Britt Nicole Looks Back Over Her Career So Far (Interview)

Tony Cummings spoke to award-winning CCM star, BRITT NICOLE

“When in 2007 pop singer Britt Nicole stepped into the Nashville Christian music world, she was tipped by CCM Magazine as being the “next big thing”. As it turned out, such a statement was to prove almost prophetic as by 2013, Britt was experiencing a major crossover hit. Now married and soon to have her third child, the award-winning singer was recently in the UK to play the Big Church Day Out events. She found the time to speak to Cross Rhythms and take a backwards glance at the albums she has so far released.

2007 – ‘SAY IT’  “I don’t normally listen to my music, by myself. I’m not, like, jamming out in my home to my own songs. But today, funnily enough, I was searching for music on my phone on the plane and I saw a song from ‘Say It’, my very first record. I wrote a song on that record called ‘Don’t Worry Now’, and that was about my parent’s divorce. I moved to Nashville when I was 19 years old. I had never really received real healing from my parent’s divorce when I was seven, and I don’t really think I knew what that was, but when I moved [to Nashville], I was at a church service actually and I went down the front. I didn’t really know why I was going down, I just felt this pull to kinda go down. I started crying right when I walked down to the stage, and as they were praying, this woman walked up to me and said, ‘Do you feel like you have unforgiveness in your heart?’ and I said, ‘No I don’t think so.’ That’s how I responded right away, ‘No I don’t think so’, but I’m just, like, crying. As soon as I said that, I saw pictures in my mind of my parents and things that we had walked through as a family, and I started to share that with her. I said, ‘Wait a minute,’ and she said a very interesting thing, nothing like this had ever happened to me, but she said, ‘I would like to take the place of your mom today and just say I’m sorry for everything.’ Then her husband came up and said, ‘I can take the place of your dad,’ and I just cried. It was just really a time of healing and me just making a conscious choice to say, ‘I forgive. I was holding onto some things that hurt me as a child, and I’m choosing today to let go.’ So in that moment God brought real freedom that I’d never felt, and I went from feeling almost like a heaviness to laughing and this new joy.  “When I first moved to Nashville I met with several producers and songwriters and they would always say, ‘What are you listening to? Who do you want to sound like. . .’ I don’t want to sound like anybody, I want to sound like me! I knew what they were meaning, they wanted some ideas of what I liked. But it was a time of trying some different things, and going, oh, this is what I really like, and kind of listening to artists from the UK, and some pop music and Britain’s Lily Allen. I remember liking the sound of her music. It was definitely a fun record to try some different things. I still love that record; I think it was a good one.”

2009 – ‘THE LOST GET FOUND’  “I remember doing the record and the producers, again, asking me ‘What are you listening to?’, and I was trying to give so many references: I like her, I like this album. But then during the making of ‘The Lost Get Found’ I decided that I wasn’t going to listen to anything but worship music. I just wanted to take a season and fill my heart and my mind with no pop music, nothing but complete worship. So I really felt I had nothing to pull from, except from Creator God. That’s the best place to pull from. He’s the ultimate creator, and he is a genius. So I said, I’m just listening to worship music and going to see what God supernaturally gives me creatively. I think in that, I sank a little deeper into who I was as a person and as an artist, and just became more confident in what I liked and what I wanted to do.” 

2010 – ‘ACOUSTIC’  “A lot of my fans were always saying, ‘I love it when you sing live. I like it better than I like it on your record.’ I think that live experience was very raw and real. There wasn’t anything covering. Because I make pop music, there’s a lot of sounds, there’s a lot of things going on, on the track. And so we said, let’s just pull it all away, and let’s give the fans something that’s more intimate and just about my voice. They seemed to really enjoy that, at least the real super fans did.”

