Americana Storyteller Emmett Jerome Balances Light and Darkness on Wistful New Track "Pretty Pieces"
With a voice steeped in truth and a heart wired for raw expression, Emmett Jerome unveils "Pretty Pieces," a wistful, stripped-back meditation on love lost and the latest single to be shared from his upcoming It Ain't Me LP, out October 22nd via Light Organ Records. Rooted in folk and Americana but tinted with the heavier essence of 90’s grunge, the song captures the helplessness of watching a relationship dissolve in real time – each shard of heartbreak slipping away like "all the best parts" of life itself.
"This is my heartbreak song for this batch of work," says Jerome. "It's got a darker, more wistful tone than the others. It draws on the experience of having a relationship break apart before your very eyes – you feel helpless as the pieces slip through your fingers."
Written in a single sitting in his living room, the song poured out in less than 10 minutes – a rare, almost urgent moment of inspiration. Jerome cites Alice In Chains' MTV Unplugged session and Chris Cornell's late-career acoustic work as guiding influences, filtering their raw intensity through his own folk and country sensibilities.
Stream + share "Pretty Pieces" now: https://ffm.to/prettypieces
For Jerome, the song feels like both a catharsis and a homecoming. "I love how everything unfolds for the listener – I tried to tie together contrasting shades of light and dark and I think it makes for a really dynamic story," he explains. "The verses are light in their descriptions of love and union, but this sensation is immediately severed when the chorus hits and the listener is reminded that that person is 'walking out the door.'"
Recorded live off the floor with the full band, "Pretty Pieces" preserves the organic push-and-pull of musicians reacting in real time. Guitarist Scott Smith joined Jerome for improvised electric overdubs, captured on an old analog tape machine that infuses the track's climax with a timeless, psychedelic edge.