When Lucy Dacus dropped out of film school, she figured she might as well record an album. She was convinced by her now-guitar player Jacob Blizzard, who needed to turn in a music project for school.
Story by Rachel Rascoe
Photo by Jesus Acosta
Since then, Dacus’ debut record “No Burden” has been heard by more than her band-mate’s professors, and was recently reissued on Matador Records.
The Richmond-based singer’s Southern-infused pop tells tales of growing up, brought into retrospective maturity by her soulful vocals. The album looks back on middle school and emerging youthful femininity, singing on the second track “Troublemaker Doppelgänger,” “she grew up as the pretty young thing / Let them look up her skirt on the backyard swing…. I can understand how a girl gets bored / Too old to play and too young to mess around.”
After leaving Virginia Commonwealth University, Dacus worked a 9 to 5 job at a photography lab, where she “actually really loved it”. She spent her time listening to music and podcasts while editing yearbook pictures. The singer-songwriter also took a trip to Europe during her break between school and the release of her album, where she found “this unified opinion that American academia is a total joke.”
The 21-year-old will return to Europe this fall to go on tour with her band. ORANGE sat down with Dacus at Austin City Limits, the day after her festival performance.
When did you first start writing music?
Guitar came in like seventh grade because I went to a church camp and our bunk leader could play guitar, and I thought she was basically the shit. I was like, ‘I want to be cool and play guitar like that person.’ I just got one off eBay for $100 and looked up chords on the computer.
Now I play in a different tuning than standard, and I don’t really know chords. I haven’t really learned music theory. It’s not a strong suit.
When you were doing solo stuff early on, were there any artists that you tried to embody?
The only person that I can directly say that I know influenced me was Shakey Graves, and we’re in Austin so I guess everyone loves Shakey Graves here.
I think he influenced me just because he’s solo and was doing the one man band thing, and I didn’t have a band. He also plays in the alternate tuning that I play in, so I just devoured all of his YouTube videos and watched what chord shapes he was making. His songwriting is super rich, like the lyrics are super good. The storytelling is awesome.