2012 – ‘GOLD’  “It’s funny because my mom used to sing a song to me when I was a little girl, actually when my parents were walking through everything they were going through, the last line of the song was ‘You shall come forth as gold.’ And she’s saying that to me as a child. It was so funny because the song ‘Gold’ that I wrote, it took a couple of weeks to write, and every time I would go to the studio I was actually going through a hard time. I had been dating the man who was to become my husband for five years, we dated six years total. He played drums for me, we were on the road together, and we had broken up. I was very sad. I went to the studio to work and I told my producer I just want to go home, I don’t have anything to say. And he said do you mind if we take some time to pray, and I said sure; that would be awesome. So we did, and one minute of prayer turned into three days of prayer. We kept coming back to the studio to work, and every time we would go to put pen to paper God would meet us and we would start praying, and nothing like that ever happened in the studio that was that strong. We kept working and working, and ‘Gold’ came out of that. One of the guys I was working with said, as we were praying, ‘Britt, I just want to remind you that you’re the apple of God’s eye,’ and in that season of feeling down and discouraged, I started crying. I said, ‘I know that’s true but I just don’t feel like it some days. There’s got to be other people like me who feel like that, so let’s write a song reminding them who they are.’ ‘Gold’ came from that. It was a song that took a lot of time, and a lot of prayer, and God really used it in an amazing way.  “In the States, that record actually crossed over from the Christian music box that it was in to mainstream. I did a pop radio tour, and it went to number 28, I think, in the pop charts. We started to see a lot of success, so many people responding. Even now when I sing it people come alive, and it’s like something in their hearts just kind of goes ‘Yes! That is who I am; I am worth more than gold’. By that point I had worked with a lot of different songwriters, a lot of producers, and I think I had found a handful of people by that time. I had moved to Nashville when I was 19, had been there for several years. I found this group of people that I thought OK, these are my people. I want to write with Jason Ingram, Dan Mukala, my husband was a producer and a songwriter. There were about five people that I knew were people I wanted to work with, and we had this chemistry, me and that group, to create something really good.”

2015 – ‘THE REMIXES’  “My husband did a lot of the remixes. Then people like Dan Mukala, who produced ‘The Son Is Rising’, did a remix. Then there were people like Jason Nevins and Capital Kings did remixes.”  Britt Nicole: The American hitmaker looks back over her career so far

2016 – ‘BRITT NICOLE’  “My husband was the one who said you should make this self-titled. I thought, that seems a little odd, I’ve been out for a while, but it felt right. We looked for a title on the record that stood out, and to say this record is the record, and there wasn’t a song that really represented the entire record. Then I thought there’s a song on here about my kids, ‘All Day’, about being a mom and having to be away, which was really hard. There were a couple of songs on there about my husband, newly married, and there were songs on there about my friends. I felt there were these little snippets of my entire life, and I decided to call it ‘Britt Nicole’ and say ‘This is me.’ So it’s good. I still like that now being a wife and a mom – I’m expecting my third, I don’t know if you knew that. . . six months pregnant, I’m due in September with another boy, I feel like I’m in a bit of a transition. I will continue to make music. We’ll see where God leads and take a little break with the baby in September and we’ll go from there. But I think it’s funny that the record was called ‘Britt Nicole’ because it summed up a full season of my life. My name is Brittany Nicole Crosby now, I signed as Brittany Waddell to Capitol when I was 21. They asked me would I be able to change my name, and I tried some different names, and I said that feels weird, I can’t change any. But I said my middle name is Nicole, so let’s just go by Britt Nicole. But I feel like it almost summed up a season of my life, and I’m kind of ready to see what’s next in this idyll. I’ll keep making pop music or I’ll transition into something different. We’ll see.” CR”

Credit: http://www.crossrhythms.co.uk/articles/music/Britt_Nicole_The_American_hitmaker_looks_back_over_her_career_so_far_/63051/p1/

