Devon Elijah releases debut track, “Apply,” about living the single life

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​The single life is something that can be fun but sometimes tough to navigate, and singer/songwriter Devon Elijah has now released his debut track, “Apply,” which he says is something anyone who has been on the dating market can relate to.

“Everyone is single at some point, and there’s no desperate need to try to cling onto anyone and just enjoy that,” says Devon. “But at the same time, if you are looking for someone, don’t be afraid to stand on your morals and say what you want. Closed mouths don’t get fed, and if you aren’t specific, anything can fall in your way, and that’s not ideal.”

“Apply” is about Devon proclaiming what he wants for a potential partner, and just having fun with it. The track has a steady drum beat throughout, which is overlapped by the piano and the powerful vocals that he provides.

“This is a song where people can listen, feel something, and relate to it just as much,” he says.

Devon says everyone goes through trials and tribulations throughout life, and hearing someone sing about it might just help them figure out a way to cope or carry on.

He sings, “I don’t really want too much
Just somebody I can trust
Talk to on a daily basis
Because they realize I’m the shit.”

“I want people to find strength when they listen to my music,” he says. “I hope people find the ability to be vulnerable and people get in touch with their emotions overall. I hope my music helps and makes people feel less alone, and is something that people can look forward to.”

Devon was born in the rural south of North Carolina, and he explained that he has been performing and singing all his life. He started singing in the church when he was five years old in the choir, and then when he was in fourth grade, he played Ebenezer Scrooge in “A Christmas Carol.” This was when he knew he wanted to be a performer.

After being on a modeling troupe, dance team, step team, show choir, and performing in musicals in middle and high school, he started writing his own music at the age of 17. Devon moved to California to search for inspiration, sounds, and connections before going back to North Carolina where he realized how much he had to offer.

Devon’s vocals have been featured on a track called “Personal” by Starvidence, as well as “Perfect” by Deuce Maxwell, but “Apply” is the start of his solo career. He released the track in October 2024 and says that this was a piece of music he had been working on for years. Devon explains that while singing at one of his favorite bars, musician Alex Herring approached him to work with him on making music.

“He believed in me and I thought it would be a great opportunity, so we got going and started working on the music,” Devon says. “We’ve worked on ‘Apply’ and still have so much more great music to come out.”

Devon describes his work with Herring as “chaos” when it comes to putting together a track. He explained that he comes from a rock background, and Devon comes from several musical backgrounds including pop, gospel, rap, and R&B as well as Japanese, Korean, and Spanish, but they both have a classical root that ties them together.

“We go into the studio, and I already have an idea of what I want the beat to be, so I just start beating on a table and humming,” he says. “Alex is at the computer while I am at the microphone, and we just work together.”

The lyrics were written about four years ago but were always sung in an a cappella format. With Herring, they put their heads together and made something they were both proud of.

“We created something a little more obscure and subdued as far as a beat, so we could showcase my vocals a bit more since it was my first song,” he explained. “I’m particularly proud of having the courage to put the track out.”

Many people make music that never sees the light of day, but something within Devon kept him pushing until he was satisfied with what he heard.

“It was a perfect fit, and time to release it, and myself, into the world,” he says.

Devon says making music is a cathartic outlet, and that there is “power of the tongue and a sense of release.”

Devon has another song called “Baby,” which is nearly finished and should be released in the coming months as well as a re-release of the tracks "Who I Am" and "It's Dark" with rapper Youssef "YoYo" Kobach. He is also working with Herring on this track, as well as several others that will be on an EP coming this summer.

“This is something that I have been working diligently on the past couple of years,” Devon says. “I have had a lot of change and growth, so with the music that is coming it has changed while I have changed. There’s a lot of that but initially, it is just me and a microphone wanting to express myself.”

Be sure to check out “Apply” and keep up with Devon Elijah’s musical journey, available on all platforms.

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Larry & Alasdair’s Rockaway brings a lot of soft rock candy in new album Southern Border

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When Larry Rifkin, 72, talks about the band Rockaway — his collaboration with Alasdair MacKenzie, 27 — and the album they just released, Southern Border, it almost sounds like he’s about to tell a joke that begins, “This old guy and a young kid walk into a studio and … .”

Except what comes after the “and” is not a punchline but 14 tracks plus a bonus song of great rock in such variety that it is impossible to pick one to tease the album.

No punchline, but Larry will joke.

