XOXOK performsย in the Downtown Raleigh Alliance’s Virtual First Friday seriesย at 6:00 p.m. this Friday, July 3.ย The event also featuresย Ayanna Albertson (read our feature),ย Kamara Thomas, INDY photographer Jade Wilson, and others.ย  ย 

โ€œIt wants to go somewhere,โ€ Gerald Moshell told NPR in 2017. โ€œIt wants to settle either here, or [there]. You donโ€™t know where itโ€™ll go, but it canโ€™t stop where it is.โ€ย 

Moshell was talking about the tritone, the famously unsettling โ€œdevilโ€™s interval,โ€ which 29-year-old Carrboro musician Keenan Jenkins deploys to devastating double effect in โ€œRight On,โ€ a turning point for his atmospheric soul project XOXOK.ย 

The spaces between those three whole tones are like the spaces between the murders of Black men by the stateโ€”regular and terrible and inexorable. Moshell was talking about musicology, but he might have been describing the state of the nation, as well.

When we premiered โ€œRight On,โ€ I pegged it as the best local song of the year and wanted to learn more about it. Jenkins wrote it in 2016, after the death of Philando Castile. It took him four years to record and release itโ€”on May 20, five days before the death of George Floyd. But thereโ€™s no such thing as prescience when an injustice is evergreen. The devilโ€™s interval, indeed.

INDY: Walk me back to when you created โ€œRight On.โ€

KEENAN JENKINS: It was a long process. Iโ€™m not a โ€œsit down in one session, write a songโ€ kind of guy. I really wish I was. That would be very convenient.

The lyrics came first, after Philando Castile was killed in 2016. That happened the day after I defended my dissertation [at UNC]. A week or two later, I was driving to the gym on campus and listening to a podcast, NPRโ€™s Code Switch, where they talk about race. They had an episode where they said, โ€œWeโ€™re paid to talk about this stuff, but we have no words right now.โ€

Every time one of these shootings happened Iโ€™d think, man, that could be me, which was awful enough. But for some reason, that day, I thought, wow, that could be my dad next, and I just pulled over to the side of the road and started bawling. I donโ€™t know why I thought about my dad. Thatโ€™s where the song came fromโ€”that moment and thought process, along with the fact that Iโ€™d just gotten my PhD, and people might think Iโ€™m protected from this stuff, but Iโ€™m not.

The music itself, part of it came from learning about music theory. I was learning about tritones, which is a very jarring sound. Iโ€™d learned about them and forgotten many times before, so I said, Iโ€™m going to learn about them again and put them in a song where I can remember. The song is nice and melodic until it gets to that part where I say, โ€œJust โ€˜cause Iโ€™ve got a PhD donโ€™t mean they wonโ€™t light me right on up,โ€ and thatโ€™s where I put that jarring tritone.

โ€œRight Onโ€ sounds a lot different from your debut EP, Worthy.

Thatโ€™s very intentional. Worthy was the stuff Iโ€™d been thinking about since college. I implemented that vision and Iโ€™m proud of it, and now I donโ€™t want to do it again. It was very wandering stuff that might not have a hook or a bridge. I said, let me see if I can do this thing other people are doing, writing a song with a verse and a chorus, how about that? On Worthy, I was trying to show off my guitar-ing and theory. Iโ€™m not a shredder, but I was proud of all the things I could do on the guitar. I tried to make โ€œRight Onโ€ less guitar-centric, focused more on the lyrics and feeling of the song.

Tell me about the timing of the release of โ€œRight On.โ€

I wanted to put out something a year after Worthy and didnโ€™t have enough material ready to record a full album yet. But I had a couple of singles. A few people have said to me, oh, how prescient that you released it this time. And I just want to respond to them like, nope, not really. I could have released this at any time, and it would have been a relevant song. I so desperately wish that it was outdated. It feels selfish to think about my song being attached to these events. Every single one of these shootings adds another layer of stress for me and most or all people of color.

Iโ€™m leery of creating the impression that โ€œRight Onโ€ is a protest song or some kind of pedagogy for white people. Itโ€™s also so personal and bottles that experience you had, driving down the road, thinking of your dad.

It definitely is a very personal song. I think the reason it resonates is that either people can relate to the fear that they or someone they love could be next, orโ€”white people specifically who talk to me about it, itโ€™s not like theyโ€™re texting that they didnโ€™t know racism exists, but maybe they feel more like this wouldnโ€™t happen to their friend. Itโ€™s a reminder, to both myself and people who see me as their friend: George Floyd was someoneโ€™s friend. Philando Castile was someoneโ€™s friend. I hope that is what resonates beyond the personal feeling for me.

Whatโ€™s next?

โ€œRight Onโ€ is the most explicit song Iโ€™ve released, and not because of the F word, but because Iโ€™m not really cloaking things in metaphor, which is a little scary. I usually donโ€™t even talk about what my songs are about. This has given me a bit of encouragement to continue doing that, to not cloak things in metaphor so much. Itโ€™s been encouraging to know I can do that and still make a good song. I have a second single Iโ€™d planned to release in a couple of weeks, but you know, Iโ€™m reading the roomโ€”the room being America.

This interview originally appeared in longer formย on the blog Moistworks.


Follow Interim Editor in Chief Brian Howe on Twitter or send an email to [email protected].ย 

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