Sofie Lynn

August 19, 2019 00:43:21
Sofie Lynn
Outside The Round w/ Matt Burrill
Sofie Lynn

Aug 19 2019 | 00:43:21

/

Hosted By

Matt Burrill

Show Notes

Singer-songwriter Sofie Lynn joins the guys on this week's episode. Sofie, a native of LA, stopped by the studio on her 2nd trip to Nashville which was filled with writes, meetings and some surprise Writer's Rounds. Hear Sofie's story, her background singing Jazz and Pop, and her love for the LA Dodgers (who still aren't as good as the Yankees or Braves :p)! Sit back and enjoy an interesting and funny conversation with one of Country's next great ladies, Sofie Lynn. 

Song of the week: 'Rooting For You' - Sofie Lynn

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Episode Transcript

Speaker 0 00:00:00 What is up? Welcome to this week's edition of the In Thero podcast. You got Matt Tyler, and on this week's episode, we have a guest from the West coast, our first La la it's our good friend, miss Sophie Lynn. Very excited and happy to be sharing this episode, this great conversation with y'all. Talked about a lot of cool things and this girl, she started out in the pop jazz realm and now is in the country realm. Here's a clip of a song that she wrote back in her pop days. This one's called Moving On. Speaker 2 00:00:46 That wasn't just How the Hell We Problem My Heart is I'm Speaker 0 00:01:50 What Is Up everyone, welcome back to the In the Round podcast. You got Matt Tyler, the Code of Bear. What's up Coming at you from the new studio we have with us? We we're very excited when we set this up. It had to be, I, it feels like it was like just yesterday, but it was like close to a month ago. California girl. Very excited. Actually. She reached out to us, which is really, really cool. Yeah, like we've got people that are listening that are, that are writers and you're one of those people. We got Sophie Lynn with us. Sophie, how you doing? Hi, Speaker 3 00:02:15 Good. How are Speaker 2 00:02:16 You? Good Speaker 0 00:02:16 For having me. Thanks for taking the time out. We know how precious the time is in Nashville and you got a lot of meetings and a lot of things going on, doing writing things, you're taking big meetings and just really getting your name out there around town. So thank you for taking the time out to come and hang out with us. And my apologies for running late. You never know what you're gonna get into, especially with the crew that we roll with. Me and Ethan, were, were we allotted 15 minutes for errands. It took us about 45. So Nice. It's the way of the world. It happens. So how's this trip to Nashville going so far? It's Speaker 3 00:02:43 Been awesome. It's been a journey. I feel like I've been here for like a month already and it's only been what, like four days? Three days? <laugh> both Speaker 2 00:02:49 On in Speaker 0 00:02:49 Nashville. Yeah. Nashville time. The big thing, me and Tyler always say we, you never know what day it is. Like you wake up in the morning and you don't know what day it is. Like, I think like I know today's Wednesday because of, there's a, there's an event that we're going to tonight that was on a Wednesday. So that's the only reason I know that it's Wednesday plus it's my off day. My off days are Mondays and Wednesdays. Same. So, so you do, so Wednesday, so this is your second time in Nashville? Speaker 3 00:03:11 Yeah, the first time I was just here for my 21st birthday, so I was just here to party <laugh>. Speaker 0 00:03:15 What was that experience like for you? Speaker 3 00:03:17 It was, it was a lot of fun. I mean, at least what I could remember was fun <laugh>, but, uh, yeah, it was a good time. I, uh, I wasn't doing country music yet. I was doing like the pop r and b stuff. Okay. So I just came here and I, I obviously love music, so I was like, let's go for my 21st. Let's go. Have a good time. Speaker 0 00:03:33 All right, sweet. So let's back it up a little bit. So how does Sophie Lynn get into music? How did the music thing start for you? Speaker 3 00:03:39 Uh, well I've been singing all my life. I've been singing since I was five. But, um, I just recently got into doing music full-time and I'm trying to be an artist. I, I went to school over in, uh, Texas, Baylor University. Oh, nice. Yeah. And, uh, I dropped out after my second year and I was like, you know what, let me give music a chance. So it was, it seemed like music was the only thing that remained constant in my life. Yeah. Throughout that whole time. So, um, I was like, might as well give it a chance and see what can happen. And I was studying nursing, which is kind of funny cuz I don't really see myself in the health field now. But, um, I was studying nursing and I, uh, I got heartbroken in college and I and my grandma passed and I was like, God, nothing is going right in my life. Speaker 3 00:04:18 It was just really sad. So I was writing songs about it all the time, like every, every single day. It was like a new song of just like really sad songs, honestly. But, um, I was like, yeah, music is the only constant thing right now, so let's give it a shot and let's see what I can do with this. And um, yeah, that's kind of how Lynn came about. And I was doing like the pop r and b stuff cuz every I had sang jazz in college, um, or not in college. In high school I had sang jazz and um, everyone's like, oh, you have that tone for r and b, you have to do it, you have to do it. So I was like, okay. So I released, um, take a Drive, which is out on like the streaming sites and um, after Take a Drive it did okay. But I was like, I don't see myself performing this genre on stage. I really have a passion for country and I really can see myself on stage having a good time making people dance, you know? Yeah. And so about maybe like eight months ago I was like, okay, let's do country. Yeah. I started like really gearing my stuff towards that. So that's where I, Speaker 0 00:05:13 Yeah. And, and as far as songwriting goes, songwriting, I mean pop and r b, there's a lot of deep music in there and songwriting, that style. But as far as like storytelling mm-hmm. <affirmative> country seems to be key. It's like country. Yeah. And Americana. Yeah. So for you with, with writing deeper songs, is that something that led you in the country music? Speaker 3 00:05:28 Oh yeah, totally. I, I feel like all of my songs have always had like an element of country to them. Um, just because I am like a story based writer. So, I mean, it just kind of seemed natural to flip over to country and add that like, production side of country now how already had like the lyrics and kind of the melodies going on, you know? So Speaker 0 00:05:44 Yeah. We were jamming out to you in the car on the