn't letting up. I feel like the walls are closing in, and I don't have a way to stop it. I wish there was somewhere I could go. Some place where I could just get away from everything. And just be creative.
SPEAKER_01There is. The Buffalo Creative Workshop. Who said that? Spirit of creativity. I heard you play, and I followed duty the healthy. Okay, in the Great Arrow Building on Elmwood Avenue. Use our space, our art supplies, and equipment to your heart's content. Let us hope you beat back the stress and feel centered again.
SPEAKER_02Wow, that sounds great. I'll check it out.
SPEAKER_01Always remember, if the world has your creative spirits in a rut, come to the Buffalo Creative Workshop for a pick-me-up. More about Buffalo Creative Workshop can be found at Buffalo.creativeWorkshop on Instagram.
SPEAKER_07Hello listeners. You're listening to the Buffalo Music Players podcast. This is Benjamin Joe. And I'm Max. And with us is a very wonderful musician. Her name is Aston. And Aston, how are you?
SPEAKER_06I'm great. Thanks for having me.
SPEAKER_07Yeah, no problem. We are recording at the uh the cafe at Amy's in University Heights. Anytime you want to get a good uh tea or interesting um chai. What are you drinking?
SPEAKER_06I'm drinking a chai chi latte. A chai chi latte.
SPEAKER_07Yeah.
SPEAKER_06It's very fancy.
SPEAKER_07Uh you're welcome to come on down. Anyway, Addison, like if you could just uh briefly introduce yourself to our listeners.
SPEAKER_06Yeah. Well, my name is Addison Logan. Um I am a pop singer based here in Buffalo, born and raised here. Um and yeah, play a bunch of shows all around the area. I haven't been doing this for that long, but it's just become a huge passion of mine.
SPEAKER_03Awesome, awesome. What um what influence the passion? What was like the spark?
SPEAKER_06Um, I've always had an admiration for music. It stems from my dad. My dad has incredible music tastes that he's just always playing different types of music around the house growing up.
SPEAKER_07Shout out to Dad. Shout out to Dad, yeah, good job.
SPEAKER_06Um, but yeah, he loves to like search different concerts on YouTube, especially ones he's gone to, so like to kind of relive that moment with his kids. But I feel like I've gotten a lot of my music taste from him. Um I've always had a deep appreciation for music, but I was never the one that was singing or doing any of that stuff. I did some local theater, but I was always a dancer. I grew up as a competitive dancer. Oh wow. And I was too afraid to sing in front of people or do any of that. I think I get spooked, as one does as a child, like not getting a part when you're like seven. And then I'm like, I'm not, I'm not gonna do this. But my family's really into theater, and my oldest sister, Lindsay, she went to school for musical theater. She was a performer for most of her life. And um, yeah, I've always looked up to her, but I just I was too afraid to ever do it myself. And then um But I always liked the arts. I went to school for film and video. Oh, that's cool. Where'd you go? I went to Mary actually, I did go to UV for two years. So right around the corner. But I transferred to Mary Mount College in New York City.
SPEAKER_00Wow.
SPEAKER_06And yeah, it was really it was really fun. It was a cool experience. It felt like I was living in Glee. Oh, good. It was a huge musical theater and dance school. I remember being in my dorm room and going down to do laundry, and I just hear the actors doing some sort of exercise for enunciation or accents and stuff like that, but it sounded like the say arms downstairs. It scared the cat. Like it was it was really, really funny. But that kind of stuff was just happening.
SPEAKER_03People would just break out in the song wherever you were.
