Isaac Watters

ISAAC WATERS RELEASES WIDESCREEN JOURNEY ACROSS INDIE-ROCK WITH EXTENDED PLAY 002 VIA hi-res records

SOPHOMORE EP PREMIERES WITH ATWOOD MAGAZINE

Charming and churning, warm and wondrous, Watters’ Extended Play 002 is a contemplative collection of gentle giants: Intimate reflections that sound sweet and hit hard, demanding our undivided attention as the artist spills his soul.” - Atwood Magazine on Extended Play 002 

“Watters is haunting and archival in the way he approaches songwriting, retracing memory with deep contemplation of the human experience. Sonically, Watters’ music has a lingering effect.” - Impose Magazine

“There are few more compelling narrators of the human condition right now than Watters, who turns his writerly eye toward the disparity in wealth in Los Angeles on the new single.” - Buzzbands LA on “Coconut In The Street” 

“Watters has been dipping his toes in assorted genres over the years, but he seems to rest most comfortably along the mesmerizing continuum between minimalist folk and moody theatricality.” - Magnet Magazine

“Blending unique sounds with deep and sometimes haunting lyrics, Watters conjures up a new perspective for listeners and burgeoning artists.” - Los Angeleno 

“Extended Play 001 offers a first full glimpse of his restless and idiosyncratic artistic impulses, with tracks diverting towards minimalist art pop, funky indie rock, and off-kilter balladry… the EP closes off with “Sliding,” a slinking and smoky effort carried by bass-driven grooves and Watters’ decadent vocal melodies.” - Under The Radar 

“...it’s hooked me, line and sinker. ‘Everywhere I go, I leave a little sadness,’ sung in the vein of Wolf Parade’s wobbly warbles? Take my money.” - Monster Children 

“The result is a collection of songs (with more to come) that reflect different shadows of Watters’ LA life, but also process fears and anxieties about the natural world, climate change, and apocalypse that’s very much “in the air” for the artist.” Glide Magazine

EXTENDED PLAY 002: LISTEN

LOS ANGELES, CA - Today LA based multi-disciplinary artist and songwriter Isaac Watters has released Extended Play 002, his thoughtfully-crafted sophomore release for hi-res records. “Watters’ new EP is a fun fever dream that defies easy categorization; a record that comes to life with warmth and wonder, graceful melodies and glistening vocals full of turbulence and raw turmoil,” says Atwood Magazine in the official premiere of the four-song release. A journey across indie-rock, post-punk, art rock, dream pop, indie folk and more, the release marks a stunning achievement for Watters, whose singular voice and patient songwriting are on full display. Watters’ music considers his and humanity’s place on Earth, how the natural world shapes its inhabitants and vice versa, and the fibers that connect us all. Watters channels these internal musings and observations while tapping into a celebrated sonic lineage of trailblazing songwriters who came before him, including Leonard Cohen, Nick Cave, Dan Bejar, and more.

Closing song “Can You Hear Me Now” joins Watters’ previous singles in underscoring the thought he imbues in his songwriting and the recording process. Describing the song as either a conversation wrestling with a higher power, or a phone call with his brother, Isaac rounds out his second EP on “Can You Hear Me Now” to a stunningly poignant effect. “Can you hear me now? I was trying so hard,” sings Isaac, as if the clouds are parting. “Can you hear me now? I was trying to understand.” There’s an admirable stillness in the messages Watters presents in his songwriting and delivery that is on full display across the song and EP.

When asked about the environmental themes and imagery he touches on across the release, Issac finds hope in the scenes of disaster and ruin that are presented in his lyrics. “I think there's always this longing for a world where things are better and things aren't dying and everything is alive, and the ocean is cold, and the sun is shining,” says Isaac. “There’s this idea I sometimes think about, that longing for a place like that.”

“I feel like music is a way to process what we aren't actually able to think about,” says Watters when asked about what he hopes listeners take away from Extended Play 002. “I hope that it's music that is comforting to people in this era that we're living in. And that it could be something that would be helpful for people.”