way, on the way over here actually from our errands and stuff we were listening to, to the new one you got, uh, rooting for You. Yay. And um, Ethan was like, holy shit, that girl's got melody like that, like the melodies that are, that are in there and stuff. So for you, when you're doing the songwriting process, um, are you more going, is it, do, do the words come first like as a writer or do you feel melodies or how, what's the writing process like for you? Speaker 3 00:06:07 Typically? I'll start out with like an idea or like the title of the song. Okay. And then, um, really just, I'm more melody based. I definitely a lot more melody based, so I have a lot of co-writers that I work with to help me on the lyrics side. Um, so yeah, I guess, I guess a title first and then I'll kind of get like a groove and a melody going and then I'll just kind of form all the lyrics around that title or idea. Okay, Speaker 0 00:06:31 Sweet. So when, how old were you when you wrote your first song? When did song writing become a thing for you? Did it start out as like, poems in a notebook? Like, Speaker 3 00:06:38 No. No. So I picked up, uh, guitar at sixth grade. How, I dunno, how old are you in sixth grade? Oh, geez. Speaker 0 00:06:45 <laugh>, that's a good question. I'm saying like 11. Speaker 4 00:06:48 You're 11, 12, 13, 11, 12. Yeah, Speaker 3 00:06:50 Because I was doing a lot of musical theater and I was like, I wanna perform shows, you know, like I wanna be in a band. So I picked up guitar and uh, you guys know the word swag? Speaker 0 00:07:00 Yes. Oh, do we, oh, do we know the word Speaker 3 00:07:02 Swag? So in sixth grade, my least favorite word, cuz all the guys were like using that word, I was like, this is literally the worst word in the world. I Speaker 4 00:07:09 Have like, different like, iterations of swag. So like, I have like swagger and cheese and swagger, sour rex, you're the Speaker 3 00:07:17 Guy that I hated in sixth Speaker 0 00:07:18 Grade's. Exactly what you're talking about. So what, so what'd you do with that? Speaker 3 00:07:21 So I took that word and I was like, all right, I'm gonna write a song. Here's my first song. It's like, swag. Swag. That's what you say when you take me out to dinner and you can't even pay. Ooh. And it's just like bashing these guys who use that word Speaker 4 00:07:33 Burn. That's Speaker 0 00:07:34 Awesome. But Speaker 3 00:07:35 I was in sixth grade so I was like super lame, but Speaker 0 00:07:37 No, that's cool though, like that you're able, you're able to do that. Yeah. Now you back up to the musical theater stuff. When did you start doing shows and things like that? I Speaker 3 00:07:44 Booked my first, um, professional theater when I was six. So I did Annie, I was, uh, Molly and Annie. No shit. That's awesome. Speaker 0 00:07:52 That's awesome. I feel like that's something that's common that a lot of people don't realize when it comes to people that do music and are, are artists or songwriters and stuff. A huge part of that. Getting up on stage and singing, that's a hard thing to do. Yeah. But people that come from the musical theater background, it translates so well to those that are up there singing songs and, and up there performing with a guitar. Like Yeah. Yeah. Was did that make the transition for you easier from singing your own songs to Yeah. Yes. Acting and doing the musical theater thing? Speaker 3 00:08:18 Yeah. Yes and no because I mean, in theater you're always like playing a character, whereas like me as Sophie le I wanna be like real authentic. Yeah. It was also really hard in high school cuz I was singing jazz and my instructor every single day would be like, you sound too musical theater, you sound too musical theater. Like, bashing me. Yeah. So it was definitely a journey to kind of like switch that sound from like, uh, you know, like very musical theater sounding with that vibrato and everything to jazz where it's literally straight toned and it's, it's made me who I am today because I incorporate both of them, you know? Um, but yeah, it was, I guess yes and no, it's like pros and cons. Speaker 0 00:08:54 Yeah, yeah. No, absolutely. I had none of that. I was, I was your stereotypical jock head. I got thrown out of band I think in like fourth or fifth grade, they tried to put a trumpet in my hand and I was like, major adhd. And I think I like broke it or smashed it on something and they were like, yeah, you're not doing this. I got kicked outta chorus, like i I day. Wow. I'm not at all. So that's why I like asking that question of people that have that, that music bug where, where you guys can do that. And Speaker 4 00:09:16 So, coming from musical theater, what was your favorite production? Speaker 3 00:09:19 That I did? Or just in Speaker 4 00:09:20 General? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, both. What's your favorite one that you did and then what's your favorite of like, all time? Oh, Speaker 3 00:09:25 That's so hard. So I guess my favorite one that I did was the last musical I ever did and it was Annie again. Yeah. And I played Annie. It was like, oh, nice. The circle, you know, first one I played Molly, last one I played Annie. That's awesome. It was really cool. Um, and it challenged my voice a lot cuz I think by that time I was like eighth grade, so I was like in that weird puberty section where you're like, oh, I don't know if I can belt notes anymore, but let's give it a whirl. You know, <laugh>. So, um, so yeah, that was probably the my favorite one that I did. Uh, as in like, my career in musical theater and then my favorite all time I, oh, I went to New York and I saw, Ooh, I saw so many good ones, but probably Mama Mia. That production was so good. Live like, incredible. Way better than the movies. The movies are cool too, but the play was just way better. Speaker 0 00:10:10 <laugh>. Yeah. Well you're seeing it live. Yeah. So that's gotta add something Speaker 3 00:10:13 To it. Ooh. But, uh, Mary Poppins was cool too, cuz one of the, the chimney guy, he tap danced on the roof. That was cool. He was like upside down tap dancing. Oh, Speaker 4 00:10:21 Wow. Speaker 0 00:10:21 That, that's a lot. I don't think I could do that. That takes some serious skills. Yeah. Speaker 3 00:10:24 Yeah. It was crazy. It was really, really cool. Speaker 0 00:10:27 So definitely, definitely takes some serious guilt. Now for you musical influences, what'd you grow up listening to? Speaker 3 00:10:32 Ooh, uh, a lot of people. My, my dad is like stuck in the eighties, so I grew up a lot on a lot of, Speaker 0 00:10:38 Like, my dad is too, so I feel young. Speaker 3 00:10:40 Like foreigner Night Ranger. Yeah. Yeah. It was like hit. We listen to a lot