TCB Exclusive: Britt Nicole Gives Insight Into New Self-Titled Album

We are absolutely SWOONING over this new article written by The Christian Beat! They were able to snag some incredible behind the scenes details from their interview with Britt! Check it out below! 🙂
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Identified as the “pop artist with a message,” Britt Nicole first debuted in 2007 with her inaugural studio album Say It, which quickly gained her fans in the faith-based space for her upbeat, positive music. The title track off her sophomore album The Lost Get Found spent eight weeks at No. 1 on the Christian Hot AC chart, soon followed in 2012 by her third studio album, Gold, which quickly crossed over into the Top 40 pop radio chart and scored Britt her first Grammy nomination for Best Contemporary Christian Album. The album’s appeal made Britt the most-played female artist on Christian radio in 2012. The Nashville-based singer-songwriter released her self-titled album this past fall to widespread critical acclaim. Now, she is touring the country as a featured performer on the Winter Jam 2017 Tour Spectacular. We had the opportunity to talk with Britt backstage at PPG Paints Arena recently, where she offered up some insight into this newest release.
Congratulations on the release of your self-titled album! It has garnered great reviews from fans and critics alike. How long was the record in progress and what does it feel like to finally have the finished product available for download?
Britt: Right after I put out ‘Gold,’ I toured that and then got married and had two kids. So, there was a lot going on. But, through that whole process I was writing and really never took a break from work. Most people think I took four years off, but in that time I put out ‘The Remixes’ record and did some tours with TobyMac. So throughout all of that, I was writing, and I wrote a lot of the record in Los Angeles with some writers and producers there. And then I live in Nashville, so I did a lot of the record there. My husband actually produced half the record. So, it feels good to have it out. It was a long process; all my other records took time, but that one felt like it was never going to be done. But I love it! I feel like my heart is in every song and now to be out here performing it and seeing people respond is really good!
Which track on the album was the first one that you really identified with and made you say, “This has to go on the record”?
Britt: “Be The Change” was one of those moments when I heard the track and connected with it. My husband had this track, and we were at a studio in LA. And so me, and him, and one other girl were writing and listening through some tracks and seeing what inspired us. We were going through tracks pretty fast and thinking they were cool, but moving on to the next one. And then we got to that one. And it has the beginning, which has an almost tribal sound, and I really thought that one was cool. And my husband told me that track was actually for another artist. And in that moment I was like, “No, I love that one!” And so I asked him to go back and replay it and I immediately got what I call a God moment – the lyrics and melody just came. Sometimes, it can take a couple hours to write, and sometimes they can take weeks to finish. And right away I just sang the whole chorus. “Don’t you know it starts today? It’s not too late. It begins with you and I; together we can be the change.” It was just a download from Heaven. So at that moment my husband realized the connection and said he would tell the other artist that I wanted it.
Were there any songs that were particularly challenging to write or record?
Britt: Well there is a song called “All Day.” It’s about the struggle of being a mom and working, which was such a battle for me when I was getting back into touring and doing music. I just never want to be away from them; I just love being a mom and with them! So that song was definitely the most challenging. I told everyone to leave the studio and just let me work on it by myself because I just felt like it was something that I was walking through. And I really wanted to communicate my heart and what I felt as I sang those words. And normally you go back and tweak stuff that doesn’t feel right. But that song, even in the areas that didn’t feel right, it was from my heart and I just put it out there. The guy that works on my label tried to change a few things with me, but we decided it just needed to be exactly what I wrote. So it’s very real and very raw. So that one was hard to write because I was really struggling with it, but I’m in a better place now.
Your recently released an awesome music video for “Pave.” Did you have a vision for that video going in?
Britt: Usually a director comes in with something prepared for the video, and the artist normally loves the idea, has a few changes, but overall loves the director’s idea. But that’s normally not my process. Normally I write it and give it to the director for them to make sure it’s good, and then we go with it. I’m very, very, hands-on. But “Pave” was different. I was super busy, so I had a friend who works on videos, named Chance, and Jeff, who actually dances for me and told them to send me something that they were excited about. And so they sent me something and I thought it was cool and decided to do it. And I think I was able to do that because “Pave” is such a fun song, and not necessarily a heart song. It’s about adventure, and it has meaning to me, but it’s not a really deep thing that I’m trying to communicate. With “The Lost Get Found” and “Gold,” I wanted to say something, and I wanted to make sure the video was telling that story. But with “Pave” I felt like this one could just be fun and let them lead on that. So that was the first one that I really took my hands off and let someone else lead. But we are actually in the process of working on another music video that I’m in the process of writing right now. So it will be my heart and my story. I just feel like music videos are that next step to communicate what you are really trying to say in the song. You put out the song and people can think it means different things, and everyone can feel something different. But then when you watch the video, it takes it to the next level.
And finally, do you have a favorite song to perform live on Winter Jam tour? 
Britt: I would say “Work Of Art” is my favorite. It’s just a moment in the show where I get to really connect with the fans. I go out on the catwalk, and I just get to grab the girls’ hands and I feel like I’m just speaking into their lives, and who they are. I feel like that’s what I’m called to do, to just remind people of who they are in Christ.