“Can You Hear Me Now” rounds out the EP, and follows lead singles “All I Need,” “Coconut In The Street,” and “My Heart is an Ocean.” With praise from publications including Impose Magazine, Magnet Magazine, Buzz Bands LA, Under The Radar and more, the release hints at more music to come from Watters in the future.

Working with producer Matt Linesch and hi-res records, Watters found recording in analog to be a creatively fruitful approach. Eschewing the endless directions that digital recording can present, along with the headache that constant tinkering and overdubbing can inspire, recording to tape provided Watters and company a more direct road map to carrying these songs to completion, and overall simplified the process. Working within limits can inspire a more successful, and ultimately more human approach. “We did the record with four rolls of tape, each song lives on that length of tape. We couldn't go back and add stuff in. Everybody that we had playing on [Extended Play 002] was flawless. They would do one take, and that would be the song.”

A multi-disciplinary artist,  Frank Gehry apprentice, and accomplished set designer (Westworld, For All Mankind, and many others), Watters’ is always considering the relationship between sight and sound, and how the two influence and affect his work.

Born in Mexico City, John Isaac Watters grew up in Oaxaca & later outside of Tucson, AZ. In 2002 He moved to Los Angeles to study architecture, going on to work for Frank Gehry while at the same time starting to write music and perform with friends in the USC music school. To date, he has released 4 albums as John Isaac Watters: Parachute Tramps, CASAS, Campanas, and Past Hope Now. Also in 2019 he released an EP as Rainstorm Brother - a new project with his long time collaborator Tyler Chester.

Besides touring nationally, from 2014-2020 he held multiple residencies in LA, the longest running was at the historic Hyperion Tavern in Silver Lake. At that residency, John attracted many notable guest performers including Jackson Browne, Madison Cunningham, Bedouine, Mark Eitzel (of American Music club), Dan Bern, Anna Nalick, Garrison Starr, Will Butler (of Arcade Fire) and many others.

Isaac is an artist's artist and in addition to music has a robust career as a visual artist. He started his career working with the legendary architect Frank Gehry and later designed multiple low-income housing projects in Los Angeles.  His architecture work led to set design in 2015 with his first project Chappaquiddick. He has gone on to design sets for existential shows such as OA, Westworld and For All Mankind, which helped shape the worldview projected in the EP (full IMBD credits HERE). Most recently he designed the sets for the buzzed-about film Don't Worry Darling and is a member of LAMB design collective where he worked on the design for last year's Met Gala In America: A Lexicon of Fashion.

Photo by Stone Shannon

ISAAC WATTERS CONTEMPLATES LONELINESS, UNDERSTANDING, AND THE SEA ON NEW SINGLE “MY HEART IS AN OCEAN” VIA hi-res records

FORTHCOMING EXTENDED PLAY 002 TO BE RELEASED AUGUST 30TH

“Watters is haunting and archival in the way he approaches songwriting, retracing memory with deep contemplation of the human experience. Sonically, Watters’ music has a lingering effect.” - Impose Magazine

“There are few more compelling narrators of the human condition right now than Watters, who turns his writerly eye toward the disparity in wealth in Los Angeles on the new single.” - Buzzbands LA on “Coconut In The Street”

“Watters has been dipping his toes in assorted genres over the years, but he seems to rest most comfortably along the mesmerizing continuum between minimalist folk and moody theatricality.” - Magnet Magazine

“Blending unique sounds with deep and sometimes haunting lyrics, Watters conjures up a new perspective for listeners and burgeoning artists.” - Los Angeleno

“Extended Play 001 offers a first full glimpse of his restless and idiosyncratic artistic impulses, with tracks diverting towards minimalist art pop, funky indie rock, and off-kilter balladry… the EP closes off with “Sliding,” a slinking and smoky effort carried by bass-driven grooves and Watters’ decadent vocal melodies.” - Under The Radar

“...it’s hooked me, line and sinker. ‘Everywhere I go, I leave a little sadness,’ sung in the vein of Wolf Parade’s wobbly warbles? Take my money.” - Monster Children