of that. Um, and then, let's see, as far as like country influences, I love Leanne Rimes. She's awesome. I sing a lot of her stuff when I do like cover gigs around. Um, I like Patsy Klein. I like a lot of like nineties country. So Diana Carter, like Strawberry Wine, obviously. Yeah. I do Speaker 0 00:11:02 That one a lot. Like were, the vocals are just massive. Yeah. Where, where these, where these ladies are just belting it out because they can uhhuh and they have some SAS to 'em. Yeah. Like you talk about Patsy Klein, she's definitely there. Oh yeah. Crazy. Definitely got some SaaS to it. Crazy. Speaker 3 00:11:13 Yeah. Yeah. I'm crazy for feelings. Like really good stuff. Yeah. Yeah. Speaker 0 00:11:18 <laugh>. That's awesome. So, so that's, so a blend of like that classic rock mixed with the country. Did you ever listen to like hiphop or anything like that? Or like, the pop side? Like, Speaker 3 00:11:27 Yeah, so when I was doing jazz, I liked a lot of funk fusion. So like Snarky Puppy or Heck yeah. Chinese Speaker 4 00:11:33 Coyote. Yeah. Have you, uh, they've been out for a little bit now, but, um, shoot, I gotta look 'em up real quick. Continue the conversation. Snar, Speaker 0 00:11:40 Snarky puppy. What is that? What is Speaker 4 00:11:42 Snarky Puppies Speaker 0 00:11:42 Like? So what's, what's Funk Fusion? What, what's that genre like? Speaker 3 00:11:45 It's like a mix of like, a lot of genres. Like Snarky Puppy, they, they feature a lot of other singers. Yeah. It's like their main things, just like their band. And they do like a, it's like funk. Uh, I don't know how to really explain it. It's like funk fusion is like, that's the word. So it literally just incorporates like a lot of different things. Speaker 0 00:12:02 So there's like some horns in there. There's like some heavy bass, there's like a beat. That's Speaker 3 00:12:05 Cool. Yeah. Crazy chord changes. You're like, sometimes you can't follow when you're like, oh, this is cool, but I don't know what's going on. Speaker 0 00:12:11 But, and it's like, how, how are they doing this? And then they're doing it all in sync. Yeah. Speaker 4 00:12:15 You listen to Scary Pockets. Speaker 3 00:12:17 I have heard a couple of their songs. Yeah, Speaker 4 00:12:19 They do like a lot of pop stuff and it's just like this jazz fusion stuff that, um, actually Scary Pocket is a lot more like in the Pocket, like mm-hmm. <affirmative> kind of thing. But like a lot of your jazz fusion stuff, like a lot of people consider like, uh, dream theater, like guys like that as like your jazz fusion stuff. It's really technical, really, like a lot of times fast paced, key changes, tempo changes. Like, it's, it's the musician's music. Oh man. Speaker 0 00:12:46 Yeah. Yeah. So that's why I wanna take a list of, I'll probably have no idea what the hell is going on <laugh>. Yeah. Speaker 4 00:12:52 Oh yeah. Yeah. I mean, it's trippy too. Like, they like do stuff. Speaker 0 00:12:54 I be down, I'm, I'm down, I'll raise my hand for some trippy stuff and whatnot. Now growing, growing up in California, what was that like for you? Speaker 3 00:13:01 Uh, yeah, so I always grew. I never, okay, so I say that I'm from LA and then if people know California, I'm like, okay Pasadena. And then if they really know them, I'm like, okay, I'm from Glendora. So like, no one ever knows where Glendora is. It's kind of like a small little town filled with like, a lot of old people and Mormons. So that's where Speaker 0 00:13:18 Mormons, yeah. Speaker 3 00:13:18 Okay. It's like a lot of Mormons. Speaker 0 00:13:21 Okay. Cause you're the, you're the first guest that we've had on that's been, that's been from out west. It's been from California, which is cool cuz usually down here, down here, most of the guests that we've had have been like Tyler. They've been southern, Southern guys and southern girls. So to find somebody that out west and stuff now the country scene out there. Yeah. A lot of people don't realize how big the country scene is out in California. Like with Yeah. With, uh, with Stage Coach and like all these big things that go on out there. People love their country music out there. Speaker 3 00:13:46 Yeah. It's, it's big in certain areas. Um, when you get closer to LA it kind of dies out. Yeah. It's got a lot more of that like, indie vibe out in LA. Yeah. Um, but if you like play out towards the desert or like the valley area, you'll get a bigger following. But we call it out there, we call it Cali Country. Speaker 0 00:14:01 Cali Country, yeah. Or Cville. Like Brett Young has his mm-hmm. <affirmative> has his vi has his, uh, brand that he's got going here in Nashville called Cville and stuff. So for you, uh, what's the, what's like playing shows out in California? Like, how's that crowd out there? Speaker 3 00:14:14 Um, I play a lot of, like, here they're like writer's rounds, right? Yeah. So over there you'll get on like a bill or whatever and it'll have, you'll have like 30 minute sets. So it's not like you sit and you have these writers playing like one song and then one song and then one song. One song. I just played my first one here, uh, a couple, two days ago. And it was like, really cool that you guys do something like that. I'm like, I'm gonna try to bring this to California, you know? But, um, but yeah, so it's like you book your 30 minute slot, you play and then the next artist plays for 30 minutes and then the next artist plays for 30 minutes. So I do a lot of that out there in order to play my own original stuff. That's like kind of the only way, unless you got a good following. Um, other than that you gotta play with like a cover band or something. Speaker 0 00:14:55 Yeah. Which that which covers are huge here too. Yeah. Like you've been out on Broadway. Yeah. Yeah. People have to play four hours of covers. Sometimes they'll, they'll play wagon wheel four or five times, which there's certain songs by the way. But you could probably sense it when you b when you're on Broadway a lot, you can hear this, you hear the same damn song over and over again, which is my original music is so cool. Speaker 4 00:15:12 Cool. You've heard the wagon wheel five times last night. Speaker 0 00:15:16 <laugh>, I feel for you. Wagon Wheel shaking all songs that I, five times, dude. All songs that I love before I moved down here. I mean, Speaker 4 00:15:22 You got paid for it, like the artist got paid for it. But I'm sitting there at the back of you, back of the bar with a splitting headache. Like, just take me out now, God. Like please God. Speaker 0 00:15:30 Yeah. Cuz coming, coming from New York, I was like, oh, I love Wagon Wheel. Oh I love this. I love this. When I first moved down here, all these