6/11/2024

Model Child shares final single "Hard Enough" ahead of new LP 'Get There!' due June 21

Model Child shares final single "Hard Enough" ahead of new LP Get There! due June 21
 

STREAM: "Hard Enough" -
YouTube / Spotify

 

At his day job, Danny Parker is a pop songwriter who has worked with some absolute legends - Kylie Minogue, Britney Spears, Nick Jonas, Shawn Mendes, Jessie Ware, etc. but his real passion lies in his dance pop project Model Child. His second album as Model Child is called Get There! and it's out June 21 on Pop Can Records. Today he shares the final single before the album is released, "Hard Enough." Parker gives some background on an unfortunate event that sparked the idea for this song:

"Just a few days before the ten-day stretch of sessions for Get There!, I took molly and a bit of mushrooms on Halloween night. I was out until sunrise and got into some late night NYC debauchery. A couple days later, my immune system was like, “Umm, no. Absolutely not - I’m not letting you get away with this one.” I got really sick and felt awful for at least the first five days of the sessions. “Hard Enough” is about pushing your limits and riding a feeling as long and as far as it’ll take you. It’s about the rush of being on a big wave and never wanting to come down, even though, inevitably, you always do." -Danny Parker

Back in college, Danny Parker—a.k.a. the L.A.-based art pop act Model Child—experienced a bad acid trip that eventually saved his life. “I had a full break with reality,” he remembers now, describing the ordeal, which took place at a music festival in Florida. “I sort of didn’t come out of the trip.” 

At that time, Parker had been dealing with the accumulated effects of a confusing and challenging adolescence, growing up queer in the paranoid suburban area of Herndon, Virginia, which is awash in the tide of various government agencies located nearby. “A lot of the people who live there are a part of the military industrial complex,” he explains. “I remember we’d be eating dinner, the doorbell would ring, and it would be somebody from, like, the CIA.”

But music was a constant through all that—a stabilizing force in a turbulent environment. And even while having trouble fitting into the larger schooling system, Parker’s innate ability to pick up any instrument grabbed the attention of teachers and friends, who pushed him to keep going. “I think I really needed that when I was a kid,” he says. So when he was back at home, recovering with the help of doctors from his break from reality, it was clear what else he needed to come back through to the other side.

“Music was this beacon of light,” he says. “It was very healing to be able to process through songwriting, and just emotionally understand what happened.” The Model Child sound—a punk-art rock-indie-electronic smorgasbord just as likely to draw the ears of fans of Talking Heads as Fischerspooner—has been in the works ever since, rolling up various sounds, styles, and inspirations like a Katamari ball, bringing Parker deep into the belly of the music-industry machine and back out again. 

That process began in his early twenties, when he was recruited by a former bandmate to contribute as a songwriter for hire in the pop-music realm. Parker studied the art of the Top 40, learning to be a “capital-S songwriter,” and picked it up quickly, as he always has. That led to a hit—which led to another hit, and another after that. Soon, Parker became an in-demand industry collaborator, co-writing songs from some of the biggest names in music, from Shawn Mendes (“Stitches”) to Jessie Ware (“What’s Your Pleasure?”) to Pussy Riot (“Plaything”).

Parker says his work in that world “sharpened my tools,” as he put it, but it’s a different mindset from what Model Child is—which is an embrace of his “relationship to music outside of this goal of writing a hit song.” Not that earworm Model Child tracks like “My Queer Teenage Anthem” and “Drain Me,” the latter from the 2020 debut Dropout, aren’t indie hits of their own—or that music from Get There! isn’t certifiably club-ready. It’s just that Model Child is all of that—from the mainstream to the obscure—together. 

“There are so many reasons to listen to music, to play music, to see music being performed,” Parker says. “Having this project has been a way to come back to my deeper relationship to the artform itself.”

The music of Get There!—big, booming dance-rock anthems that feel designed for opening up a house party—actually started as an experiment in staving off loneliness. It was late 2021, and Parker was living in New York City, craving the kind of human contact that had become so precarious at that time. So he decided to will the desire into existence: “I went into it wanting to make danceable songs,” he says. “Something extroverted, kinetic, active.”

It was also the experiment of making art in a pressure cooker. Working with producer Rusty Santos (Animal Collective, Jackie Mendoza), Parker wrote and recorded most of the material “on the fly.” “The record was really in the spirit of trying to capture a moment and not to overthink anything,” he says. The result is an album overflowing with songs that will get stuck in your head immediately, but will draw out new nuanced details on repeated listens. 

On “Headlights,” a blistering semi-truck of a rock song that’s as much early Phoenix as it is the Strokes, Parker taps into the feelings of being blinded by the high-beams of someone on crash course toward you; on “Overdrive,” he creates an eerie, delicate scene that builds into the sort of musical euphoria that speaks to Parker’s own salvation in music: “This beat might save your life tonight,” he sings, “Let’s kick it into overdrive.” 

The record’s title—Get There!—is a playful nod to the push-push mindset of the city it was created in, New York, and the country at large, wanting it to signify an image of movement and energy. But in typical Model Child fashion, it’s also a subversion of that idea just the same, poking fun at the silliness of the self-imposed chaos of our lives—of the idea that a better life is always “just around the corner,” as Parker says. 

“On the subway, it’s like, everyone’s going somewhere,” Parker laughs. “Where are we going?” There’s only one “there” he wants to go with you: “Getting to a place outside of yourself.”

TOUR DATES

6/29 Los Angeles, CA - Permanent Roadhouse (Album Release show!)

 

Model Child
Get There!
(Pop Can)
Street Date: June 21, 2024

Track List:

Tough Guys
Joy Rider
Overdrive
Hard Enough
Headlights
My Angel
In Your Blood
Shine a Light

Hotter and Hotter

MODEL CHILD LINKS:

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Bandcamp
Soundcloud
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