“The result is a collection of songs (with more to come) that reflect different shadows of Watters’ LA life, but also process fears and anxieties about the natural world, climate change, and apocalypse that’s very much “in the air” for the artist.” Glide Magazine
Watters has the ability to connect on a higher level, and his work signifies his sincere way with words, his adeptness at creating moments of innocence, and the way his music reverberates. All of this while at the same time not being raucous.” - The Review Geek

“My Heart is an Ocean”: LISTEN

LOS ANGELES, CA - Today LA based multi-disciplinary artist and songwriter Isaac Watters has released his latest single “My Heart is an Ocean,” the third offering from his forthcoming release Extended Play 002, out August 30th via hi-res records

There’s a stunning spaciousness to Watters’ sound across the single- full but never crowded, and ample space for the humanity in his voice and songwriting to shine through. Watters finds loneliness in the vastness of the ocean, always connecting the natural world to his internal compass, overtop of gentle acoustic strumming and dynamic synth sonics. “It’s a lonely place and there’s a lot of trash floating / I wish I was floating back into your arms,” he sings, equally pensive and forlorn.  Watters describes “My Heart is an Ocean” as a love song, “but not just romantically, it’s about a longing to understand and be understood.”

A howling post-chorus caps off a captivating echoing chorus from Watters, a rallying call for connectivity and understanding in a sea of isolation. “They say the Earth’s oceans are mostly getting warmer / that the ice is melting and I know it’s true,” sings Watters, tapping into the changing climate in this extended metaphor. “Maybe someday soon, maybe sooner than later / the whole world will be ocean, and you’ll be lonesome too.”

Watters’ knack for evoking deeply personal emotions by using nature and his surroundings as an extended metaphor is what separates him from other songwriters in this day and age. There’s a constant conversation happening between the self and the surrounding environment, and the way the two shape each other has always been at the forefront of his storytelling.

“My Heart is an Ocean,” follows previous singles including the stunning “All I Need” and haunting “Coconut in the Street,” both to be included in Extended Play 002. His second release through Los Angeles based label hi-res records, the EP captures Watters’ singular voice and widescreen vision to songwriting, which is further supported by the warmth of the labels analog-recording approach.

Watters will be performing in Los Angeles at Gold-Diggers on July 28th with Clara-Nova, with more performances slated throughout the summer.

Photo by Robbie Jeffers

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ISAAC WATTERS TRAVERSES THE STREETS OF LOS ANGELES IN ETHEREAL SINGLE “COCONUT IN THE STREET” VIA hi-res records

FORTHCOMING EXTENDED PLAY 002 TO BE RELEASED AUGUST 30TH

“Watters has been dipping his toes in assorted genres over the years, but he seems to rest most comfortably along the mesmerizing continuum between minimalist folk and moody theatricality.” - Magnet Magazine

“Isaac Watters, too, poignantly connects with his past on the typically immersive “Child in the Rain,” - Buzzbands LA

“Blending unique sounds with deep and sometimes haunting lyrics, Watters conjures up a new perspective for listeners and burgeoning artists.” - Los Angeleno

“Extended Play 001 offers a first full glimpse of his restless and idiosyncratic artistic impulses, with tracks diverting towards minimalist art pop, funky indie rock, and off-kilter balladry… the EP closes off with “Sliding,” a slinking and smoky effort carried by bass-driven grooves and Watters’ decadent vocal melodies.” - Under The Radar

“...it’s hooked me, line and sinker. ‘Everywhere I go, I leave a little sadness,’ sung in the vein of Wolf Parade’s wobbly warbles? Take my money.” - Monster Children

“The result is a collection of songs (with more to come) that reflect different shadows of Watters’ LA life, but also process fears and anxieties about the natural world, climate change, and apocalypse that’s very much “in the air” for the artist.” Glide Magazine
”Watters has the ability to connect on a higher level, and his work signifies his sincere way with words, his adeptness at creating moments of innocence, and the way his music reverberates. All of this while at the same time not being raucous.” - The Review Geek

“Coconut In The Street”: LISTEN

LOS ANGELES, CA - Today LA based artist and storyteller Isaac Watters has released the ethereal “Coconut In The Street,” his latest single and second offering from his forthcoming release Extended Play 002, out August 30th via hi-res records. A stunning and haunting single that presents a number of harrowing vignettes while traversing the streets of Los Angeles, “Coconut In The Street” examines the ever-growing chasm between wealth and poverty in the city, and the potential tragic ends that await all sides of this divide. 

