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Abigail Ory

Interview by Carol Wright Photographer: Weslee Kate @JVAgency

Boston-based singer/songwriter Abigail Ory describes her music as “weird pop” because it doesn’t quite fit in exactly one genre. With songs about emotional stability and art house-esque music videos, in Ory’s case, weird is synonymous with breaking the mold. In a time when the music industry is going through constant changes, fresh perspectives are needed, and Ory is surely proving that.

When did you become interested in singing and songwriting?

I had fun singing as a little kid and would compose melodies starting from when I was around 9 years old. I was into musical theatre in middle school and did a fair amount of singing through that. My first songwriting project with lyrics was a musical I began writing with a friend (keyword began, we didn’t get super far). It wasn’t until my freshman year of high school that I really got into singing for the sake of singing, or into songwriting for pop-style music.

You self describe your music as “weird pop”. In your own words, what does that mean?

I don’t sound like everybody else. I don’t even sound like everybody else who doesn’t sound like everybody else. But that’s the key, and it’s also what brings my music closer to pop than any other genre. If pop music reflects musical trends, one of the biggest trends right now is genre defiance. And if pop music reflects the times, where we’re at now (clearly) is total mayhem. My music is both of these things at its core. And yet, there’s still something relatable to my songs. My music is “weird” in the way a middle schooler might think of weird. It’s quirky and unafraid of that. And it’s certainly got that current pop ethos of genre defiance, coupled with a relatively pop song structure and plenty of pop inspiration from across the generations. What do you get when you marry those two; what’s more left-field than left-field pop? Weird pop, and me.

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