It’s all about right now, the immediacy of the moment; nothing matters but the honesty and authenticity of the present. Placed squarely in the midst of this moment is Genesis Owusuâs dynamic new song, âHole Heartâ. âI chose this song for the mixtape because I feel like it represented my state of mind at that moment,â says the Ghanaian-Australian artist in his downtown Los Angeles studio. âIt ushered in the energy that I was putting forward going into 2023.â
The veracity of the immediate is an unwavering artistic pursuit for Owusu. Though clear nods to funk and hip-hop shine through, his music isnât easily categorised. He cites Jimi Hendrix and Frank Ocean among his key influences, and is set to hit the road with Bloc Party and Paramore this spring. Owusuâs style is most evident in his approach. The songwriter and performer broke out in 2021 with his ambitious and sometimes punky album âSmiling With No Teeth’, which established him as an artist who amplifies individualism at every turn. The debut album received awards and accolades at home and abroad.

Owusu describes âHole Heartâ as a sincere, heartfelt gut-punch. âIâm a vessel for everything the world fears, white tears, always white noise on the boysâ ears,â he purrs. Owusu wanted to tap into the collective experience of the past few years, the rush and doom of it all, but itâs important to find a way to push through too. âYou still have to run and survive and push through,â he says. âAnd thatâs the energy that Iâve been putting through. Being David when youâre fighting Goliath.â
âHole Heartâ was born from a day-long studio jam last year between Owusu, Jack Carroll Kirby and Solomonophonic. âI like to have songs be like photographs and just capture the immediacy of whatever is going on at that time,â Owusu says. âWe didnât go in with a vision except to capture the thoughts and feelings in the room at that very moment.â
âHole Heartâ may have been written in an LA studio, but Owusu says thatâs not the usual home for his creations. âIâve made some of the most important music of my life in bedrooms, dens, closets,â he says, with a laugh. âYou can have grand âscapes or beaches but itâs all about whatâs inside.â While Owusuâs songwriting process values immediacy, his second approach is much more premeditated and discerning.

âThe process of listening to a song back is the crucial aspect. I feel like most of the things Iâll love while making it or Iâll hate it while making it. And then the listening back is that definitive moment that can change everything. Something I hated when I was making it, I could get it back and feel like itâs the greatest thing I ever made. The time to reflect on something is very important.â
With each song he writes, Owusu keeps himself in mind as his first listener. Whether a song is good isnât about whether the hypothetical fan or critic in his head will like it. Itâs about whether he has met his own needs as an artist. âWhen I write music or when I create any kind of art, itâs for me first and foremost,â he says. âI am my own standard. If I feel like I have expressed myself honestly, whether itâs good or bad, then it meets that standard.â
Stay tuned to NME.com/C23 for the latest on the return of the iconic mixtape
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