Watters’ signature setting-based storytelling narrative thrives on the scenes he paints from roaming nighttime crosswalks, traveling LA’s most recognizable arteries, and passing its disenfranchised inhabitants. A steady, contemplative acoustic strum accompanied by shimmering, delayed-out synth sonics set the pace for this uncanny nighttime walk as Watters reflects on his place throughout it all. “We’re all going to the corner bar / see you in the morning if I don’t make it that far / either way it’s been a real good time / tired of trying to bring it back.” As the song progresses, a chilling call-and-response from Watters solidifies the songs’ identity in the sidewalk, filling the space within the cracks.

Anyone who has spent time in the city will recognize the scenes that Watters sees at night, as well as the contrasts between the haves and have-nots in a shadowed cityscape. A group of friends on their way to the next bar while passing a homeless man sleeping on the street, a man trying to sell mangoes from a plastic bag on the intersection in 110 degree heat, an addict who wanders to the edge of the freeway, a construction worker who removes his harness and helmet and leaps from the newest luxury highrise. 

“These are all scenes I was thinking about while writing “Coconut In The Street,” says Watters. “But really it's just a song about being out in Los Angeles at night. Roaming the streets with your friends, or trying to find someone to be your friend. All these images are things that happen in LA. I think it's something about the compression of wealth and poverty, facelessness and celebrity. It drives people to the extremes.”  

It’s true that the city attracts hopeful dreamers hellbent on dreams of grandeur, but Watters’ ability to hold a mirror to Los Angeles’ less examined subjects that live in the shadows is what separates him from other LA based artists and songwriters, and carves a place in a storied tradition of deeply moving, meaningful songwriting.

“Double back flip of the new glass tower downtown / Is that you they found? Is that your enemy? / Is that the friend you always meant to be,” sings Watters, a reminder of the stakes facing the city’s vulnerable.

“Coconut In The Street” joins previous single “All I Need” as the first two offerings from Extended Play 002, his second release via Los Angeles based label hi-res records. Watters found a partnership in the label, and in producer/engineer Matt Linesch, whose analog-first approach to recording and production perfectly encapsulates and supports the warmth of Watters’ artistic vision and songwriting approach. 

Watters will be performing in Los Angeles at Gold-Diggers on July 28th, with more performances slated throughout the summer.

Photo by Robbie Jeffers

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ISAAC WATTERS LOOKS TO THE STARS ON NEW SINGLE “ALL I NEED” VIA hi-res records

“Blending unique sounds with deep and sometimes haunting lyrics, Watters conjures up a new perspective for listeners and burgeoning artists.” - Los Angeleno

“Watters has been dipping his toes in assorted genres over the years, but he seems to rest most comfortably along the mesmerizing continuum between minimalist folk and moody theatricality.” - Magnet Magazine

“Isaac Watters, too, poignantly connects with his past on the typically immersive “Child in the Rain,” - Buzzbands LA

“...it’s hooked me, line and sinker. ‘Everywhere I go, I leave a little sadness,’ sung in the vein of Wolf Parade’s wobbly warbles? Take my money.” - Monster Children

“The result is a collection of songs (with more to come) that reflect different shadows of Watters’ LA life, but also process fears and anxieties about the natural world, climate change, and apocalypse that’s very much “in the air” for the artist.” Glide Magazine

“Extended Play 001 offers a first full glimpse of his restless and idiosyncratic artistic impulses, with tracks diverting towards minimalist art pop, funky indie rock, and off-kilter balladry… the EP closes off with “Sliding,” a slinking and smoky effort carried by bass-driven grooves and Watters’ decadent vocal melodies.” - Under The Radar