guys and girls were like, you're gonna be sick of this song. Within within a month. I literally Speaker 4 00:15:40 Looked at him and I was like, I give it two weeks. That's Speaker 3 00:15:42 Funny. Two Speaker 4 00:15:43 Weeks and you'll be done. Speaker 0 00:15:45 Yeah. No. So, so um, so come, so coming to Nashville, what's this trip been like for you? What, what kind of things do you got going on? Speaker 3 00:15:52 Yeah. So Speaker 0 00:15:53 That you can talk about, I know there's certain meetings and things and stuff that happened with the industry stuff, but in terms of what's going on, what, what do you got cooking? Speaker 3 00:16:00 Yeah. So, um, main purpose of the right was actually I write with a lot of people, um, in different states. So we all write, always write over Skype. So, um, one of my good writers friends, Tammy, she was like, oh, we're gonna come down or I'm coming down. And then she just kind of got everybody that writes with to come down too. So we're all like in one house and we've been writing a lot. Um, and then the first night I came in, so I came in Monday and I like flew in at 6:00 AM got like two hours of sleep. It was crazy rough. But uh, flew in at 6:00 AM and then I had two shows. So I played over at Doghouse and Alley Taps. Okay. And that was my first time ever playing in Nashville. It was really cool. It was like first time playing in Nashville, first time doing a riders around, first time playing like both these shows and one night, you know. Yeah. So it was pretty crazy. But, um, so I did that. That was really awesome. And it's kind of funny cuz rooting for you has like a key change in it. In it. And when I play it back at home, like people don't really pick up on it. They like, they like it cuz it's like big climactic, but everybody in the audience was like, oh, key change. Like everybody understood it. I was like, okay. Yeah. Speaker 0 00:16:59 There's an extra appreciation for people know what's going on. They Speaker 3 00:17:03 Appreciate it. Yeah. It was awesome. I was like, okay, Nashville, people get it, you know? Yeah. Um, but yeah, so I did that and then, um, we are meeting up with Mitch Fur a little bit later. Who place for like Carrie Underwood. So that's gonna be cool. And then, um, I met with my producer who did rooting for you? Colt Caparo. That was awesome. He's so down to earth and so knowledgeable. He brought his little baby to the meeting too and I was like, oh my gosh, Speaker 0 00:17:26 That's gonna be fun. Awesome. Speaker 3 00:17:27 Yeah. She was so good too. But she didn't cry the whole time. Speaker 0 00:17:30 That's impressive. A well-behaved baby that, that's impressive. Yeah. Right. Speaker 3 00:17:35 But yeah, so just stuff like that, writing a lot. I think last night we wrote like three songs or yesterday we wrote three songs, so that's cool. Just kinda like building our catalog and just meeting people, you know? It's my first time here, so I'm just trying to like, be nice to everybody and say hi, like, show my face, you know, Speaker 0 00:17:50 Just, just making friends. Yeah. And a big thing that I've learned being in this town, it's all about the hang. It's just making, it's just making friendships and connections, which was hard coming down from New York and being out in LA it's very like, businesslike. You know, you're in the big city, it's businesslike down here, it's like the opposite of that. It's just chill. Yeah. It's just you make friends having a beer at, at Whiskey Jam or at Losers. He's Speaker 4 00:18:10 Slowly learning this process. <laugh>, I'm slowly, Speaker 0 00:18:12 Oh no, it still comes out and Tyler still looks at me like, you gotta tone your Yankee down man. You gotta tone it down. You're Yankee down. Oh dude. Oh dude. It, it gets, it gets bad sometimes. Like the goodbyes, like if you've heard of like the Irish goodbye where they just, there's no like emotion. Everybody just kinda like walks away kind of thing. Mm-hmm. <affirmative> down here. Goodbyes take like 40 minutes. Cause everybody just kind of lingers and wants to be polite in southern hospitality and stuff. But, um, but what's the Skype writing process like? Cause that's something that we haven't, we haven't really heard about on, on this podcast with guests and stuff. What's that process like for you being so far away from co-writers? Speaker 3 00:18:46 Yeah, so it's actually really cool because you get to write with people that you would never meet Yeah. In general, you know. So, um, I'm a part of Song Town. I dunno if you guys are familiar with Song Town, but, um, I've met a lot of my writers off Song Town. Um, it's just like a little site for a lot of different people to interact and, um, people in the industry give you advice and they'll critique your songs and, um, it's just like a little monthly membership. So that was like the biggest blessing I could have joined when I started country music. Um, just because I didn't have access to any of that Yeah. Ever in California. And I didn't know anybody doing country at the time. So, um, yeah. So I hook up with people off Song town and, um, I don't know, you just kind of like, the word gets around, like, the writers that you write with have writers that they write with and just Speaker 0 00:19:30 Networking. Speaker 3 00:19:31 Yeah, exactly. Yeah. So, um, what happens is you just kind of get their information. You say, Hey, are you available Monday at three o'clock? You know, three o'clock my time, obviously. Yeah. Like, probably like here, I don't know, like five. But, um, time Speaker 0 00:19:43 Zones are tough. I agree with you. I'm my, my home's in a different time zone too, so I hear Speaker 3 00:19:47 You. Yeah. I'm like, what's the time zone again? Am I like Pacific time? I don't know LA time. Yeah, Speaker 0 00:19:52 LA that's what I say. New York time. Same thing. Yeah. Speaker 3 00:19:54 LA time. That's all I got for you. Yeah. Um, but yeah, so you just say this time, this place, and then one of us will come in with an idea and you just ding ding, ding, here's the Skype call. Except, you know, here's my idea. And then we just build off that. It's just as if you do it in person, you're just like with the camera. So hopefully Yeah. Sometimes there's a little bit of a lag, like a delay and that's really Speaker 4 00:20:13 Frustrat. Yeah. Have you ever, uh, the one that's my least favorite experience or the guy like, like just throws out a line, but it lags and like all of a sudden just like <laugh>. Yeah. And you're just like, all right dude, what'd you say? Like, Speaker 3 00:20:27 <laugh>. Yeah. Or they're like trying to sing you their idea and it just keeps breaking up and you're like, that sounds horrible. It's