Product DescriptionFrom the opening blast of high-voltage guitar on Someone Else s Problem the lead-off track on Corey Tut s debut album Everything the NYC-based singer, guitarist, and songwriter announces himself as a serious triple threat. Brimming with pop melodies, driving modern rock guitar hooks, and punk energy, Everything has, well, everything from powerful, chugging rockers ( Right Where You Belong, Keeping Up With the Jones )to buoyant pop/punk ( So What ) to brooding power ballads ( Everything, Way Back Home ) to melancholic acoustic-driven numbers ( Wayside, Not Leaving ). From start to finish, the album is a showcase for Tut s range and versatility as a songwriter, not to mention his caramel baritone and million-downstrokes-a-minute guitar work. I love the energy of punk, but I also love a melody, Tut says. I love a good hook. First and foremost, I m a singer, so I like a good melody behind me. Born in Champaign, Illinois, Tut developed a craving for music growing up as a military brat in Texas. He spent time shuttling around the state before landing in Fort Hood where his stepfather was posted with the Army. There was nothing to do there but fight off the snakes and lizards, Tut says. I had an AM radio so I was just kind of glued to that until I was about 14. It was a very strict household, very military. He found his escape by writing songs on his grandmother s piano, which he taught himself to play. Then 10 years ago I picked up a guitar and that totally changed everything. Tut says. By that time, his family had moved back to rural Illinois and Tut decided he needed to get out of the Midwest. Living in a town that s totally surrounded by cornfields with cows grazing outside my window, I just had to get out. He visited New York and fell in love with the city s energy and vibrancy. He decided to stay and found himself an apartment in Manhattan s rough-and-tumble Hell s Kitchen neighborhood. New York felt like freedom to me, Tut says. I never felt like I fit in growing up, and here was a place I could lay down some roots and become me. It was very exciting. The freedom had a transformative effect on his songwriting. Tut kicked around the city s rock and punk clubs, like CBGB and Coney Island High, soaking in the music and performing his own stuff. Then a few years ago, I went through a major upheaval. I had to shed everything and start from scratch. That s what Everything is about. I just felt like I needed to get rid of the negative stuff that was around me. Writing the songs on the album was a very cathartic process. Indeed, lyrically, Everything comes across, in large part, as a giant kiss-off to ex friends, ex lovers, and ex business associates. The lyrics are volatile, agitated, with an impassioned vocal delivery to match. My songs definitely come directly from my life, Tut admits. And the people they re about generally know who they are. I m better writing down my feelings as opposed to verbalizing them. That s how I get my sh*t out, by writing songs. To help him achieve his sonic vision for the album, Tut turned to the Brooklyn-based production team Super Buddha Barb Morrison and Charles Nieland, songwriter/musicians turned producers who ve worked with Deborah Harry, Rufus Wainwright, and the Scissor Sisters. They just immediately got it, Tut says. It was like they could read my mind. They really brought a lot of the album s pop sheen and were hugely instrumental in my not being afraid of the word pop . Everything is Tut s calling card as a studio artist, but his heart really lies with performing live. I wanted to make a big rock record which would allow me to take the crowd on an emotional journey, and I did." Tut says with a laugh.