Watters has the ability to connect on a higher level, and his work signifies his sincere way with words, his adeptness at creating moments of innocence, and the way his music reverberates. All of this while at the same time not being raucous.” - The Review Geek

“All I Need”: LISTEN / WATCH

LOS ANGELES, CA - Today Los Angeles based artist Isaac Watters released “All I Need” via hi-res records. It’s a stunning widescreen rumination on loneliness that pairs Watters’ signature pensiveness with gorgeous shimmering guitar sonics. “This is all I need / A cup of coffee on a mountain top / A cabin tucked into a cleft of rock / An empty notebook and a stone flowing ink,” sings Watters atop of a steady-paced groove and drum section, perfect to soundtrack a dusty desert montage. 

Subtly soaring galactic synths recall the scene that Watters took in at a cabin in the desert just outside Joshua Tree, CA, where a panoramic vision of the vast desert landscape inspired a prolonged look up to the stars. “I began to imagine being in outer space, floating away from the surface of our planet, and towards the farthest reaches of the universe,” says Watters. “It felt like a metaphor for the internal loneliness we all share, the farther we go inside ourselves mirrored only by the great expanse outside of us.”

It also got him thinking about Michael Collins, the astronaut that went around the dark side of the moon during the moon landing while Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin were down on the surface. A New York Times article (see more below) Watters cites as inspiration draws clear parallels to “All I Need.”

“I am still here up on the mountain / Been tryin’ for years to come down / See the dust kick up in the distance / I hope that it's you coming round,'' wails Watters as the resonance in his voice underscores the isolation and wanting of that human connection. There's a through line between self and surroundings throughout Watters’ music, a constant conversation between the landscape, the forces that shape it, and the inhabitants who call it home. "All I Need" finds Watters considering his own place in the universe, and the perpetual perseverance of loneliness in an ever-changing world.

Watters found a partnership in the label, and in producer/engineer Matt Linesch, whose analog-first approach to recording and production perfectly encapsulates and supports the warmth of Watters’ artistic vision and songwriting approach.

The music video was directed by Aaron Eisenberg  of Sound + Video Co. and filmed in Pipes Canyon in Yucca Valley, CA. Avid cinephiles and fans of the 1984 film Paris, Texas may recognize a nod to Harry Dean Stanton’s character in Watters’ attire, performance, and march through the desert. The relationship between sight and sound has always shown itself in Watters’ work. Trained as an architect, Watters began his career working for legendary Frank Gehry and recently contributed his expertise as a set designer on the films Don’t Worry Darling, Boston Strangler, and many others. 

Watters will be performing in Los Angeles at Club Tee Gee on April 24th and May 22nd. 

New York Times Michael Collins Interview for reference for “All I Need"

“For half a century, Michael Collins has been answering variations of the same question asked by reporters, he says:

“Mr. Collins, weren’t you the loneliest man in the whole lonely history of this lonely planet by your lonely self behind the lonely moon in this lonely orbit? Weren’t you terribly lonely?” he mused.

“I had this beautiful little domain,” Mr. Collins said. “It was all mine. I was the emperor, the captain of it, and it was quite commodious. I had warm coffee, even.”  

Photo by Robbie Jeffers

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ISAAC WATTERS RELEASES SUN BAKED INDIE-ROCK  EXTENDED PLAY 001 VIA hi-res records

“Hear the sweat dripping from his brow as his voice shakes, quivers and cracks as if these Southwester ramblers are the most important thing in the world.” - LA Times

“...unapologetically cerebral.” - Magnet Magazine

“...it’s hooked me, line and sinker. ‘Everywhere I go, I leave a little sadness,’ sung in the vein of Wolf Parade’s wobbly warbles? Take my money.” - Monster Children on “Sadness”

“Known for cinematic, electro-baked…Watters draws lyrically vivid landscapes to accompany his soundscapes. Often he sketches forlorn places fraught with peril — territory that seems to occupy more acreage these days. - Buzzbands LA

