![]() ![]() A fellow critic noted how Andress sounds similar to Maren Morris, and yeah, it’s hard to ignore that, especially with some of the more pop-oriented inflections. But I like that it keeps it grounded in the present to better paint a warmer sentiment and introduce a cast of characters we can actually appreciate and care about.Īfter several paragraphs on just the lyrical content, let’s move on to another department. Given that this song speaks to the potential hurt one will cause to so many in the event of a breakup beyond just their significant other, it would have been easy to play this in the lane of the aftermath of it all to show the actual effects of that. The pictures of meeting a sister who will do anything to embarrass Andress or meeting a father who will pretend to not like this guy when he meets him are relatable, and it paints an overall well-woven story of an actual mature relationship. In other words, whereas most mainstream country singles paint broad sketches to try and establish the same level of depth, when you actually paint a real picture of a scenario, it will always be more gripping. In a nutshell, the characters here have warmth and depth to them, and it creates a song that’s easy to connect with. As intimidating of a premise as it might seem from that small description, it’s the execution where the song ultimately succeeds. The song’s main point is to show that, should they break up, it won’t just affect her, but also the family members this spouse will eventually come to know. This song is a literal tour of one’s hometown offered to her spouse as she brings him back home to meet her family. What I like most about this song is that it offers something many mainstream country singles these days lack – detail. Hopefully there’s no sophomore slump when it comes to Andress, however, as her new single, “More Hearts Than Mine” is a genuinely compelling single. However, as is a common case in mainstream country music when it comes to female artists, Andress’s debut single, “Ladylike,” made no impact whatsoever on the charts (I’ll admit it slipped my radar as well). Along with a stint that included two seasons on The Sing-Off as part of an acapella group, she’s earned a degree from the Berklee College of Music and a 2016 Grand Prize victory in an “Unsigned Only Music Competition.”Īs such, it’s no surprise she found her way to Warner Music Nashville last year. The long version: If fellow mainstream country artists should take anything away from this song, it’s a note on how specific lyrical content will always connect with an audience more than generic drivel.Īs for the personality behind the microphone of said song, Ingrid Andress is certainly qualified to be a singer. Writers: Ingrid Andress, Sam Ellis, Derrick Southerland.What I am singing about and crying about has happened to so many other people and the goal is to make them feel less alone and more understood.The short version: “More Hearts Than Mine” is one of the most well-executed songs I’ve heard in mainstream country in quite some time. ![]() It’s really scary, but at the same time, it’s more about the art to me. There would be no other way for me to really get across how painful that moment was without being true to that moment. But I was like, ‘You know what? This album is all about being vulnerable so let’s just go there.’ It’s terrifying to do that because you’re opening up a very, very hidden part of you to the entire world. Honestly, I wanted to take out the crying part because I don’t like crying in front of people. Normally, you go back and rerecord the song but I didn’t. I’m so authentic when I sing, so most of that vocal for that song was taken from the day I wrote it. Writing is my therapy so I just let it all out. It was really weighing me down when I should have been thriving. It was in a moment when I realized that the person I was with, it was just not healthy for me. “I feel like being in love is making me realize that there’s like a lot of power in feminine energy,” she says. What follows are deep love ballads true to her own journey, a step in a different direction for a singer who rarely sang about falling in love. ![]() On “Feel Like This,” Andress gets out of a “toxic situation” and learns what love is really supposed to feel like: “Homemade cooking, like backyard kissin’,” she sings. “It started my ‘Oh, I need to break up with this person’ journey.” And it ends with her entering a new, healthy partnership. “I started the pandemic questioning everything in my life,” she says. Good Person opens sonically darker, with 1975 influences as she sings about getting out of an unhealthy relationship. “With the first record, I thought that I hit my max, but I hadn’t,” she says. The LP meets Andress - whose written for the likes of Charli XCX, Fletcher, and Lauren Jauregui in the past - as she learns to allow herself to tell her own stories, unabashedly.
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