SPEAKER_06People would break out in the song, they'd be dancing through the halls. It was a very small school. I think my graduating class was like 1,200 people. Oh wow. Which is crazy because UB is not like that. So like a huge school. And I went to Lancaster, um, southern of Buffalo. And we had a pretty big school. Like I graduated with 500 kids. So I was always used to a pretty decent sized school. But when you go to college, you think there's gonna be 20 plus thousand kids just in four grade. And no, I knew like everybody that was there, which was kind of cool. That's really awesome. And being in a huge city too, so you didn't feel like you were at a small school because your dorms were downtown, schools uptown, and you got to experience that big city life. I mean, there's millions of people in New York City. Didn't feel like you were in a small school. But yeah, being there felt like I was in an episode of Lee, which is an interesting situation to say the least. But um yeah, so I always um I always was into the arts, went to school for film and video. My senior year of college, I secretly joined an apella group because I did know that I wanted to sing. Secretly, I knew that I thought I could sing, you know.
SPEAKER_07When you say secretly, do you mean that you did not tell friends or family about it?
SPEAKER_06I did not tell my friends, I did not tell my family. Um I might have told my roommate and maybe one friend, but nobody would come like have anybody come to the shows. Not because our program was good, and I even had a solo in one of them, but I was just too nervous. I just I don't know, maybe just didn't have the confidence yet.
SPEAKER_03Are you a bit of a like a perfectionist? Oh yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's like a role.
SPEAKER_06I I post videos to my Instagram story sometimes of me singing a cover or singing an original song, and I probably have taken like a hundred takes at that point. And they all sound the same.
SPEAKER_07Yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_06For the most part, they all sound the same.
SPEAKER_07Yeah, probably you have a great voice, but I hit your gut. That's I was just like, wow, this is amazing.
SPEAKER_00Thank you.
SPEAKER_06Yeah, I I really like that song. It's I wrote it a couple years ago. Um wasn't the first song that I have written, but it was the first one that I felt like I could release, you know? Because like I said, I haven't been doing I've only been singing and writing music basically since COVID.
SPEAKER_03Since COVID, do you think um going to college and living in the big apple and stuff, that's kind of what gave you that last boost of confidence to sing and stuff?
SPEAKER_06Maybe a little bit, but I didn't actually I think in my social life being in the city gave me confidence, gave me confidence to talk to people, and I think it's translated to my performance now of having that um I mean I'm still working on my stage presence as as one is. Yeah. Of course. But I think being in the city gave me that confidence to be able to stand in front of people and talk to them. But I don't know, I don't think that that gave me the confidence to perform, if that makes sense, because I did not start doing that until I moved home. So COVID happened. I'd already graduated college and um a couple years before that, and I moved home, and I was so I kind of was transitioning from living in the city and moving home just to try to figure out like. Yeah, it's definitely different from living in East Village. Exactly. It was crazy, and I was bored in my tiny apartments. I bought a ukulele off Amazon and I'm gonna teach myself how to do this, it can't be that hard. I play a little bit of piano. I grew up playing basic piano, but nothing crazy. Um, and then when I did move home, my brother-in-law had a guitar, so I kind of tried to transition from the ukulele to the guitar and just experiment on the piano. And like you said, it's a huge culture shocking for bringing the city back into your childhood bedroom. And um I was just going through a lot, I was going through a breakup, I was going through leaving all of my friends, doing all that kind of stuff, and I had a lot of feelings, everything was shut down, you know. It's as everybody knows, it was it it was obviously hard for a lot of people, way worse than what I was experienced just being locked at home. But um, yeah, it still was it was it was tough. And writing music just really helped get my out and express that, even if it didn't go anywhere, and I just started posting on my Instagram story and blocking all of my close friends and family so that they couldn't see because I was too nervous to still stick in front of them. Yeah. But I would still gradually get my confidence by singing, quote unquote singing in front of people.
SPEAKER_04Yeah.
SPEAKER_06It definitely feels that way, you know, because now I have the confidence to sing in front of people all the time. I could sing in front of my friends if I want. I never was able to even sing in the car in front of my fa family or friends before this. I just yeah, I don't know. It was just it was really hard, and now I'm confident in it, which is which is nice that I'm practicing all the time because I want to consistently get better.
SPEAKER_03Yeah. Like Glenn said, you have a really nice voice, so you shouldn't be trying to say.
SPEAKER_06Thank you so much. I really appreciate it.
