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June 30, 2023

Interview Peter Raffoul

We had the pleasure of interviewing Peter Raffoul over Zoom video!

For Nashville-based singer/songwriter Peter Raffoul, songs often emerge late into the night, at an hour when inhibitions fall away and the most essential truths are laid bare. With a...

We had the pleasure of interviewing Peter Raffoul over Zoom video!

For Nashville-based singer/songwriter Peter Raffoul, songs often emerge late into the night, at an hour when inhibitions fall away and the most essential truths are laid bare. With a lyrical sensibility that merges intimate confession and boldly detailed storytelling, the Canada-born artist opens up about anxiety and isolation and the more complicated aspects of human connection, elegantly matching his moody intensity with a mercurial form of alt-rock/folk. Made with producers Owen Lewis (Old Sea Brigade, Maddie Medley) and Henry Brill (Phantogram, Jack Garratt), Raffoul’s debut body of work reveals his undeniable gift for transforming pain into beauty—an element endlessly magnified by the pure warmth and power of his voice.

Originally from the small Ontario town of Leamington, Raffoul first embraced his stream-of-consciousness approach to songwriting in his late teens, when he spent countless hours teasing out songs in the clubhouse-like shed behind his family’s home. As the product of a highly musical family—his father Jody has played in rock bands for over three decades, his brother Billy is singer/songwriter signed to Interscope—Raffoul grew up immersed in the timeless records of the Beatles and Led Zeppelin and began exploring his own musicality by taking up piano at 17. “The music I’m making today really comes from all that time I spent in the shed over the years,” notes Raffoul, now 27. “It was always a world away from everything, where I could mess around with songs on this little keyboard and figure out how to put chords and melodies to all the lyrics I had in my head.” Before long, he’d added guitar to his repertoire and created a song called “Maybe I Do,” a bittersweet but radiant track slated for his forthcoming debut EP. “I was trying to paint a picture of the start of a relationship where the other person seems so perfect, you’re almost waiting for something to go wrong,” says Raffoul. “It felt melancholy and hopeful at the same time, and once I found that contrast I knew I wanted to keep writing more songs in that vein.”

All throughout his debut, Raffoul builds a hypnotic tension between that raw emotionality and a wildly unpredictable sound informed by everything from late-’80s college rock to left-of-center hip-hop to the Beatles’ excursions into dreamy psychedelia. Among the EP’s standout tracks are his debut single “Fucked Up Together”: a gorgeously stripped-back piece centered on his delicate piano work, soulful vocals, and lyrics that speak to a deep longing to be understood. On “Cigarette Holes,” he spins a piercingly honest portrait of emotional chaos, upending the song’s heavy-hearted mood with brightly uptempo rhythms. Meanwhile, “Bad for Me” brings potent beats and prismatic textures to an unflinching meditation on cycles of self-destruction. “When you’re going through a breakup or any other hard time in life, sometimes it feels easier to do things that are bad for you, as a way to numb yourself,” says Raffoul, who co-wrote “Bad for Me” with Connor Thuotte and Kate York (Lady A, Caitlyn Smith). “We started riffing on that idea and Connor played a very simple chord progression on this junky little guitar he’d gotten for $5 at a yard sale, which we used on the final version—it was this magical moment where everything just came together so naturally.”

True to the playful spontaneity and DIY spirit of its creation, Raffoul’s debut EP offers up plenty of idiosyncratic moments that intensify the unbridled energy of each track. To that end, the chorus to the gloriously frenetic “I Just Want to Be OK” takes the form of a cathartic outburst, a component he improvised in co-writing the song with his brother. And on “Call Me,” Raffoul shares an epic heart-on-sleeve ballad threaded with hauntingly stark and spellbinding piano melodies. “I wrote that song late at night in a hotel room and made a demo where the piano sounded super-thin, almost like it was playing through a truck driver’s transistor radio,” he recalls. “When we worked on it in the studio, we ended up manipulating the piano sound so that you can still really feel that loneliness of the original, which is one of the things that makes that song so special to me.”

With the release of his first batch of material, Raffoul hopes that others might find solace in his unfiltered yet finely crafted outpouring. “Most of these songs are about admitting that things are far from perfect, but to me there’s hopefulness in that,” he says. “I think it’s possible to find comfort in being uncomfortable, as long as you know you’re not the only one who doesn’t have it all figured it out. I want to let people that it’s okay to be happy and sad at the same time—and that instead of trying to ignore those uncomfortable feelings, we should try to make the most of them.”

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Peter Raffoul

artist

Growing up in the small Canadian town Leamington, ON, Raffoul first embraced his stream-of-consciousness approach to songwriting in his late teens, spending countless hours teasing out songs in the shed behind his family’s home. The product of a highly musical family – his father Jody has played in rock bands for over three decades while brother Billy is himself a singer-songwriter signed to Interscope – Raffoul unveiled his debut EP, Songs From House in Blue, in 2022, showcasing a hypnotic tension between raw emotionality and a wildly unpredictable sound informed by everything from late-’80s college rock and left-of-center hip-hop to soulful balladry and The Beatles’ excursions into dreamy psychedelia. With “Book Club” – and new songs still to come – Peter Raffoul reveals an undeniable genius for transforming pain into beauty, a gift endlessly magnified by the pure warmth and power of his powerful voice.

“Most of my songs are about admitting that things are far from perfect,” says Peter Raffoul, “but to me there’s hopefulness in that. I think it’s possible to find comfort in being uncomfortable, as long as you know you’re not the only one who doesn’t have it all figured it out. I want to let people know that it’s okay to be happy and sad at the same time – and that instead of trying to ignore those uncomfortable feelings, we should try to make the most of them.”