“ Extended Play 001 offers a first full glimpse of his restless and idiosyncratic artistic impulses, with tracks diverting towards minimalist art pop, funky indie rock, and off-kilter balladry.” - Under the Radar

“The song is reminiscent of the post rock psychedelic phase of the 80s, with a touch of folk and an impassioned message which almost becomes spoken word poetry.” - Folk n Rock on “Listen to the Wind”


LISTEN TO EXTENDED PLAY 001: HERE

Los Angeles based artist, Isaac Watters, has released his new EP, Extended Play 001, his first release on the LA based label hi-res records. A four song EP featuring Watters’ singular blend of ethereal indie rock and post-punk, expansive storytelling narratives, and sun-baked shimmering sonics, and more. Extended Play 001 features his previously released singles including “Listen to the Wind,” “Sadness,” “Child in the Rain,” as well as the previously unheard “Sliding.”

Much of Watters’ work considers his place in the world, and the way in which an ever-evolving relationship between man and the wild can shape one’s innermost feelings, and vice versa. His music examines the wilderness not just as a setting, but as living, breathing force, whose presence and influence is felt even before it is consciously considered. “The mountains, the ocean, the slow disintegration of the world we have known, and the rise and fall of civilization,” says Watters when speaking on the meaning behind Extended Play 001

“The flailing power grid, the eroding canyons, the roads sliding down the edge of the coast into the sea.” For Watters, the wilderness envelopes nature and humanity, and weaves a thread between these forces that can never be unwound, for better and for worse. The wilderness does not end at the edges of nature, it reverberates across all corners of the Earth, and within its inhabitants.

“This EP is about living in Los Angeles. The dirt and grime and fire and smoke and the perfect light in all of it. After living here now for 20 years, I finally felt like I could make a record about it. It still has the deserts of Arizona and the cities and jungles of Mexico around the edges, but at its heart it's about Los Angeles,” says Watters. “It's about sitting alone on a desert mesa, seeing a cloud of dust rise up in the distance, and hoping that someone is coming for you. The mesa is your life, and the puff of dust you can barely see is the news you’ve been waiting for. Maybe it's a tiny rain cloud full of your dreams.”

“Sliding” finds Watters embodying his surroundings, and using erosion as a metaphor to deal with the nostalgia of a carefree childhood. “When I was young I was in love with everyone I saw / I was a green hill in the sun I was in love with everyone / Now every evening the ashes fall / It’s like I’m living on the foothills of a volcano.” 

The way Isaac encapsulates the zero-sum balance of man’s impact on nature is staggeringly beautiful and equally tragic. Musically, he finds a balance in the sonic spectrum he glides across. A wonderful bass groove carves agony into the Earth, while floating keys and crisp guitars soar like an echo in the wind. “And when a piece of me crumbles in the middle of the night / I slide into town, disrupt a life,” sings Watters. “I take whole families with me, whole houses get torn / They are absorbed by my heartache, they join the storm.” 

“A smooth green hill in the sun meets fire and rain and over time is eroded into canyons, and all the softness it once had is washed into the river,” says Watters. “A man reflects on the erosion of his life as he walks along the storm filled river.” 

“Sliding” expands on the sonic universe Watters lays down on his previous singles “Child in the Rain,” “Sadness” and “Listen to the Wind.” Each filters through Watters’ past, his childhood, his experiences living in Los Angeles, Tucson, and Mexico City, and the world around. From nuclear fallout, to the widening rivers, to the borders that divide humanity, Watters’ carves nuanced stories and images into his music.

Watters found an incredible creative partner in hi-res records to help bring his vision to life. The label’s focus is on high quality productions. For Watters’ album, the choice was made to record, mix and master all in analog. It’s an audiophile’s dream, and something that connected with Watters’ creativity.

“Building these songs with the limitation of having only 24 tracks on the tape machine was a challenge, but also a driving element in the creativity of the production,”  says producer Matt Linesch. “Working solely on analog tape forces you to commit to your songwriting decisions, requires a high caliber of musicianship to execute the recordings, as well as requiring the skillset to see a production from beginning to end.” 

