Young Alumni
Recording under the moniker Hala, 24-year-old Ian Ruhala writes songs that feel fresh, bright, but insightful, out of his home in Detroit, Michigan. It is the kind of music that one would expect to hear at the beginning of a movie or short film, alongside the opening credits. With a prolific output, Hala stresses the importance of the songwriting and production process, as much as the final product. Take his 2016 debut, Spoonfed, which is perhaps Hala’s best-known collection of songs. “I was in a pretty rough, and eclectic state of mind, when I was writing and recording the album,” Ruhala remembers. “I felt like the entire world was fighting against me, and my only weapon of defense was my voice, and my guitar.” Recorded in the attic of a century-old home in Midtown Detroit, with limited studio equipment, songs like “Club Soda,” “Phone Calls,” and, “Not Your Modern Man,” chronicle Ruhala’s experiences of living in a musical commune, and crossing the threshold of adulthood. These songs document in a rather poignant way, a sense of uncomfortability, and naiveté, that almost simultaneously accompanied these transitions in the young writer’s life. The stand-out from the record, “What Is Love? Tell Me, Is It Easy?,” has gathered praise for having this sensibility. Lyrically, Hala says the song is rather rhetorical, but since its release, it has become a soundtrack for the optimistic but always hopeless romantics of indie rock consumption. Hala’s latest numbers seem like reasonable stepping stones. On “Love Grows,” the guitars waver hot above a low, dusty drumbeat, as a restless bassline shrugs beneath shuffling chords, and a vocal that croons like that of Bob Dylan. A most recent single, 2018’s “Sorry,” shows Hala at perhaps his most realized—sunny and fun, with lyrics as mischievous as the guitar’s leads; the track is energetic, restless, and all-encompassing. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Recording under the moniker Hala, 24-year-old Ian Ruhala writes songs that feel fresh, bright, but insightful, out of his home in Detroit, Michigan. It is the kind of music that one would expect to hear at the beginning of a movie or short film, alongside the opening credits. With a prolific output, Hala stresses the importance of the songwriting and production process, as much as the final product. Take his 2016 debut, Spoonfed, which is perhaps Hala’s best-known collection of songs. “I was in a pretty rough, and eclectic state of mind, when I was writing and recording the album,” Ruhala remembers. “I felt like the entire world was fighting against me, and my only weapon of defense was my voice, and my guitar.” Recorded in the attic of a century-old home in Midtown Detroit, with limited studio equipment, songs like “Club Soda,” “Phone Calls,” and, “Not Your Modern Man,” chronicle Ruhala’s experiences of living in a musical commune, and crossing the threshold of adulthood. These songs document in a rather poignant way, a sense of uncomfortability, and naiveté, that almost simultaneously accompanied these transitions in the young writer’s life. The stand-out from the record, “What Is Love? Tell Me, Is It Easy?,” has gathered praise for having this sensibility. Lyrically, Hala says the song is rather rhetorical, but since its release, it has become a soundtrack for the optimistic but always hopeless romantics of indie rock consumption. Hala’s latest numbers seem like reasonable stepping stones. On “Love Grows,” the guitars waver hot above a low, dusty drumbeat, as a restless bassline shrugs beneath shuffling chords, and a vocal that croons like that of Bob Dylan. A most recent single, 2018’s “Sorry,” shows Hala at perhaps his most realized—sunny and fun, with lyrics as mischievous as the guitar’s leads; the track is energetic, restless, and all-encompassing. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
What Is Love? Tell Me, Is It Easy?
Sorry
Problems
Feels Like Yesterday
Found A Way
Club Soda
Keep On Loving
Suburban Escape
Phone Calls
Sins
More Than Anything
Wait Forever
Hey, Hey, Hey
Somehow
Belong to You - Demo
Acid Wash Jeans
Working Man
Why Do You Want Anything to Do with Me?
Get by Me
Emotional R&B
Last Class - Demo
Reruns
I Don't Need a Reason to Love You
So Cold
Just Because
Pluto's A Planet
Feelings Locked up Tight
Not Your Modern Man
Making Me Nervous
Love Grows
Hesitate
Canadian Girls
I've Been Right & I've Been Wrong (Ben's Song)
R.S.V.P.
Tell Them All Relax
She
Rosenthal
Ghost in You
Turn Out Right
Run to You
Red Herring
With You Now (It’s the Only Place I Want to Be)
Diamond Tears
Camera
Lies
We Can Start Again
Oh Me, Oh My
Nobody-Body Knows
True Colors
Emotional R&B - Hellogoodbye Remix
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