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Paisley Fields on Growing Up in Iowa and Finding One’s Superpower

Tuesday, November 08, 2022 By Mayer Danzig

Paisley Fields

Tell us about your tour vehicle.

I don’t really have my own touring vehicle. If it’s a full band tour we will rent or borrow. If it’s just me going on the road I’ll take the Jeep out.

How do you eat cheaply and/or healthy while on tour?

It can be a challenge to eat healthy on tour, but I always try to avoid fast food. Hitting up grocery stores or vegetarian restaurants is generally a good move. If a venue provides meals we will always take them up on that to save money.

Where do you rehearse?

When I’m in NYC I usually rehearse at Battalion Studios in Gowanus, Brooklyn. It’s easy to get to and they have everything I need.

What was the title and a sample lyric from the first song that you wrote?

I started writing music when I was a little kid and never really stopped. The first song I remember writing and taking seriously is a song called “Flora’s Alive”. I wrote it shortly after I moved from Iowa to NYC and was feeling a bit home sick. One of the lyrics is “the lights on the combine will show you the way home”. I grew up next to a cornfield and I remember watching the combines plow the field at night through my bedroom window.

Describe your first gig.

My first music job was playing piano for the church. I started doing that when I was 14 years old. I was always playing weddings, birthday parties, funerals, you name it when I was in high school. The first gig I remember playing as an artist was when I was 18 years old at Cup of Joe’s Coffeehouse in Cedar Falls, Iowa. I was a freshman in college and invited all my friends out. All I had with me was my keyboard. The venue didn’t have a microphone or any sort of PA, so I played completely acoustic. I had about ten songs I’d written and threw a couple covers in the set too. I had a blast and recorded my first solo album shortly after that.

What was your last day job? What was your favorite day job?

I worked as an executive assistant for this company in the financial district on Wall Street that managed charter schools. The was my last “day job” and I can’t say there’s really any job other than music I enjoyed. I quit that job when I moved to Japan in 2009. While I was in Japan I studied Taiko drumming, formed a duo with a Japanese musician named Kazunari Abe, recorded an album and toured the country. When I moved back to NYC a year later I took nearly every music gig that I could get. I’ve been playing music full time for over a decade now.

How has your music-related income changed over the past 5-10 years? What do you expect it to look like 5-10 years from now?

Before 2020 I was able to string a decent income together through touring and various gigs in NY. I have no idea what the future holds for the music industry. I love playing live and touring, so I hope I can continue doing that.

What one thing do you know now that you had wished you knew when you started your career in music?

Comparing yourself to other artists is a waste of time and energy. Confidence is key and what makes you different is your superpower.

Active since 2013, Paisley Fields is a singer, songwriter, and bandleader splitting time between Brooklyn, New York and Nashville, Tennessee.

A touring member of the newly reformed queer-country icons Lavender Country, Paisley also played keyboard on their 2022 album Blackberry Rose.

On Limp Wrist, Paisley draws inspiration from queer icon Andy Warhol and a myriad of drag artists with whom he’s collaborated. His years of experience in Manhattan piano bars did not diminish his love for country music, and he has already released two albums that pay homage to the music of his youth.

Limp Wrist is an exploration of where rural queerness intersects religion. Paisley’s family were devout Catholics, and he served as the official church pianist in his parish throughout his teens, playing every Sunday.

Connect with Paisley Fields online and on the road.

Filed Under: Country, Interviews, Videos, Why It Matters Tagged With: Paisley Fields

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