“I think the 27-year-old and the 72-year-old getting together — if Alasdair were on this call, he’d say, ‘I love the music because it’s what my father used to listen to.’”

At another point, he gets to the heart of the collaboration.

“Here you’ve got a 72-year-old guy writing these songs, but he’s got this incredible producer and multi-instrumentalist who fronts a lot of the songs. He’s got a beautiful voice.”

One possible choice of a representative song was “Did I Make You Up,” a rocking little love song dedicated to his wife, Carmelita. Larry wrote what might be one of the sweetest love songs you ever heard and composed music in which the lyrics fly joyfully instead of drowning in syrup.

From the chorus:

Tell me this is not all a dream
Did I make you up
Did I make you up
Tell me this is really what it seems

Alasdair sings this one, as he does most of the songs. Larry has a good voice, but Alasdair has THE voice.

Larry is not just some old guy who, in retirement, decided to try songwriting and singing. He is, for instance, the man who got Barney to PBS and took a singing purple dinosaur viral before viral or the Internet were things. He did essentially the same for women’s basketball with his home state University of Connecticut team as the vehicle.

For most of his life, he has played in bands, and he still plays in one called BOOM, for Band Of Old Men.

Alasdair is a graduate of Harvard in politics, but music is in his blood. He is a member of a Boston band called Hush Club, “a brilliant” musical engineer and producer who works with a lot of writers, said Larry.

“We are both drummers as our primary instrument. I can play some keys, but he can play everything. I love working with this young man. He’s just amazing. That’s why the sound, I think, is so bright.”

They collaborate mainly by email.

“I send him demos, recorded at Ace Tone Studios in a nearby town, and he can tell what I’m looking for, particularly rhythmically, by the bass lines of my keyboard playing.” Larry sends the chords and lyrics and then the back and forth of the collaboration begins.

Larry has another album out, It’s Not My Circus, released in January 2024. It is still getting a lot of play on the college music circuit through Pirate, a radio marketing company in Boston.

Writing music was one item on the list of things he wanted to do in retirement. He had to learn a melodic instrument — something other than drums — in order to compose and chose keyboards. His father, who died young, wrote music but Larry never heard it because it was never recorded.

So, for his music, he found Matt Terribile at Ace Tone Studios and recorded some demos, in case the grandkids “ever wanted to know what was grandpa thinking.”

But “I can’t leave well enough alone. I kept doing that and posted some of the demos.”

His daughter, Leora, and her husband, Peter, aided and abetted by finding Alasdair, who produced one of the songs on the first album.

“He did a great job, and then he and I just started recording.”

Southern Border’s 15 songs are so diverse in content, subject matter and music that no one song can represent it, except in quality.

Even when the subject matter is the same, the treatment is different, as in “Suite for Carmelita.” Larry, to talk about “Did I Make You Up,” can only get to it by talking about the other two songs in the suite,” “Old Love” and “The One Promise.”

“Old Love” is about the magic of growing old together. “The One Promise” came out of a period of medical issues he endured early in 2024, and which he went through this year thanks to his wife's great care and support.

“And I said, ‘If I don’t get one good love song out of this, then what was it worth?’ So, the idea was, when you’re ill you make a lot of promises to yourself.”

Like, eating better, meditating, “I’m going to do this, I’m going to do that.”

“That was the concept. Okay, you make all these bargains, then you break ’em all, except the one promise that I plan to keep is loving you.”

This song is acoustic, soft and slow but playful and upbeat.

And, for the record, he only got to that discussion after a detour through another sort of love song, “If I Say I Love You.”

“It’s a question about, what is love, right? I mean existentially. What does it mean to say ‘I love you,’ and does it have any consequence? I mean, people throw it around all the time, and two weeks later they don’t know each other. You know what I mean?”

The existential answer would seem to be “Suite for Carmelita.”

And then there’s “Four Cars,” a meditative piece about a four-car funeral procession he saw once, the only sad song on the album. It is so beautiful and thoughtful, it might make you cry.

Larry’s favorites are the political and social satire, like “What’s Wrong With Everyone,” “Over the Wall,” “Life of the Party,” and the title track, “Southern Border.”

Musically, lyrically, this album has a lot of delicious listening in a lot of different flavors.

Taste for yourself. Connect to Rockaway on these platforms for new music.

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Amazon Music
Apple Music 
SoundCloud
Spotify

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