probably great, but I can't tell cuz there's so much static, you know? Yeah. But, uh, yeah, that, that gets pretty frustrating. You gotta have like, good wifi Speaker 0 00:20:41 <laugh>. Yeah. Oh, wifi is that wey. You gotta have it. Yeah. Um, now have you made like Connect now do you have like a crew of people that you'll, you'll particularly go to with a certain idea? Like do you have some like co-writers that like you're really gelling with like a circle right now that you've met through that network? Speaker 3 00:20:56 Yeah. So a lot of people that are staying at the house right now have been writing with a lot. So my friend Tammy Marler and, um, Lindy and Maddie Fisher and Tom Pino, Colleen, there's like a bunch of us that are in the house right now. Um, honestly, I was introduced to a lot of them through Tammy. Tammy's been like my rock through, like the whole thing. Awesome. So it's been really Speaker 0 00:21:15 Cool. How'd, how'd you meet her? What was the, what was the connection on that? Speaker 3 00:21:18 She found me on Song Town. I posted one of my songs for review, um, by the guys that run Song Town. And I guess she saw it and hit me up and was like, Hey, you wanna write? I love your style. And then ever since then, she's kind of been like the glue between me and everybody, like, here write with this person. Right. With that person. You know? So it's been really cool. I Speaker 0 00:21:34 Love that you guys are kind of having like a writer's retreat, but it's in Nashville. Yeah. It's wild. They to see that because literally that people do that all the time. Yeah. Speaker 4 00:21:42 Like I go to, I go to the mountains pretty much every year. Yeah. Like, I go out to North Carolina like every fall and have a writer's retreat. Speaker 0 00:21:49 Like that's such like a Nashville thing. But you guys are all from other areas. Yeah. So you're all meeting in Nashville so you can, you can take meetings so you can play out and do all that stuff while writing together. That's so cool. Yeah. Like that, that's something that, that, that really makes up for not being here full time and stuff. Which, yeah. Which, which again, for, for you, I mean, it sounds like you're still able to make enough Nashville connections doing the trips and through Skype and stuff, which Speaker 3 00:22:11 Is cool. Yeah. And just playing that one show over at Doghouse, I met like probably over 15 people that are like Yeah, that's right. You know, and the Speaker 0 00:22:18 Power of Midtown. Yeah. So cool. You talked about, it's so cool. Yeah. You talked about Broadway coming for your 21st Midtown is where all the locals hang at. Yeah. That's where you'll see if you go into certain bathrooms or certain look at certain walls, you'll see in the round stickers post. That's where we market ourselves on a podcast. Oh yeah. We stuck stickers all over the place where, here's the thing. Speaker 4 00:22:36 Nice. We haven't stuck a sticker anywhere. Speaker 0 00:22:38 No. We, we get people that hang stickers places. Speaker 3 00:22:40 I'll stick a sticker for y'all to gimme some stickers. Oh, Speaker 0 00:22:42 We'll do that. Bring it on. Speaker 3 00:22:43 I have any, I'll bring it on over to California too. Oh dude, Speaker 0 00:22:46 That'd be be great. That'd be awesome. Yeah. Now look, now we're at halfway through 2019, which is crazy. It's crazy how fast time flies. What do you got looking forward to, uh, the rest of 2019? Speaker 3 00:22:55 Yeah, so, um, I have my music video coming out August 2nd for Root for Speaker 0 00:22:59 You. Oh, awesome. Congrat. Speaker 3 00:23:01 Yeah, it's, uh, gonna be through Vivo. I'm still trying to find someone, someone to like exclusively premiere it. So if y'all know anybody let me know. Okay. But, um, but yeah, so that's coming out August 2nd. And then, um, I have a couple more songs that are working on production right now, but I kind of just wanna milk rooting for you. See what I can get more. It's, Speaker 0 00:23:17 It's a good song. It really is. Thank you. Your, your vocals on there are great. The melody of it is great and the lyrics. Thanks. They're, they're, they're, they're honestly for a 22 year old that's just really getting, getting her feet wet, still in country music. You, you're writing some deep lyrics. Thank you. You're doing a good job. What was that writing process like? Who'd you write that with and what went into that song? Speaker 3 00:23:34 Yeah, so I wrote it with my friend Marlon Lim. Um, he came over, I I used to write a lot of my pop stuff. Pop stuff with him. Yeah. Um, and he came over and it was like the first day that I was like, I wanna do country, you know? Yeah. And he's like, okay. Because it's really out of his comfort zone. Yeah. Um, and so we sat down, he had that chord progression going and I started with the, uh, uh, the uh, hoo. It just like, kind of like came natural and then we built, uh, right off of that. But it was funny, we wrote like half the song in my little like makeshift home studio thing at, I like, have a home studio by at, in my grandpa's back house cuz it was, he was using, using that for like, furniture. So I was like, I'm gonna have a yard sale. Speaker 3 00:24:12 You know, so I had a yard sale, sold all of his stuff. He was like, I guess he was okay with it. But yeah, so we wrote half of it in that little studio and then half of it, we, we were like exhausted from being inside. So we went to this coffee shop and literally wrote the rest, like outside on this coffee shop and was just done in one day. And then, uh, I found Colt and Colt really brought, brought it to life. That was awesome. So, and he's actually here in Nashville, so it was kind of cool. I found him on Instagram. I find everybody on Instagram. Yes. I'm like, this creeper that's like, hi, I am Sophie Lynn. I don't live in Nashville, but I'm gonna message you anyways. You know, that's Speaker 0 00:24:44 The way it has to work though. You're not being a, you're not being a creeper. You're, you're doing the right thing by doing that. Yeah. Like, seriously. So, Speaker 3 00:24:51 Um, so yeah, I found Colt on Instagram and I hit him up and he really liked the song. So he was down to get on the project. And then I just recorded my vocals in my little home studio, literally with like an AKG two 20 and I had like foam on the wall. It was so janky. But, uh, yeah, I sent it over to him and he got working on it and you can't even tell that my setup was what I used on there. So he's awesome. Incredible. So, yeah. So that's how rooting for you kind of came about. And Speaker 0 00:25:17 What's the response on it been like for you? Speaker 3 00:25:19 Pretty good. Better than I ever expected. I went in with