New Backstage Pass Interview

Another portion of Britt Nicole’s Backstage Pass interview was released in November. We learned that “Gold” was also written during a time when Britt and her husband Josh had broken up. I love learning new facts about Britt Nicole and how God has been working in her life over the years! 🙂 Watch it below!

Britt Nicole’s E! Online Interview

Niko La Mere

Today might be National Make a Difference Day, but for some stars like Britt Nicole, the desire to make a difference happens every day.

The Nashville singer, who dropped her self-titled album earlier this month, has become known for her vulnerable approach with her music and her fans, completely opening up and using the music to talk about her scars in hopes of inspiring and uplifting others.
And when talking with E! News exclusively, Nicole explains how she finds the strength to air all of her struggles so publicly.

“People want real, and they can see when you are not real. I only know how to be honest and authentic with my fans. Every song I write is written from heart about my struggles, my fears, my hopes and dreams. We all hurt and we all have struggles, but when we are transparent about them, that’s when we are able to connect with other people,” she tells us.

“I just want to love people and see their lives change for the better. We are all vehicles for change in our own ways, and I draw my strength from the hope that maybe something I say will get someone to finally see themselves for all they are worth.”

 Niko La Mere

Nicole, who is about to start the first leg of her tour next month, shares that her latest project took four years to complete. “A lot of life happened in those four years so this record took much more time to make than my previous records,” she tells E! News.

“I worked on this record in LA, Nashville and while on tour. I loved working with so many amazing songwriters and producers, it was such an inspiring and creative experience.”

And although it’s difficult to pick her favorite track from the album, Britt shared that there is one song she can’t help but admire more than the rest. “That’s a loaded question but I would have to go with ‘Be the Change.’ It’s an anthem and it’s incredibly powerful to perform. I feel like the atmosphere changes when the first note drops!”

(In fact, Be the Change has become a movement!)

Along with trying to spark a difference on a larger scale, Britt Nicole also wants to help on a smaller scale, too, and shared what she does to turn her mood around, in case someone needs to brighten up their day.

“I listen to music, pray, and call someone that really knows and loves me (usually my brother). It’s so important to stay immersed in a community of people who know you and will instinctively build you up in your moments of uncertainty, brokenness and insecurity,” she tells us.

Britt Nicole concludes, “I hope that every day I have an opportunity to show broken, hurting people that they are loved and not alone, that someone sees them. I also hope to inspire people to live out their dreams, that nothing is too big or too far for them. No matter your circumstances or platform, you can change the world.”

 Article link: http://www.eonline.com/news/803316/singer-britt-nicole-shares-how-to-be-the-change-on-national-make-a-difference-day

 

