We had the pleasure of interviewing Breagh Isabel over Zoom video!\xa0
Breagh Isabel \u2013 the Halifax-based and Cape Breton Island-born recording artist, songwriter and producer \u2013 has released her debut single, \u201cGirlfriends,\u201d (LISTEN HERE) along with the official video (WATCH HERE). The song helps usher in her new recording contract with Warner Music Canada.
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\u201cGirlfriends\u201d is a pop-leaning, coming-of-age story about a very specific type of heartbreak; the kind that comes from being a lovesick teenager in less welcoming times. The song emerged from a session with one of her Canadian songwriting crushes, Simon Wilcox (Nick Jonas, Selena Gomez, Lennon Stella). Isabel offered up the lyrics, \u201cmaybe we were homophobic\u201d and like an astute therapist, Wilcox instantly started peeling back the layers, unravelling a closely kept story that needed to be told, and thus \u201cGirlfriends\u201d was born.
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\u201cI had no firm intention of delving into a solo artist project when I wrote \u2018Girlfriends,\u2019 but the song easily became the most honest thing I had ever written. I started to feel like I had something to say that might resonate,\u201d says Isabel. \u201cThe song is about little \u2013 and sometimes big \u2013 moments and thoughts I didn\u2019t know what to do with at the time, but now realize were just expressions of me figuring out who I am.\u201d
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The theme of heartbreak is vivid in the accompanying music video, filmed in both Vancouver and Halifax. The video follows two high school students (played by Carolyn Yu and Cassidy Foley) as they explore burgeoning feelings, echoing the lyrics of Isabel\u2019s song. The video was funded in part by the\xa0MVP Project, produced by Shelby Manton of\xa0Boldly\xa0and directed by Tamara Black.
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Sonically, \u201cGirlfriends\u201d pairs thought-provoking, emotive storytelling with dynamic percussion and bouncy electric guitar that counterintuitively make the song feel catchy and calming all at once. Airy vocal swells and synths off the top of the track set the stage for the song\u2019s dream-like reflection. In her signature smoky timbre, Isabel sings, \u201cI wanted to be girlfriends, but we were just girl friends,\u201d revealing the painful standstill of confusion and loss that comes from love unrequited.\xa0
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\u201cIt\u2019s a bit of a sad song wrapped up in a happy-sounding package. The lyrics don\u2019t really tell a hopeful story,\u201d Isabel spills. \u201cThe resolution comes from the fact that I can own the experience and re-tell it from a place of happiness.\u201d\xa0
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Though Girlfriends signals the start of her own solo career, Breagh Isabel\u2019s creative handiwork will likely already be familiar to music audiences. Isabel has written for and been featured on the records of artists like Classified, Ria Mae, Donovan Woods and BANNERS. While the world was in lockdown, she cut her teeth in production and signed a publishing deal with Concord Music. Her tracks have already been featured on the megahit show\xa0Grey\u2019s Anatomy\xa0and the superhero series\xa0Batwoman. She also toured throughout Canada and Europe and gained international recognition during her time as a member of the band Port Cities. Mostly writing for others, she would often tuck little ideas away that seemed overly personal, but with \u201cGirlfriends, Breagh Isabel is now ready to begin a new chapter all her own.
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