SPEAKER_07I was watching that uh Buffalo session over on your website. Looked like you were doing are those is that your band or is that is that uh just like some studio players there? So I know it was building band, but yeah.
SPEAKER_06Most of them are in my band. Um one so basically um BuffaloBlog reached out to do their they were restarting their Buffalo Blog sessions, and at the time I didn't fully have a band. So that's why I was like, it is my band, but it kind of wasn't at the time. Um so I they asked if we wanted to do the session, and I was just like, well, I want a full band because normally I was just doing acute acoustic stuff. Me and um my duo partner, Mikey, would just kind of go around and um and play live acoustic shows with a full band. And um, yeah, then we got asked to do the session, and I just kind of found some friends that were going to play with me. They learned um all of my music, and we did uh rendition of dreams by Cleveland Mag.
SPEAKER_07Right. We also did a Hey Your Guts. The Hey At Your Guts songs right off the bat.
SPEAKER_06Yeah, which was really, really fun. It was a really cool experience, and that was the first time I ever went to Bama, which is such a great recording studio.
SPEAKER_07Yeah, fun place.
SPEAKER_06And they're awesome there.
SPEAKER_07Yeah. Shout out Bama Studio.
SPEAKER_06For real. Seriously, so just such lovely people. Um, and yeah, then I'm like, I don't have to do this all the time.
SPEAKER_07So in that is that when the bug hit you like while you were yeah, I was wondering about this. While you're doing those acoustic shows and everything, what was propelling you for? Was there a real like a real knowledge that you would be doing more of this? Or was it just something fun? Like when did that really hit you? That professional bug that you get where you're just like, I want to do this all the time.
SPEAKER_06It was probably about a year ago.
SPEAKER_07Really?
SPEAKER_06Yeah, because even that long. Yeah, so um I've been performing shows probably for three, two, three years now. I probably probably more like three years. Yeah, and um, because I used to go to open mics, and that's how I met a lot of my band. Um work through open mics or booking shows. I would go to Nichi's, um, Clarence Center Coffee is nice. Where I yeah, they have a great open mic, and my bandmate Mikey actually runs it, so it's shout out Mikey. Shout out, shout out to Mikey. He also produces all of my music. So double shout out, double shout out. Um but yeah, uh that's kind of how I met most of my band. Um and I so yeah, started me playing solo, then going to open mics, I found Mikey, and um one day he was just kind of like in my jam with you at an open mic, like sure, and started doing some really cool things with my original music. And then when I started booking other shows, I was like, Well, do you want to play with me at these shows? And um, so we started playing together. Um, people came in and um and filled in along the way, but um yeah, about a year ago, I was like, I think I really want to do this at a more professional level, especially since we had started to release music because I was writing music for almost three years and not releasing anything.
SPEAKER_05Oh, so you had like a you had a bunch of stuff in the bowl.
SPEAKER_06Yeah, and then we produced I hate I Hate Your Guts, and then we did I Can't Beg, and you know, not that they have any sort of crazy traction, but it got it got some people to it's as popular on Spotify, so like that's what I thought. If it plays on the radio sometimes, yeah, nothing like crazy, but it's um but it it's enough that I've had people that recognize have told me that they like my music, you know, it's not just something that's just sitting in my noSap. Um but yeah, it's just like I think I want to translate this stage, and we started booking a show. I think the first show that we did um we did as a full band was last year when the Caz in South Buffalo was opening up. Oh yeah. We got we got booked to open for stress dolls. Oh nice, which was really cool. And they're full band, so we I was like, I think we need to be a full band. And now I have my two I have two guitarists, I have a bass player and a drum, a drummer. So we have Mikey, Brian, TJ, and Ned. Those are my bandmates, and they are incredible, just such awesome people.
SPEAKER_07And you call yourself the the Mookie fan, right? No, I'm sorry, different, different, different pods. Yeah, different. So you call yourself the standing fan.
SPEAKER_06It's Addison Logan. So it feels very narcissistic sometimes. Be like, yeah, it's called Addison Logan.
