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Eve’s Twin Lover Share Fifth Single From The Upcoming Album

Chicago’s Eve’s Twin Lover are sharing “One of Those People” which is the final single ahead of their forthcoming LP. Stop Sending People To Kill Me is due next Friday, April 1st. In case you’ve missed them, be sure to listen to the previous singles from the record: “Share Your Tingle,” “Josie,” “All The Chi in Tina,”… Read More Eve’s Twin Lover Share Fifth Single From The Upcoming Album

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Chicago’s Eve’s Twin Lover are sharing “One of Those People” which is the final single ahead of their forthcoming LP. Stop Sending People To Kill Me is due next Friday, April 1st. In case you’ve missed them, be sure to listen to the previous singles from the record: “Share Your Tingle,” “Josie,” “All The Chi in Tina,” and “Guillotine.”

ETL’s Tim Flood had some words to share about the single:
“I was married, and it was difficult, ending in divorce. I’ve been in a bunch of relationships since, and always seem to find a reason why it won’t work. This song came out of me wondering, ‘Why can’t I make a relationship work?  Do I sabotage them; am I one of those people who just won’t let himself get there with another person?’” 

Eve’s Twin Lover is the solo project of Chicago’s Tim Flood. Flood connected with music before truly connecting with other humans, via records his mom started giving him when he was 7 – The Beatles, ELO, pop compilations. He started creating melodies after his parents brought home a barely usable piano from a church auction when he was 10.

“I remember doing my homework with an old tape recorder next to the radio, so that I could easily hit ‘record’ when a song I was obsessed with came onto WXRT. In jr. high and high school, I was that kid pushing bands I’d discovered at his classmates, and couldn’t believe my luck in college when guys started introducing me to new stuff,” recalls Flood.

In hindsight, creating music has been an attempt at connection for Flood. “We didn’t communicate on a deep level in my home – I doubt my experience is unique, in that regard – and melodies and lyrics bubble up to the surface from somewhere inside that I otherwise have trouble going.”

In the era before smart phones, Flood carried around a small, interviewing-type tape recorder in his coat pocket, to record melodies as they came to him, unpredictably. Creating and playing music offered somewhere to put the loneliness and anxiety that have always followed him around. ”

I recently listened to a song we recorded in 2015, and realized it’s about some grief I was processing, but not fully conscious of at the time. Music helps me get out of my head, where I spend too much time obsessing over my ‘shit’ – why couldn’t I make that relationship work; why did that fly out of my mouth last night. And it’s great fun – to be able to play live rock music, even just rehearsing, or to a small, half filled room. It’s hard to describe the connection to that energy.”

Flood is always trying to make rock music that is interesting – catchy, accessible, but unique enough to stand out – and to create connection, like music has always done for him. He feels like music is this conversation that’s run through his entire life, and releasing music contributes to that ongoing conversation.

“I feel at times like I’m a kid trying to earn a place at the adult table. It’s important to me that each record we make evolves noticeably compared with our last record, which is why I wanted to work with Brian Deck. This is our most interesting record to date, I’m really happy with how it turned out.”

Source: thoughtswordsaction.com

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