CCM Magazine Interviews Britt Nicole

Britt Nicole – Stronger Together
By: Jen Rose Yokel
October 14, 2016
“A lot of life can happen in just a few years, just ask beloved hit-maker Britt Nicole. Her songs have struck the balance between catchy hooks and vulnerable songwriting for almost a decade, and in 2012 she released Gold (buy), a collection of positive pop tunes that earned acclaim from contemporary Christian and mainstream audiences alike.
But a bigger audience isn’t the only thing that’s changed. A few months after Gold’s debut, she married producer Joshua Crosby, and is now a mom to three year-old Ella and twenty month-old Adin. With so much on the family calendar, it’s not surprising that it’s been so long since we heard new music, and maybe that’s what made July’s debut of new single “Through Your Eyes” such a pleasant surprise.
Nicole’s fourth record, simply titled Britt Nicole (buy), is in some ways a reintroduction and a continuation of what she does best. We had a chance to chat with her about the past four years, the power of collaboration, and the reinvention of the “same Britt” we’ve come to love.
CCM Magazine: It really has been a while since we’ve heard any new music from you, but maybe that’s just part of adjusting to marriage and mommy life? 
Britt Nicole: Yeah, it’s funny, ‘cause everyone’s like, “So, you took a break!” And well, I put out a remix album last year, we continued touring, and I did two tours with TobyMac. So I kind-of haven’t really stopped? [Laughs]
But after Gold came out I had [my daughter] Ella, and when she was a year old we found out we were pregnant with my son. So over these four years so much life has happened! We have been working, but making this new record was definitely a process. It just took time.
CCM: Why did you decide to call your fourth record Britt Nicole? 
BN: We were living with the songs and asking ourselves, “What is that one song that jumps out? What is that theme?” But it kind-of felt like every song was different in their own way. My husband said to me, “Why don’t you let it be your first self-titled album?”
The more I lived with that thought I felt like, “Man, this record—more than any other—has a piece of my heart in every single song. With so much life happening—getting married, having kids—obviously I wrote about all of those things. It feels like it’s me, from the lyrics to the style of the songs and the melodies, everything about it feels like who I am!
CCM: Does it feel like a reinvention?
BN: It really does. When you’re coming back with new music after four years, it’s kind of like a blank slate. People consume music so fast now that four years seems like a long time, but even though so much has changed, nothing has changed in my heart and who I am. I’m the same Britt.
It feels like a fresh start in so many ways, even with the imaging and the creative style. I love the music I’ve made before, and this feels like a continuation of that, still with a very pop sound and songs written from my heart. But this feels like a new stage of life for me.
CCM: In the past, you’ve been very involved in the writing process for your music. Did this record come from a lot of collaboration, or mostly from your personal writing?

BN: There was a ton of collaboration, actually. I felt like this year God was speaking to me about the word “together,” the power of coming together with people and the impact that can make. Sometimes I can be the kind of artist who’s like, “Okay I got it, I can figure it out,” and I can try to do things on my own. All of my records have been written with other people, but it’s usually only like five writers total and two or three producers at most. But I just felt like God was talking to me about coming together with people.
Britt Nicole, CCM Magazine - image
So I went to my label and said, “What if we opened up this record to other songwriters, let them pitch songs,” and we ended up putting two songs on the record that I didn’t have any part in writing. I’m excited because I don’t even know how many people total are on this record. There’s probably thirty songwriters and at least ten producers, five different mixers… So many people that are involved!
CCM: Is it challenging or freeing for you to put your music in other people’s hands?

BN: In the past, I’ve always wanted to write on every song so that they show my heart, because I feel like I can sing something with more conviction if it’s something I walked through, you know? But this time it did feel freeing. Like, “What if someone else has something to say that resonates with me?”
CCM: Was there a particular song that you really made your own?

BN: Yeah, I was pitched a song called “Pave.” It was a really cool song, and I liked what it was talking about. It was originally an acoustic ballad, but my husband started working on it, and now it’s an upbeat, fun pop song. It’s totally different from how it was given to us, though all of the lyrics and melody is the same.
For me, “Pave” is all about adventure. I don’t know what the songwriter was thinking when they wrote it, but some of the lyrics say, If you want to jump from the top of a waterfall / climb up a mountain just to hear the call / swinging through the jungle, running for tomorrow / anywhere you wanna go I can pave the road.
My husband and I had taken a trip to Hawaii, and we actually had a day without the kids and decided to just go have fun. We ended up jumping off of these amazing cliffs and waterfalls, things we never get to do in real life. And I felt like God was speaking to me, saying, “I created you to live your life and enjoy what I have given you.” So many times we get busy with our families and work, and we end up doing that same routine but forgetting to make room in our lives for adventure.

CCM: Is it challenging or freeing for you to put your music in other people’s hands?