SPEAKER_05That's part of being a musician, though.
SPEAKER_06You gotta Yeah, it's very solo projects, but they're just part of a much just as much part of my band as I am, you know, and they make me better. I couldn't do this without them. They give me so many ideas um for different types of melodies, especially to improve my songwriting. Um, yeah, they inspire me so much, and they're all in a whole bunch of different projects too. Yeah. Which I feel like makes us well-rounded.
SPEAKER_05Have you ever looked at like your journey and been like, well, I really came a long way from like being afraid to sing to like being a leader of a band?
SPEAKER_06Yes, I definitely do. Sometimes I'll go back in my photos and videos and look back at my old videos that I used to post on Instagram and just I felt like such a little girl back then. And now I feel like I'm I've grown up so much, you know? And it's really cool to see where sometimes I'll go back. I have so many journals of songs that I've written throughout the last five years, and um I'll try to replay them if I remember right then. But I'll go back and just see how my writing style has changed. And sometimes I've gone back to a song that I wrote years and years ago, and I kind of rework it into my style now, and it could be used for something that I do now, you know, it'll be repurposed, which is really cool.
SPEAKER_07Before we go any further, why don't we uh take a listen to a clip of one of your songs? I'm thinking I hit your guts, or yeah, sure.
SPEAKER_00I hit your guts.
SPEAKER_07Here it is.
SPEAKER_02From flour to pre-roll, vaporizers to concentrate. You can rest assured that something big is waiting for you at Mammoth Dispensary. Just keep in mind, if you smoke cereal from the General Mills factory nearby, they can't help you. You have to go home and get a bowl yourself. It's a dispensary, not an eatery after all.
SPEAKER_07And that was I Hate Your Guts. Great song. Thank you.
SPEAKER_08Thank you.
SPEAKER_07So listen, I mean, it seems to me that like you're we and we were talking a little bit off mic, uh, listeners just to let you know, but Asin was talking about how um her inner perfectionist actually kind of helps her, like, in her songwriting. Um she knows how to go and work with it.
SPEAKER_06I I guess this is something deep-seated from childhood, I suppose, but yeah, it I always say it's my strength, it's my biggest strength, and it also can be my biggest weakness. It's not full brief all the time. Um we were talking off air about um growing up in a competitive dance background has helped with my self-discipline, you know. Um, it's made me a perfectionist because you're consistently doing a routine over and over and over again and wanting to get better at beer, trying new moves, doing all that kind of stuff. Um, so I think that's where my perfectionism kind of started. Um I was saying before, sometimes I'll if I'm stuck writing a song and there's one part of the song that I just I don't have anything for it, I have the melody, but I don't have any lyrics for it, I'll tell myself just write something random. Just write something random and we'll see what happens, you know? You can change it.
SPEAKER_07Or just we're real heads here.
SPEAKER_06Yeah, you can you can change it later. And um I feel like I'm such a perfectionist all the time that still kind of putting something there, it's not just like I'm switching the segment, you know. I'm still relating it to what I'm writing about, and sometimes it gets my wheels turning where I'm writing the chorus or I'm writing another verse, and I'm like, well, I wrote this here. I know I don't didn't want to keep it, but maybe this could be a good segue into something else, and it ends up relating to the song and it ends up fitting perfectly, you know.
SPEAKER_07Always advancing.
SPEAKER_06Yeah, and it does not work all the time. There are sometimes where it's it's really bad. But um, but there are some times where it it really, really works out in my favor, um, and just gives me a new perspective of things, you know? Or I'll be like, I absolutely hate this line, and I'm trying to think of a million other things when I go back to it later, and I'm like, you know what? I think I actually like this line better than everything else I'm coming up with, and then I have a new appreciation for it.
SPEAKER_07So it's how many songs do you think you've written all together? Like you know, recorded, practiced, or just in a notebook somewhere?