Photo by Peter Brownlee

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ISAAC WATTERS RELEASES “CHILD IN THE RAIN” SINGLE FROM UPCOMING EXTENDED PLAY 001 OUT ON hi-res records JANUARY 17TH

“...unapologetically cerebral.” - Magnet Magazine

“...it’s hooked me, line and sinker. ‘Everywhere I go, I leave a little sadness,’ sung in the vein of Wolf Parade’s wobbly warbles? Take my money.” - Monster Children

“Known for cinematic, electro-baked…Watters draws lyrically vivid landscapes to accompany his soundscapes. Often he sketches forlorn places fraught with peril — territory that seems to occupy more acreage these days.” - Buzzbands LA

“The song is reminiscent of the post-rock psychedelic phase of the 80s, with a touch of folk and an impassioned message which almost becomes spoken word poetry.” - Folk n Rock on “Listen to the Wind”

LISTEN TO “CHILD IN THE RAIN”: HERE

Los Angeles artist Isaac Watters has released his latest single “Child In The Rain” today. The song is the third offering from his forthcoming EP, Extended Play 001, out January 17th via Los Angeles-based label hi-res records, and follows previous singles “Listen To The Wind” and “Sadness.”

“When I was a kid in the desert in Arizona, whenever it rained it would rain really hard, the wash would fill up and we'd run down in it and wade out in the water. It was such a rare occurrence to have a river running through our backyard that we really enjoyed it,” says Watters. Now living in LA, he still thinks a lot about water and the desert, and the way that we’ve drastically altered the landscapes, especially in the last 100 years.

“Try driving around your city and think about where the streams used to be, how wide the river would get when it would flood, before we encased it in concrete. We've made this desert into something entirely different, less wild, more controlled,” says Watters. “It feels like we've robbed the landscape of its child-likeness, and dressed it up in a suit to go work in a tall building.”

The start of the song references a thesis project Watters did while studying architecture at the University of Southern California. The thesis proposed an International Museum of Border Conflict at San Diego’s Friendship Park along the US/Mexico border. Friendship Park serves as a meeting point for visitors from both countries to meet, complete with a border fence that separates the park and runs through to the ocean; this irony is not lost on Watters.

“In the last 15 years since my project the US border patrol has replaced what was just a chain link fence that families could meet at and talk through, with two thirty-foot tall walls that are constantly patrolled, as if it is a war zone,” says Watters. “If you get a chance to visit, you can walk down the beach from San Diego, or up from Tijuana, and you'll see a wall rising up in front of you on the continuous coastline. It's the most unnatural thing. Whoever built that wall must have lost their childlike mind.”

LISTEN TO “LISTEN TO THE WIND: HERE

LISTEN TO “SADNESS”: HERE

“This EP is about living in Los Angeles. The dirt and grime and fire and smoke and the perfect light in all of it. After living here now for 20 years, I finally felt like I could make a record about it. It still has the deserts of Arizona and the cities and jungles of Mexico around the edges, but at its heart, it's about Los Angeles,” says Watters. “It's about sitting alone on a desert mesa, seeing a cloud of dust rise up in the distance, and hoping that someone is coming for you. The mesa is your life, and the puff of dust you can barely see is the news you’ve been waiting for. Maybe it's a tiny rain cloud full of your dreams.”

Watters found an incredible creative partner in hi-res records to help bring his vision to life. The label’s focus is on high-quality productions. For Watters’ album, the choice was made to record, mix and master all in analog. It’s an audiophile’s dream, and something that connected with Watters’ creativity.

“Building these songs with the limitation of having only 24 tracks on the tape machine was a challenge, but also a driving element in the creativity of the production,” says producer Matt Linesch. “Working solely on analog tape forces you to commit to your songwriting decisions, requires a high caliber of musicianship to execute the recordings, as well as requiring the skillset to see a production from beginning to end.”

EXTENDED PLAY 001 - OUT JANUARY 17TH

Photo by Peter Brownlee

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