like, um, kind of, I didn't really have any expectations because it was my first country single. Yeah. And I was just like branching out. Um, but I, it, the first day it came out it got on like, new music Nashville. So that was pretty cool. Jumped up a bunch of streams, um, on Spotify and then just everybody's been real supportive and I mean, y'all had me on here, so that's really cool. I guess it says that the song's pretty good, you know, without even knowing me. You just brought me on board, so that was really awesome. But yeah, it's been cool. The people have been receiving it really well. Speaker 0 00:25:51 Awesome. Awesome. Now, now we've fa we rewind a little bit. Um, something we've been doing a lot in recent episodes we've been asking people about their first time in Nashville, their first night out and stuff like that. Okay. So, so like what, when you came for, so it was your 21st birthday. Yeah. Who'd you have with you? Speaker 3 00:26:08 Uh, I had a, a group of people. I had some friends from Texas when I was going to school in Texas. They flew out and met me here. Um, and then I just had a lot of my guy friends from California and some other girlfriends. And then my parents came and my older sister. So that was pretty cool. They wanted to get my first drink with me. So, um, but yeah, that's who came with me. We Airbnb a house over in, I think East Nashville, then just like Ubered into Broadway every day. Speaker 0 00:26:33 What all, when's your birthday? Speaker 3 00:26:34 January 12th. So it was, it was the winter snowing. It was snowing. It was icy. It was terrible. Speaker 4 00:26:40 Terrible. It was actually snowing here. Speaker 3 00:26:41 Yeah. It was bad. They said it was the coldest winter. It was last, last, uh, January. Speaker 4 00:26:45 It was pretty cold last year. Speaker 3 00:26:47 Yeah. There's ice all over the roads. Uber, Uber Speaker 4 00:26:49 Drivers were Speaker 0 00:26:50 Terrified. Yeah, I remember. And you're, and you're coming from Cali and then, and then you have people from Texas there, so like, what the hell is this? Speaker 3 00:26:55 Yeah. Nobody knew what was going on, but we were like, we're just gonna get drunk and have a good time. <laugh>. Speaker 0 00:26:59 So, so what were your, what were your thoughts of Nashville? I know that's more of a pleasure trip. It's more of like a fun trip. Yeah. In terms and, and not as much a business trip like this has been. What were your thoughts of Nashville when you first came for what you remember? It's, it's the 21st birthday. We see that stuff all the time working on Broadway. But what were your initial thoughts of the city? Speaker 3 00:27:15 Yeah, I, I mean I absolutely loved it. I loved that every bar had live music. Cuz we do have live music over in LA but not like where there's just every single bar has a band, you know? So, um, that was really cool to see. From what I remember, it was kind of bad, but, uh, yeah, the food was good too. I really liked the food. I had hot chicken that was bomb. Speaker 0 00:27:34 What was your favorite bar that you can remember? Cause back then a lot of bars aren't open. I think Whiskey Row had just opened, Speaker 4 00:27:40 No Whiskey Row had been Speaker 0 00:27:42 January, 2018. This is right. Yeah. So yeah. Whiskey Row had, Speaker 4 00:27:45 Yeah, this year had just been open. So like Luke and Jason's wasn't open Kid Rock wasn't open. Speaker 0 00:27:49 Yeah. Last year, 2018 alone seven bars opened on Broadway. Speaker 4 00:27:52 Wow. That's, that was 12 Speaker 0 00:27:54 Was 12. Speaker 4 00:27:55 12. Oh geez. Speaker 3 00:27:56 That's wild. Speaker 0 00:27:56 Do you remember, so at that point, what was your favorite bar? What's the bar that you remember being like, oh, that was rowdy? Speaker 3 00:28:02 Yeah, so there there's two that actually stick out to me. One was the Florida Georgia Line bar. Cuz I met, yeah. Um, I met Chris Young. Oh. And oh geez, I was so awkward. I was like, hi, my name is Sophie. And it was like really awkward. Um, I don't know, I dunno why it was so awkward, but I just remember that being Speaker 0 00:28:17 Oh, that, that happens. You bump into a star casually at a bar, which happens here all the time. By the way, I, I can name countless people that we we bump into at work and stuff, but like that, that's gotta be kind of cool. Yeah. Speaker 4 00:28:28 I can't tell you how many times I've tried to deny somebody at the door and they're be like, do you really know who I am? And <laugh>, whether it Speaker 0 00:28:34 Be, whether it be a, whether it be a Nashville Predators player, a Tennessee Titan or, or a big time artist that's Speaker 4 00:28:39 Just, or like football player. Like a lot of 'em are football players. Really. Like n NFL guys like, come in the door. I'm like, Hey man. They're like, do you, do you not know who I am? I'm like, ah, yeah, you're good. <laugh>. Speaker 3 00:28:51 Yeah. So that one sticks out to me. And then, I can't remember the name of the bar, but it, it looks like a trailer inside and it has like grass on the ground. Speaker 4 00:28:58 Oh, Santas. R i p Speaker 0 00:29:00 Is that Santa's? No, Speaker 3 00:29:01 No, but I did go to Santa's. That was awesome. Speaker 4 00:29:02 No, that was Paradise. That Speaker 0 00:29:04 Was Paradise Park. Speaker 4 00:29:05 Paradise Park. All I Pete Paradise Park. Yeah. Now it is the downtown sporting club. Speaker 0 00:29:09 No. Which by the, which I thought the downtown sporting club would you All right. But it is, it has not lived up to it because it, it's set up like it should be in like, like a major. It's set up like, it's Speaker 4 00:29:19 Got Axe throwing, like who wants Axe throwing with drunk idiots on Broadway? Speaker 3 00:29:23 Yeah. It's really Speaker 0 00:29:23 Terrifying. It's got ax and it's got, Speaker 3 00:29:24 But I'd totally do it. <laugh>. Oh Speaker 4 00:29:26 Yeah, I would too. But, Speaker 0 00:29:27 And it's got hotel rooms like in the bar. Like Speaker 4 00:29:29 It's that Airbnb, the third level is an Airbnb. Speaker 0 00:29:32 That's so weird. Which is sketchy because, you know, because it's on Broadway. A lot of sketchy things go on Broadway. You shouldn't have that Speaker 4 00:29:38 Know about that. I've multiple overnights on Broadway. Waking up or not even waking up, but like seeing the sunrise on Broadway and just watching the people like scatter is like one of the worst things. Speaker 0 00:29:51 Yeah, yeah. Well not wanna be. And what's really weird is like, there's blinds. So if the blinds are open, you can see the beds like from from the door at um, at like whiskey, whiskey babies. You can see 'em Speaker 4 00:30:01 On the other side of the street. You can see the