SPEAKER_06Um, I'm new to the recording process, so haven't recorded a lot of music. Um currently working on an AT right now. Should be out new shit. Should be out very Soon I feel like I keep saying very soon. I've been saying that for like the last six months. It is pretty much complete. Uh there's some finishing touches that have to it's in its third trimester. Yes, it definitely is in its third tribus. But you know, life gets busy. I'm also like I said, a big strength and weakness of mine is being a perfectionist. I don't want to rush anything. Um not saying my song is my songs are gonna be perfect when they come out, they might not, and imperfections are beautiful. But I mean Mikey have just really been listening listening carefully to the songs that we've recorded for the CP and just really discussing what we want, what we like, what we don't like, and um experimenting with different sounds, and I think it's really cool. I'm also writing a lot of music so we're recording demos of other things that won't be a part of this project that we get sidetracked on because we're excited about that, you know? Um so I haven't I haven't recorded a lot of music, um, but I do have some really great songs that are coming out. Pro I say in the next three to four months. Just gonna give that timeline. We're gonna have a single first. We already know which ones are gonna be on it. We're gonna have a single first, and that's gonna roll out the EP and I hit your guts, and I can't tag you to be on the EP, which is gonna be great. Um yeah, it's your you know, pop album. It's fun. Um, but I'm really excited about it. I've never done any of this before. This is my first my debut EP, you know, it'll hit up in a loop ball. Yeah.
SPEAKER_03You have a degree in um film and writing, I believe, right?
SPEAKER_06I do. I have a degree in digital media and video production, and I specialized in screenwriting. Um, not like the whole time, but at at the end of the day, I thought I wanted to be a screenwriter. So I like to say that, you know, my songwriting and my musical capabilities just kind of came out of nowhere run one day. But I think like I was saying before, I think subconsciously I have been working towards this for a while. Yeah. Call it destiny, call it anything else, you know, call it the way of life. But um I started writing for film, just kind of passion projects and different types of skits for different classes and doing things for like personal reasons, and um, I just kind of fell in love with it, and I had some really great mentors in school that really encouraged me to write, and that's where I got my confidence in writing. And I think I can relate screenwriting to songwriting. There's a formula, it doesn't always have to have a formula, but there is a formula for both for both play videos. Um, and so I think that discipline of having that structure helped with my songwriting, you know? Um, and it was completely different than anything that I've ever done. They are two very different things, but I've always been a very creative person, so I think my creative writing has helped with creating stories and song rather than film.
SPEAKER_03Have you ever thought about merging the two? Like maybe making your own movie about your life and then doing the whole your own music for it too?
SPEAKER_06Oh, I've never thought about that actually.
SPEAKER_05I mean I feel like that's the next step, the next evolution.
SPEAKER_06Maybe, you know, I I see people doing that. They'll have uh a short film for a song, you know. Uh I feel like I'm constantly making up stories. Whether whether my songs are about specific aspects of my life or just feelings I've had and coming up with stories, I feel like that's mainly what my music is about, is things that I've things that I've felt but maybe never fully experienced that specific scenario. Like if I'm not that I have a song like this, but that I'm saying like I'm sitting here, then I walk to the store, I do that. Maybe that exact scenario didn't happen, but the feeling I had walking to the store is something I felt in my actual life. So um, or even just things that I've seen on TV or seen my friends and family experience, you know. I feel like I'm inspired by everything, and it really translates to my music. Um but I could see those stories coming to life in a short film for sure, you know, because we were kind of talking off uh off air too that sometimes I feel like I have imposter syndrome sometimes when it comes to writing music. Sometimes I I look at writing and my songs as like big puzzles. You know, with every line that I'm writing, it's another puzzle piece that fix. And sometimes it just feels like that was meant to be, you know. Um where I couldn't have possible, not that it's anything profound, but like something where they go together or the next line just works so well with the one that you wrote before to tell a story where it just feels like it was already written, you know? Like you can't all like a puzzle piece, like you're doing a puzzle and it just there is a piece that matches. And and it's a really cool feeling, but it's also a weird feeling because sometimes it just makes you feel like you didn't write it sometimes, you know, even though you did. And so I view my songs as different characters. I you know, like I said, everything is a verbatim of things that I've gone through, some things I've never gone through with music that I've written, you know, and it's all a different character.