BN: In the past, I’ve always wanted to write on every song so that they show my heart, because I feel like I can sing something with more conviction if it’s something I walked through, you know? But this time it did feel freeing. Like, “What if someone else has something to say that resonates with me?”
CCM: Was there a particular song that you really made your own?

BN: Yeah, I was pitched a song called “Pave.” It was a really cool song, and I liked what it was talking about. It was originally an acoustic ballad, but my husband started working on it, and now it’s an upbeat, fun pop song. It’s totally different from how it was given to us, though all of the lyrics and melody is the same.
For me, “Pave” is all about adventure. I don’t know what the songwriter was thinking when they wrote it, but some of the lyrics say, If you want to jump from the top of a waterfall / climb up a mountain just to hear the call / swinging through the jungle, running for tomorrow / anywhere you wanna go I can pave the road.

My husband and I had taken a trip to Hawaii, and we actually had a day without the kids and decided to just go have fun. We ended up jumping off of these amazing cliffs and waterfalls, things we never get to do in real life. And I felt like God was speaking to me, saying, “I created you to live your life and enjoy what I have given you.” So many times we get busy with our families and work, and we end up doing that same routine but forgetting to make room in our lives for adventure.

So when I heard the song I thought, “Oh my gosh, this reminds me of our trip to Hawaii!” So that’s one way that it was so much fun to invite other people into making this record and using their gifts to create something amazing.

 
CCM: “Through Your Eyes” just seemed to come out of nowhere and is really resonating with people. What’s the story behind that one?

BN: I wrote that song with my friend Ben Glover (“The Lost Get Found,” “All This Time”). We usually come together in the recording process and write at least one song together. We wrote some songs, but we didn’t love them…didn’t feel like they were right for the record. When I was almost finished, I felt like there was something left that I wanted to say and thought maybe Ben and I should write together one more time, because we’ve always written really strong songs before.

I noticed for a couple weeks I’d been walking with my head down, literally looking down, not living in God’s truth of what he says about me. The morning I was going to write with him, I was getting my kids ready for the day, and I felt like I wasn’t doing a very good job balancing everything. When we were getting in my car, I just sat there in the garage for a few minutes. I had my head down and I was pulling on the steering wheel, and I started to say these things to myself like, “Britt, you gotta get it together. You’ve gotta do better.” For some reason I put this pressure on myself, to be the best mom and the best wife and the best artist, almost trying to reach this perfection.
I’ve never made a record while being a mom and being a wife, so this has been a brand new process for me. Even with my walk with God I’ve been putting pressure on myself. And right then, I felt like God walked into my car and literally lifted up my head. I could feel Him saying to me, “Britt, you’re okay. Take the pressure off. Give me your heart and I’m gonna meet you and help you.” In that moment I saw myself through his eyes.

I think about my kids and how I love them. I’m not looking at them every day thinking, “Well, you guys are not perfect enough.” They’re going to make mistakes and learn, but I love them and help teach them. And God loves us way more than we can even love our kids!

So I went to the studio, and Ben and I wrote this song. I just want people to let that message speak to their hearts and minds, and to see themselves as God sees them. I think we live in a time where—especially with social media—people want to portray perfection. I think people resonate with us when we say, “I’m not perfect. I need Jesus.”

CCM: So your debut came out almost ten years ago…


BN: Oh…I hadn’t realized that!

CCM: Yes, 2007! So what would you say has been the biggest thing you’ve learned in the past tenyears doing music?

BN: Wow…ten years since Say It! I’m realizing now that I want to always be thankful for every opportunity, and be grateful I get to do this. As I’m putting out a new record it’s easy to get caught up in the work of it, but I want to stay in that place when I heard my song on the radio for the first time and I was so grateful and excited and humbled that my music would even be played.
And I think I’ve learned to have fun with what I do. I’m a perfectionist sometimes and take this stuff pretty seriously. But I’ve learned to lighten up a bit and have fun, and I think I’m enjoying it more than ever.

Article Link: http://www.ccmmagazine.com/features/britt-nicole-stronger-together/