beds. Speaker 3 00:30:03 That's the weirdest Speaker 0 00:30:04 Thing Speaker 4 00:30:04 From every Speaker 0 00:30:05 Bar. Speaker 3 00:30:05 I don't even know what's going on Speaker 0 00:30:06 With those babies. If a Paradise Park was awesome, dude, Speaker 3 00:30:09 That mine was dope. Speaker 4 00:30:10 Yeah. This past weekend, the Nashville sounds honored. Paradise Park. I think they're gonna do it annually. The weekend the Paradise Park closes, they offer tickets and it's $6 pictures of beer, all you can eat, hot dogs, fries and like other things. Yeah. Cause that's what they were known for. Like, it sucked because it took the late night dining away from Broadway because nobody now is open. Stupid late. Except Speaker 0 00:30:32 For the diner. Which is the Speaker 4 00:30:33 Diner. But that's a couple blocks over. That's Broadway. Yeah. You know, you might get Mellow Mushroom if you're lucky, but like that was the place to go for especially all the Broadway people. Cause it's so cheap. Yeah. Speaker 3 00:30:42 Yeah. That was a good time. I went there real late and I got, I, I can't remember if I got food, but I just remembered drinking a lot of beer real late. Yeah, that Speaker 0 00:30:49 Was a good time. So, so you, so so that, that weekend or was it a week or weekend? How long were you guys here? Speaker 3 00:30:54 I was here, uh, I think I, I came Friday. No, Thursday to Monday. I left Monday. Speaker 0 00:31:00 Okay. Yeah. So what was your, what was your, uh, your drink of choice for your 21st? Speaker 3 00:31:04 Oh, I, everything. Speaker 0 00:31:05 Do you remember everything? Speaker 3 00:31:06 People were just buying me shot. I remember the one shot that I had that was really good. Um, it was a lemon drop shot. I met some people from California and they, oh no, no. They bought me this one that was called the Panty dropper. And it was a double Speaker 0 00:31:17 The Panny dropper? Speaker 3 00:31:18 Yes. Yeah. It was pink and it was a double. And I don't remember anything after that. They were like, here you go. And I was like, okay, thank you. Here's a panty dropper shot. I'm just taking this from random strangers. And then they don't really know what happened after that, but it's a good time. <laugh>, you Speaker 0 00:31:33 Woke up and you were fine. That's what happened. You were good. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You Speaker 3 00:31:36 Were good. Yeah, exactly. It's Speaker 0 00:31:37 Fine. But if we were to buy you a drink, what would your drink be? Speaker 3 00:31:39 Now I'm kind of like bougie, but I like, uh, Moscow Mules Speaker 4 00:31:44 My favorite. Speaker 3 00:31:45 Okay. My favorite. Speaker 0 00:31:46 Give her, give her a, that's, that's Tyler's favorite. Like he has Speaker 4 00:31:50 Listen Speaker 0 00:31:50 A cup. He has a certain mug. I think we have picture of, I'm gonna have to pull up Speaker 4 00:31:54 My phone. Yeah. We had it, it got lost. Okay. In, uh, in a certain exchange. Speaker 0 00:31:59 Got lost in a breakup, but whatever. Yeah. He had, he had, how big was it? It Speaker 4 00:32:04 Made three Moscow Mules. Speaker 3 00:32:06 Oh my gosh. Speaker 0 00:32:09 Cup. Seriously. Green Cup. Speaker 4 00:32:09 Seriously. Took three cans of ginger beer and like a very, very heavy pour of vodka. Oh Speaker 3 00:32:14 My Speaker 4 00:32:15 God. And a pretty generous pour of lime juice. <laugh>. I I do lime juice. I don't do Axl limes, so. Oh, Speaker 0 00:32:21 Okay. Last Gum Mule. A lot of people do drink that down here. Speaker 3 00:32:24 Oh, I love 'em. I love em. I went to the Dodger game last week. Speaker 4 00:32:27 You have the, uh, Tennessee or the Kentucky Mule yet? Speaker 3 00:32:30 No, I Speaker 4 00:32:30 Have not. So Tennessee Mule's with Jack, uh, Kentucky Mule is with any bourbon. Like, you know, maker's Mark, uh, what's Jim Beam? Jim Beam, any of those guys is a Kentucky mill. You gotta get one while you're down here. Yeah. Speaker 0 00:32:44 So you're a Dodgers fan? Speaker 3 00:32:45 Oh yeah. Big Dodgers fan. Speaker 0 00:32:47 All right. So we're big baseball fans too. Oh Speaker 4 00:32:49 Yeah. So I'm a brave fan. Speaker 0 00:32:51 Tyler's a southern boy. He's a Braves fan. Yeah. I'm a New Yorker Die hard Yankees fan. And I am hoping, I don't think we're gonna get the Braves. I think they're still a little bit away. I'm hoping this Speaker 4 00:33:02 Trade deadline. Speaker 0 00:33:03 Well, the trade deadline's coming up. I'm hoping we get a shot at your Dodgers. I'm hoping Yankee, they're Speaker 3 00:33:08 Get the Speaker 4 00:33:08 Yankees. We got a Coachman over there. Fly the w i Speaker 0 00:33:11 I can't. How can you forget the Yankees in all 27 championships? Speaker 3 00:33:14 They're just poorest. Oh God. Here. Speaker 4 00:33:17 Not gonna lie. I'm not gonna lie. Seeing Ronald Una last year hit that grand slam off of, uh, what's his name? Burle? Y'all's pitcher. Oh, the rookie guy last year. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And winning the game off that Grand Slam. I don't care if that was the only game we won, that was the greatest thing of last year. Speaker 0 00:33:34 The Dodgers are really good. So you're big into sports. Speaker 3 00:33:36 Yeah, I mean, my dad is, so I just like go along with my dad. Speaker 0 00:33:40 Are you an LA Rams fan yet? No. Speaker 3 00:33:42 Is that No, no. I have not jumped on that bandwagon. Okay. No, no, no. But uh, but yeah, we went to the Dodger game and I got a Moscow Mule. It was like 25 bucks, but then you go to refill it, it's only $12. Okay, Speaker 0 00:33:53 So they cut you a deal on the refill? Yeah. Speaker 3 00:33:55 Yeah. But you, you get the cup too. So Speaker 0 00:33:57 It's like, how makes the cup, is it like a special Dodgers, like collectible Speaker 3 00:33:59 Cup? Yeah, it says like LA on it. La la Speaker 0 00:34:01 Dodgers la Speaker 4 00:34:03 Do you watch Letter Kinney? Speaker 3 00:34:04 No, I don't. Speaker 4 00:34:05 Okay. Speaker 0 00:34:06 No Speaker 4 00:34:07 Reference to Letter Kenny. It's Speaker 0 00:34:08 A, it's a, a Canadian show and they, they do, they do a little bit about La la the way they say LA and they're crazy Canadians. Did they say it that way? They no, Speaker 4 00:34:17 They say, they say that everybody that's been to LA pronounces it LA Speaker 0 00:34:21 Oh, they do like a drag hat. They're just crazy Canadian guys. But we, we like watching the show. Yeah. So, um, so big baseball girl. That's like your favorite sport. Speaker 3 00:34:29 Yeah, I mean I played soccer growing up. Okay. But to go and like watch a sport, it'd be baseball. Everything else is a little boring Speaker 0 00:34:34 To me. And Dodgers over Angels. Speaker 3 00:34:37 