SPEAKER_00Wow.
SPEAKER_06You know, just like writing films, just like writing the skits that I would write back in college, you know. They have a life of its own. Each each song that I write has its own, has its own life. You know? So like that recorded music where I don't like there's a song that we're um that we're we have been recording for a while that I keep going back and forth on whether or not to put it in the eighty. I have a lot of friends that really like this song. And if you're listening, I know you know which one this is. But um I keep going back and forth on whether or not I want to release it. Um because but in my head, because I don't like love it, but I also love it. I don't know. I think it's also been so long that my music style has evolved. But I like the and I'm in such a different place now than when I wrote that song, you know. And it's actually a happy song. Not that I'm not in a happy place, I'm in a very happy place right now. But it was just it was a different time in my life, and I think I just don't relate to it anymore. I don't relate to you know, and I think that's what's pushing me to not release it.
SPEAKER_07It could become your biggest song. That's the song that you like, you know, they hate that song. Exactly.
SPEAKER_06Exactly, which is why I keep not honestly like that, but it's it could be though.
SPEAKER_05It could be it could be it won't if you just keep it in there though.
SPEAKER_06Exactly. And I always feel like I said, it all has a life of its own, and I feel like it deserves to be out in the world. You know, even if I don't like it, even if because it's not that I don't like it, I still think it's a great song, and I still have such a love and appreciation.
SPEAKER_05Just like another version of you.
SPEAKER_06Yeah, and uh I still think that whether it's on this VP or it's not, I think that it does deserve to be out in this world. So we'll see. We'll see what happens. But I doubt. Yeah, stay tuned in the next couple months. No release date yet, but we're we are getting very close. I think I keep saying that. I told my friends that for like the last at least three months. It's actually true this way.
SPEAKER_03The Prime Master doesn't have to be exactly three months, it can be a little longer.
SPEAKER_06I want to just be as proud as I it's nothing's ever going to be perfect. I'm not expecting anything to be perfect, but I want to be super proud of what I'm putting out. Yeah, so I think so does Mikey too. He's just so great at what he's doing right now, you know, and I'm so lucky to have him pre as a friend and producing all of my stuff, and he just really gets the sound that I want. And yeah, I want him to be proud of the songs too, you know. Can't tell him to change can't tell him to change the BPM by one every five seconds, which has happened before. He's like, You can't tell the difference, dude.
SPEAKER_03I can't. Exactly.
SPEAKER_06My my brain, I can. I can tell if it's 160 or if it's 159. Come on.
SPEAKER_03I can't tell you.
SPEAKER_06No, I've showed it to my friends. My friends actually they make fun of me sometimes because I have said that to them and I've shown them both versions of like it literally sounds the same. What are you talking about?
SPEAKER_04You have a critical ear.
SPEAKER_07That's that's a good thing.
SPEAKER_06Yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_07Are you thinking making any boot videos with songs? Do you have any ideas for that?
SPEAKER_06Um, I do want to, at least some teaser videos, especially for um we're gonna release a single for that is going to lead into the peak. I can I can give you the name. It's called Good Time. I play it at my shows sometimes too, so if you've ever been to an Addison Logan show, I have been playing it. It's a really, really fun one. I'm really excited for it to be out. Um, but I have some cool ideas for for that song, so um stay tuned.
SPEAKER_07Yeah, pleasure.
SPEAKER_06Yeah.
SPEAKER_07Well, that's about all the time we have for today. Addison, thanks for coming on the pod. I really appreciate it.
SPEAKER_06Thank you. Thank you for having me. This is so fun.
SPEAKER_07It was a pleasure having you on. And just uh tune in next time to the DMP Podcast, Bob of Music Players. Have a good night, y'all.
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unknownIt's the B and B pocket. It's the B and V okay.