On Her Own
Local acoustic pop artist gets ready to hit the road—again
By Marisa Demarco,
The Alibi
Magen White stole
her sister's guitar. Well, not "stole" exactly.
Her sis played it for a couple months, then kind
of forgot about it and left the guitar to languish
in their house. Five years ago, Magen picked it up
and started fiddling. She cut her teeth on bands
like Dashboard Confessional and The Get Up Kids.
After making a go in two bands and an acoustic duo
(Look Mom No Hands, a collaboration with her cousin),
White is on her own, writing, playing without distortion,
learning to be witty in front of crowds by herself.
She's heading out on the road in November all alone
for a tour of smaller college towns.
So
what you’re
doing now is folk rock? What would you call it?
I
call it folk just to be easy, but I would mostly
call it acoustic pop rock because it still has the
pop aspects. I don't really play folk rhythms or
sing about folky things.
You've already been
on tour in the Southwest ...
Two, actually. The reason
[my cousin] Barry and I started Look Mom No Hands
was solely for the purpose of going on tour. We really
wanted to travel with music, but we knew we couldn't
do it with our full band. We didn't have the money
for the trailer or van or whatever. I was like, "Well, I have all
these acoustic songs. We could just brush those up
and go to Phoenix and Los Angeles." And Barry's
like, "OK."
How did you do your
tour booking?
We pretty much did it last-minute. We
were in Phoenix and we needed a show in Los Angeles,
so we called. I've found that it's easy to book things
way in advance, like six months in advance, or it's
easy to book them two days before. But anytime in
between, it's screwed.
Why do you think that
is?
I guess it's this sense of emergency. I'm saying, "Well,
we're going to be there tomorrow night. Can we please
play?" And they say, "I guess we can put
you as an opener." That's usually what I do—open
for people. People think, "Oh, solo acoustic
act. That's an easy opener."
Are you going to try
to make a run at this music thing, or is it just
for fun?
No, it's fun, but it's what I want to do
with my career. I just graduated from UNM in May,
and I'm not looking to get a job in my field at all.
What kind of degree
did you get?
I got a journalism and mass communication
degree for broadcasting. I minored in media arts.
I'm just working to make money and pay the bills,
but every free moment that I get, I spend writing,
preparing to record or recording. I really want to
do it for my career as an independent artist or on
a label. There's plenty of opportunity as an independent
artist to make a living at it. I won't rule that
out.
What do you do?
My mom
owns a pet cremation business.
Do you cremate pets?
I
just do the things she asks me to do.
Does that include cremating
pets?
(Laughs) Yes.
How does your family
feel about you wanting to be a musician professionally?
They're
all for it. They're totally supportive. They're not
necessarily at every show, because I wouldn't expect
them to be. My mom's researching things for me and
telling me what to do. It's helpful, and I appreciate
it. They just really want me to do it. If I say I
want to do it, they want me to pursue it with all
my might.