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Rising Stars: Meet Brye Sebring of Berry hill nashville

Today we’d like to introduce you to Brye Sebring.

Hi Brye, can you start by introducing yourself? We’d love to learn more about how you got to where you are today?
My “big break” was a song called “LEMONS” that I produced, wrote and released when I was sixteen. It went viral two weeks before the pandemic hit and it flipped my life upside down. I had always been musically inclined. I was a stereotypical theater kid, I was singing before I could talk, I was always writing. I knew that I wanted to be a musician, I just never anticipated it becoming a full time thing. Thank god it is.

Alright, so let’s dig a little deeper into the story – has it been an easy path overall and if not, what were the challenges you’ve had to overcome?
This entire job is obstacles I’d say. Being an independent artists in the era of streaming is a constant ebb and flow. I’ve hit the wall over and over. I’ve been dropped by distributors, and management. I was self managed for two years and drowned myself in monthly releases, touring, shipping all of my own merch, producing all of my songs. It’s a slippery slope to burnout. Thankfully now I have a team that genuinely gets what I’m making and is just as excited about the music as I am.

Alright, so let’s switch gears a bit and talk business. What should we know about your work?
I’m a self produced singer/songwriter. I think what makes my work stand out is that it’s kind of unabashedly political. Like even my first ever proper release at sixteen was about masculinity and misogyny. My previous record is extremely confessional, and tackles my eating disorder recovery. It has scathing tracks about the diet industry. Every single time I write a song and think to myself “oh god, this is too honest, I can’t put this one out, no one’s gonna get it,” it ends up resonating the most and streaming the best.

Do you any memories from childhood that you can share with us?
I grew up in the Chicago suburbs so we had long and snowy winters. We had a giant hill behind myself and I have dozens of fond memories of sledding a million miles an hour down it.

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