![]() In addition to teaching at Utah State University and the University of Utah, I have worked extensively in public relations for a variety of organizations including a major metropolitan university, college of osteopathic medicine, and community college. in journalism and mass communication from Ohio University's Scripps School of Journalism in 2002. I am a native of Toledo, Ohio, having received my Ph.D. “Our musical chemistry instantly made both of us feel joy,” Barrick says, adding that the stage has become their “safe space and playground.” He adds, “When she came to my house, I instantly knew, with her background in folk music, that she played with so much freedom and she instantly clicked with the chords and riffs in the music.” Barrick, who now lives in Salt Lake City, immediately connected musically with Judith Rognli, a German-born violinist and songwriter who moved to St. Since then, the most significant transitions have led to a burst of creative output. Barrick’s most impactful creative model is Brandi Carlile, whom he considers “one of the greatest vocalists of our time.” Ani DiFranco is another song artist that Barrick admires holistically. George.īarrick says he felt rejuvenated writing new songs, translating the experiences of a complex personal period in his life, which would become the creative flesh for Wastelands, an album released right at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. After a painful relationship breakup and his mother’s illness with cancer, he returned to St. George area, he decided to move to San Francisco, “a big city where he was a little, little, fish,” as Barrick describes it. In an interview with The Utah Review, he says that in his twenties, piano had been his main instrument. Having recently transitioned, he pulled from his catalog the music he had produced under his birth name. ![]() ![]() I wanted to replicate that idea so I can hold myself accountable.” Indeed, Now That’s What I Call Music! was a major success, when the first album reached platinum status.ĪIDEN BARRICK (June 25, 2:45 p.m., The Round]Īiden Barrick’s life as an indie-folk musician and songwriter has been driven by an innate love with beat poetry and spoken word performance to bring clarity and cohesion to many complicated chapters in his life. “So that’s where my idea initiated, but I wanted to take it a bit further. “The cover art would always catch my eye and I always knew there was going to be another volume coming,” he said. I call it a series because I’m going to continue dropping them.” He cited the Now That’s What I Call Music! series as an example. He explained that it “is meaningful because this project I pushed myself artistically and was able to learn how to produce. In a CanvasRebel feature published earlier this year, Rothschild talked about his Pure Ambition series. ![]()
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