Oh yeah. Yeah. Dodgers Speaker 0 00:34:38 Over. Even with Mike Trout. You don't have any appreciate. You don't like Mike Speaker 3 00:34:40 Tr I think he's great. I think he's probably the best ball player out there. But I Dodgers fan Dodger games, they just get more rowdy so I have more fun. Yeah. Yeah. Speaker 0 00:34:50 <laugh>. Yeah. That's awesome. Now, um, well something else that we, that we've been the last couple episodes that we've recorded and then with, are you on Twitter at all? Speaker 3 00:34:59 Yes. I'm not, I'm more active on Instagram, but I am on Speaker 0 00:35:01 Twitter. Instagram. Yeah. That was your Twitter stuff. Is it more like, what's your Twitter handle? Cause Tyler's gonna, Speaker 4 00:35:06 This is the fun part. Speaker 3 00:35:07 It's, oh gosh. I am Sophie Lynn <laugh> and it's s o f i e. My parents wanted to be different. The pH, they just did not wanna do Speaker 0 00:35:16 That. Okay. That's another wrong being a little bit different. It stands out. There you go. Yeah. Speaker 4 00:35:20 I am Sophie Lynn. Oh gosh. Her, uh, oh God. Bio. I'm just a California girl. Gone country <laugh>. Right. All right. Let's see. Um, bunch of stuff. Speaker 3 00:35:32 It makes it sound so much more lame when you read that. I should change it. Speaker 0 00:35:36 It's just, no, that's just, just Cause he's, he's, he, he's a southern boy. He talks about, he says it a lot slower now. If I were to say it, I would say like just the California girl Gone country. Like it sounds a little bit more, you know, like, I put that, that was, I hit my microphone and stuff. Sorry. Tyler. Bad radio. <laugh>. Speaker 4 00:35:51 Hold up. Do you tweet a lot? Speaker 3 00:35:55 Not too much. Speaker 0 00:35:55 She said she's more active on Instagram. Okay. Speaker 4 00:35:57 Yeah. Let's see. Speaker 3 00:35:59 Put her's like hard find for me to navigate for some Speaker 0 00:36:02 Reason, because we've had some people on where they're, they're tweeting some wild things. Like it's like 3:00 AM on and they're out on Broadway. Oh yeah. Speaker 4 00:36:07 No, random. I love seeing dogs in the airport. Speaker 0 00:36:10 <laugh>. I love seeing dogs in the airport too. It's literally Speaker 3 00:36:12 The best thing. Speaker 0 00:36:13 I, there's a dog that comes into our bar, Uhhuh on Broadway. His name's Mr. Biggs. Oh. And he's like a little, little chubby. Um, is he a french bulldog? Tyler? Yeah. And he wears a big chain, like I gto like a big gold chain. And he just walks around. He wears like a little security shirt. Hold on. He just walks around seeing dogs. This Yeah. Speaker 3 00:36:32 I'm just, Brian's my day. Oh, that's great. I'm a boxer girl. I have like two boxers. Okay. Speaker 0 00:36:36 Oh, those can be pretty big dogs. What are their names? Speaker 3 00:36:39 Lola and Olive. Lola Speaker 4 00:36:41 And yeah. Okay, here we go. Here's some good ones. Uh, this is from January. Actually, my dentist just told me he's retiring now. Oh. Started crying. He's the only dentist I've ever known and I feel like I'm being dumped Speaker 0 00:36:52 <laugh>. Oh, very seriously. You wanna, you wanna shout out that dentist? Speaker 3 00:36:55 Yeah. Dr. Young. Dr. Short. Y'all are awesome. It was, that was the saddest day. I was literally like my mouth wide open crying. Speaker 0 00:37:04 <laugh> <laugh>. Speaker 4 00:37:05 All right. I just said, bless you to the lady who sneezed and she didn't even acknowledge me. I dk why that bothers me so much, but it does <laugh>. Speaker 0 00:37:14 Hey, it bother Speaker 3 00:37:14 Me. It does. Like, I'm trying to be nice to you when you're over here. Like you're the one who just sneezed all over the place here, Speaker 4 00:37:21 Camping on the snow to celebrate my 22nd year on this earth. Thank you for all those sweet birthday wishes at Idle Wind California. And there's an Instagram tag. Yes. There you. So that's how you celebrate your 22nd. There you go. Speaker 3 00:37:32 Yeah. I went camping in the snow that I always have Speaker 4 00:37:34 To do snow. But see that's thing about winter. Mine's February 10th and so like, I always do top golf Okay. In like four jackets, Speaker 3 00:37:41 You know? No, yeah, exactly. It's kind of a, a bummer. But camping in the snow was Speaker 0 00:37:46 Cool though. Being from the north, I'm January 23rd. I'm another, I'm another winter birthday. Yeah. And I've had blizzards on my birthday. Oh man. My 21st, I was in college and we just got, we just, we couldn't go anywhere. There was a foot of snow on the ground. School was closed. Like it was, it was rough. We were just in the dorm room. We just had a big ass party. That's funny. It was crazy that Where can people go to find ya? On, uh, on the socials and stuff? Speaker 3 00:38:05 Oh, they can find me. Um, at I am Sophie Lynn. Everything is under that, so it makes it a little easier. But s o f i e the f is a little Speaker 0 00:38:13 Bit. And you, and you recommend Instagram in terms of like news and interaction with fans and Speaker 3 00:38:17 Stuff? Yeah. Yeah. That or my website, Sophie lynn music uh, dot com. Awesome. Speaker 0 00:38:21 Yeah. All right, sweet. Yeah, we always wrap this up with, uh, with the guest playing a little number for Play, A little song. What do you wanna play for us today? Speaker 3 00:38:28 Cool. Um, I'll play rooting for you for now, Speaker 4 00:38:30 Right? Sweet. Yeah. Speaker 0 00:38:31 Awesome. Well, while you grab that guitar, do the little housekeeping quick. Tyler, there we go. Another episode in the books. Big thank you to Sophie Lynn for coming out all the way from California, having our first West Coast girl. And uh, yeah, it was awesome. A lot of fun. It was really cool. And uh, thank you for taking the time out of your busy schedule. These na this time in Nashville. So precious and so busy. Thanks for taking some time out, coming down to our studio and hanging out with us. Yeah. Speaker 2 00:38:55 Thank y'all for having Speaker 4 00:38:56 Me. So real quick, where can everybody find you on socials Speaker 2 00:38:59 At I am Sophie Lynn. Speaker 4 00:39:01 I am Sophie Lynn. Yes. There you go. And for us, it's in the Round podcast on Instagram, in the round, on Facebook. Just a wandering Tyler for myself and at Matt Bar on Instagram. Speaker 0 00:39:13 There we go. Now we're gonna let take it. We're gonna let Sophie Lynn take it away. Here is her new single. It's out right now on all the streaming sites. We dig it. Y'all are probably gonna dig it too. Here's Rooting For You by Sophie Lynn. Y'all have been listening to the In the Round Podcast. Speaker 2 00:39:33 Root for You Can Fall Asleep. The song came the.

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