Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Neriah bares her soul with new EP

- By Holly Alvarado halvarado@scng.com

If writing on heartache is Neriah's superpower, then falling in love is her kryptonite.

For the Los Angeles-born and raised pop artist, every song is heartfelt from beginning to end, meticulous­ly detailing every ounce of despair and what she sees as the toxic motives of various ex-boyfriends who've only made her stronger. In turn, she's created a compelling repertoire that's relatable for anyone who's faced the messy turbulence, yet divine interventi­on, of a breakup.

At age 5, Neriah wrote her first song, “The Wishing Well,” after the unexpected divorce of her parents. Her father had painted a portrait of Neriah and her sister sitting in front of a wishing well, which inspired her first songwritin­g effort.

She was raised between Brentwood and Malibu, and cruising down Pacific Coast Highway most evenings was Neriah's safe haven, allowing her to sing — with streams of tears and occasional screams — as she molded those pivotal stories that would become her third and latest EP, “No One Cries Forever,” which drops today.

“It's such a special collection of songs because the idea that no one cries forever during a breakup is true,” she shared during a recent phone interview. “I've had exes in the past where I thought it would take me years to get over. And (one) ex, whom I mostly write everything about, took me almost 2 1/2 years, and it was this constant feeling of, am I ever going to be over him? Am I still going to miss him or the little things that reminded me of him? So this project was, for me, the first time I thought, wow, I'm over it, I'm done. It was a sense of closure that I never got in my relationsh­ip, which is nice to find that in music. I never felt that before.”

Neriah shared that she really had no intention of creating a project like “No One Cries Forever.” Every song on the EP shifts sonically and emotionall­y. For almost a year and a half, the now-23-year-old pop singer would write two to three songs daily, detailing the tropes of longing for someone you know you shouldn't want but still do anyway. With a stack of songs, Neriah wanted to ensure that fans felt like they were picking out a page from a personal diary as the conversati­onal verses flowed throughout.

“What's interestin­g about the EP for me is that it goes into different sounds,” she said. “I think this project is a showcase of all the varieties and all the different sounds in order for me to find my sound and who I am.”

In real time, Neriah was healing while writing, confessing that crying her eyes out was always a timely thing as she wrote. The pop rock anthem “Shoulda, Coulda, Didn't” is something she notes as an emotional release. With the melodramat­ic ballad “Blockbuste­r,” she flips the loneliness into resilience, which begins to shine midway through the EP.

“I think that's what's so beautiful about it,” she said. “Even through all the pain I was feeling, the songs take a new meaning in all the different forms, from writing it to listening to it while I'm crying to performing. It can really just take this whole other meaning, or it's about someone else now, and many times while performing the songs, it gives me that sense of closure. You really are getting a piece of my journal. It's vulnerable, but that's where the best music comes from. I think everyone can learn from each other, and I love that I get to do that for everyone listening.”

Now, Neriah is moving on to bigger things. With the release of the EP, she's looking forward to releasing her debut studio album next. The forthcomin­g 24-track record subconscio­usly became a letter to her past self about realizing that sometimes solitude is more important than staying in something you're just not happy in. As with the EP, the intention of the new album is to take listeners through a story. She wants fans to know that no matter where you are in the healing journey, no one truly cries forever, and there's comfort in that.

“I promise to everyone listening and wanting that support, you will move on,” she said. “I know what it's like to wake up every morning and still think about this person and constantly be reminded about them, but one day, you will. I appreciate all my exes because you learn so much in every relationsh­ip. It takes you being with the wrong people multiple times to realize what you do want in someone and how to find the right person. That's what I found through my music.”

— Neriah

 ?? COURTESY OF MAXINE BOWEN ?? Los Angeles product Neriah sings about relationsh­ips on her latest EP, “No One Cries Forever,” which drops today.
COURTESY OF MAXINE BOWEN Los Angeles product Neriah sings about relationsh­ips on her latest EP, “No One Cries Forever,” which drops today.

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