Ian Guerin – “Irreplaceable”

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“Irreplaceable”, is the title of singer, songwriter, and producer’s Ian Guerin’s triumphant new album, however it also describes his irreplaceable velvet and passionate voice and the titanic talent belonging to its creator. Already celebrating several successful singles generated from the album including: “Cry”, UK Best R&B Soul Song of the Year, UK #1 single “Roll the Dice”, and “Free Time”, four time award winning U.K. #1 single, which was just released in the US.

Like a raging tsunami Ian Guerin vibrantly and authentically writes songs from the heart…or should I say the heartbreak. Carefully choosing his lyrics, Ian sings from his soul. His R&B romantic touch defines his style and celebrates his destiny. His candid honesty goes beyond all smoke and mirrors. He tells the truth no matter how much it hurts.

What inspired your album?

What started the album was a series of unfortunate events, and I’m not trying to quote the movie when I say that. It really was like that. I had a first album come out in 2012 called “Madsexy”, and it was a pop album. That didn’t go so well because I wasn’t so into pop when I first started so I started recording R&B songs for girls that I dated. I didn’t have any money, so I gifted the songs to them. They didn’t really appreciate it because I was in music, so they thought it wasn’t very hard for me to do, they expected something better.

And you gave them your songs from your heart….didn’t you?

Yeah, I did. I never saw a reaction of “oh I really like this” or “I really appreciate it”. It was never like that. So I started thinking. The songs that I write for them are the songs that I really like to sing. I had an advisor back then who is a close friend of mine from LA and he told me if I was going to cross over that now was the time to do it. He thought I should put out an album that really reflects who I am. In the videos that I made for the pop music I was in sneakers and all that, something that I would never do, I wasn’t comfortable. So I started thinking about that and I had had a few unfortunate experiences with some of the girls that I dated. I wrote songs to gift to them but then I also wrote songs about how I felt after they dumped me. They all did. I never left because of me, or because I wanted to. 

You’re dating the wrong girls.

I know, my sister tells me that all the time. She says I need someone with a lot more spice. So I took out those demos and listened to them and discovered that the songs that I had written after the break ups were actually pretty good. I started dissecting them. I started taking the parts that worked. I figured that although the songs might not work for an album some of the parts do. So I created the first song which was, “Cry.” I pieced it out from a series of songs that I didn’t use previously and it turned out to be pretty good. People liked it a lot. The next few songs just came about when I remembered what I had gone through. I started writing about all of those experiences. I always say that “Irreplaceable” is like a cleansing experience. It opened the door for the next albums that I will put out. The next albums will be from a fresher, happier perspective, but I have to get all the shit out first.

I get it and sometimes that makes for the best songs because they are authentic.

I tell the stories from beginning to end and if you read the lyrics you’ll find out that there are no bridges that repeat themselves except for one or two songs. It’s more than a letter to them, they are all the stories that happened. I have a lot of issues communicating this during the show. I talk a lot. I usually only have 30 to 40 minutes to do my set and then I talk a lot in between. So if people are at a festival and they aren’t really that connected they don’t get why that guy up there keeps talking for five minutes instead of singing. I like to tell the story.

When did you start singing and writing songs?

My dad says I was singing the national anthem from the time I was six months old. But that doesn’t count. Officially I remember I was singing karaoke and my Aunt thought I was pretty good. That was when I was about eight or nine. She decided to gift me some studio hours. She told me to choose some karaoke songs so that I could record them but she didn’t tell me where she was taking me. So she took me to the studio and that’s when I started recording. I did some covers, and then I sang the covers for a while. Then I started writing songs at about 14. I remember the first song I wrote and it was called “How Can I Explain”, and I still have the words. But that song really sucked. Then there was another one that didn’t suck as much called, “Tired of Waiting”, because I liked this girl in elementary school. Her name was Erica. I remember and I was tired of waiting for her but I never really told her that I liked her. That’s how I started writing. I started polishing my writing right before the debut single which really has bad lyrics but the hook is good so nobody cares. I polished my songs when I met my head producer. Now I write plenty of songs. My motto is “if I can’t remember it by the next morning then it’s not useful.”

If you could have your ultimate stage fantasy what would you want to happen?

Do you want the big crowd answer?

It’s your fantasy….

No one has asked me that before. I do have one, and I think about it every time that I rehearse. My fantasy would be that all of the girls who dumped me and didn’t like me because they thought I was going nowhere…. it was hard to introduce myself and to say I want to be an R&B star…. they don’t really listen to R&B in Mexico….. when I say R&B some people have even told me, “I don’t know that band”…. 

Did you ever try singing in Spanish?

I don’t like my voice in Spanish. I did a song last year for a movie and it turned out very good, but I still don’t like my voice in Spanish. Even when I talk I think it’s horrible.

You are so funny and you don’t even know it….so continue with the fantasy….

To playing in an established arena, in my mind the O2 Arena because that’s the one that I liked best, and have all the girls who dumped me because they thought I was going nowhere, all there watching me, and having to have bought their ticket to come and see me. That would be my ultimate fantasy. 

If you could say anything to your fans and followers, what would that be?

This is going to sound so Hollywood, but I was watching a Michael Jackson video last night and he was saying believe in yourself. He was talking about how people made fun of Henry Ford and the Wright Brothers, and Walt Disney. They told him that he would be nobody because he was a college dropout. I am a college drop out too. I’m a white, R&B, Mexican born singer, singing in English, and I know that the demographic I’m trying to reach is hard. I do appreciate the market for having opened the doors to me. So, what I would tell them is to believe in themselves because no one is going to believe in you if you don’t believe in yourself. That’s something that I learned the hard way. I didn’t believe in myself at first. I think that people like to bring you down sometimes and they don’t really rejoice in your success. I would also tell them not to reveal their plans until they are actually happening. I would also tell them to remember when they get their hearts broken there will be someone else, and it will be better. This is like trying to look for a quote like Mariah Carey quotes, she is such an inspirational person. I love to hear her speak. I would tell them to “find their inner peace and to find their inner self or their higher self. If they are connected with their higher selves than everything else will flow smoothly.”

There it is.

That’s the quote? 

That’s the quote …..

Follow Ian Guerin on the web:

Ian Guerin Album “Irreplaceable” Streaming

Twitter @IAmIanGuerin

Instagram 

Facebook 

Reverbnation  

Photos: Courtesy of Ian Guerin

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