Erin LeCount Delivers an Impassioned Live Performance of "Killing Time" [Premiere + Q&A]
Unbridled passion, raw talent, and a brilliant piece of performance art are on full display as Erin LeCount gifts audiences with a recorded live version of her debut single âKilling Time.â Drawing from the growing pains of past relationships, LeCount pours her heart into an intimately personal and moving song.
âKilling Timeâ in its original form already tugs on the heartstrings, but the live performance takes it to another level. Itâs filled with so much emotional energy that you just canât help but find yourself launched deep into your feelings. Dazzling us with her beautiful voice and some creative looping work, there is so much that can be said about this song, but we think itâs better that you hear from LeCount herself.
Ones To Watch: âKilling Timeâ feels very personal in nature. Can you talk about the inspiration behind it?
Erin LeCount: A really personal oneâabout this self-destructive habit of staying in dead-end situations or relationships that I had a feeling would end badly but letting myself go along with it regardless. Iâm young, Iâm still nineteen, so I think that whole âlive in the moment, deal with the consequences laterâ thing is fair enough. I wrote âKilling Timeâ when I realized I was repeating that cycle with someone again, but itâs not necessarily about them or any one person in particular (I wonât give anyone that much credit). Itâs more about how I justify wasting my time on people by romanticizing them and the situation way too much. âKilling Timeâ was me, sitting in a car on a âdate,â realizing I was just going to keep hitting dead ends with people, and becoming self-aware that I was going to keep dragging it out for as long as I could before we reached that point.
What is the most meaningful aspect to you about releasing music?
The idea that releasing music is a bit like an âoffering.â Kind of like youâre just openly giving it out to anyone who wants it. You offer this thing that youâve made, spent time on, and fallen in love with, and everyoneâs going to hear and interpret it differently. It resonates with the people itâs meant to, and once youâve offered it, itâs not just yours anymore. Some people I know hear âKilling Timeâ as a love song, and others hear it as quite a sad and self-deprecating song. I think itâs meaningful that people can find a bit of both in it.
Is writing songs and sharing your story with an audience cathartic for you?
Writing is therapeutic. I always end up being brutally honest with it even when I donât mean it to be. Often about things that I donât even consciously know Iâm feeling at the time. Sharing all of that to an audience for the first time felt exposing on a personal and human levelâbut I think that feeling means you did something right creatively. Thereâs something cathartic about knowing youâve been as genuine as you possibly can be with what youâve made.
What is some wisdom we can glean from your journey?
The most basic answer ever, but I think the biggest thing Iâve learned, is that I can trust my gut feelings about stuff both musically and generally. I had to get out of my own way and stop questioning my judgment on everything. To realize that it is safe and okay to trust my taste in music, production, and writing. Your instincts about what sounds good and feels good are your biggest strengthsâso trust what you like, trust what you donât like, and keep being led by that.
Whatâs next on the docket for you?
Releasing an EP that Iâve spent over a year on now and that Iâm so ready to share. Iâve put so much into it and I feel so ready for it because I just want to keep making stuff. Iâm already making and thinking about the next project after this. But in the meantime, live performances like this one, and experimenting with performing are some things I canât wait for.