singer
R&B vocalist Sevyn Streeter was enlisted by Mary J. Blige to perform at The Strength of a Woman Festival and Summit in Atlanta this past weekend. The show took place at The Tabernacle on Friday night, where she performed alongside Kiana Lede, Rubi Rose, Emotional Oranges and more.
In 2021, Sevyn released second album Drunken Wordz, Sober Thoughtz. On this project, she exercises a great amount of transparency and gives some insight on where sheβs been these past few years. It has its introspective moments on songs like βFall Backβ where she speaks directly to the other half of a toxic relationship that is coming to an end. Then, thereβs songs like βWet Dreamzβ featuring singer Jeremih and βChange My Mindβ where Sevyn shows off her naughty side while delivering addictive harmonies.
The album is the perfect balance between sweet and sour and perfectly encapsulates how the singer has grown musically and personally.
The catchy melodies and flawless vocals are what draws people in to the world of Sevyn, but it’s her duality that hooks you. And at the end of the day, Sevyn is just like us. She, too, has her fair share of problems and emotions to sort through. The only difference is that she used those emotions to create one of the best projects of the year.
We spoke with Sevyn to discuss the inspiration behind the album, touring and what it’s like working in the studio with music industry vet Jermaine Dupri.
The Knockturnal: How have you been?
Sevyn: Iβve been amazing and in a good space, just creating new music.
The Knockturnal: I saw you linked up with Jermaine Dupri, so were you guys working on something?
Sevyn: We are working on my new project. We just started but weβre having a great time. Heβs the G.O.A.T. and such a legend and it’s such a honor to work with him. Heβs super cool and so talented. To sit there and watch him make a beat last night, I was just staring like βyo, you really that n***a.β
The Knockturnal: How are you enjoying Atlanta?
Sevyn: I love Atlanta. Iβm a Florida girl, Iβm a country girl. So, Atlanta feels very close to home for me.
The Knockturnal: I have been a fan since your first project Call Me Crazy, Butβ¦ Youβve came a long way since then and youβll only get bet bigger. But, I have been waiting to ask you this: you released your EP Shoulda Been There Pt. 1 seven years ago… your fans have been been begging for a part two since then. Will we be getting a part two?
Sevyn: Listen, Twitter is gonna love you for this cause they be on my head about that! I mean, Shoulda Been There was a little moment. I donβt know if Iβll ever do a part two, Iβll be honest. I feel so bad because I was gone for four years and left you guys but Iβm not gonna do that anymore. I promise to give an abundance of music. Thatβs where my head is, just to give you guys more music and more visuals.
The Knockturnal: You released your album Drunken Wordz, Sober Thoughtz last year. What inspired the title of that album.
Sevyn: When you hear drunken words and sober thoughts you think, βOkay, Sis had one too many drinks and is telling all of her business.β And itβs a little bit of that because I definitely had a couple of drinks and told some of my business. But, when I really think about it in my mind when I was creating it, I felt like you can be under the influence of a million emotions. Anger, heartbreak, jealousy, love, so many different things. I wanted to write from all of those different spaces. I just like that at any given moment, no matter what you’re going through, you can pick one of those songs off the album and if youβre under the influence of a certain emotion then you can play that record.
I started a lot of [the album] before quarantine and I finished it during quarantine. We were all under the influence of different emotions during that time. Some days, I was sad. Some days, I was angry. Some days, I was so at peace and happy to be home. I just allowed myself to not be afraid of those emotions and just dive right in to them, then write from that space. Thatβs really where the title came from.
The Knockturnal: You hit 5 different cities during your tour for this album and it was very intimate but will we be getting a bigger tour from you soon? Β
Sevyn: Weβre in talks of doing a bigger tour. It was a little warm up for me and I hadnβt seen [the fans] in so long. So, I wanted to be able to be so close that I could touch them. To be able to yell at them and they could yell at me back, it was very close and intimate and I love that. But, we are going to do a bigger tour and have more fun. I love live shows and going tour because my Street Team is crazy. They be yelling at me, telling me what songs I should sing. I live for it, though.
The Knockturnal: If you could open up for any artist who would it be? And donβt say Beyonce because everyone says that.
Sevyn: Actually, my old girl group RichGirl opened up for Beyonceβs I Am Sasha Fierce Tour back in 2009. That was fun. But thatβs a great question. I would have to say Rihanna. I would love to open up for Rih, I think that would be so much fun. Once she has the little baby, if she gives us this album that weβre dying for then I would love to open up for Rih.
The Knockturnal: As a woman, where do you find your strength from and what is your greatest strength?
Sevyn: I find my strength from a number of different things. The older that I get, I find that I get a lot of strength from what I call my trinity: my mother, my aunt and my grandma. The three of them keep me together. I will call that four in the morning if I need to cry or vent or talk or just get some knowledge on things. Weβre talking about three different women who have obviously lived different lives but they have so much wisdom to offer from their experiences, the good, the bad the ugly. They won’t lie to me and thatβs what I love the most. Even when the conversations are not so great, they always end up in a positive light. There’s always something to be learned.

Earlier this month, we witnessed singer Eloise Alterman perform songs from her all new EP Sad Bird,Β out today on all streaming platforms! We were completely moved by the conversations and the stories that Eloise tells throughout her immersive music style, and it was wonderful to hear her talk about these songs in addition to performing them. We sat down with Eloise to talk all about the new EP, check out the conversation below!
The Knockturnal: Eloise, how are you?Β
Eloise Alterman: Iβm good. How are you?Β
The Knockturnal: So to start us out, you Β wrote most of this music during the pandemic. What was that Β process like?Β
Eloise Alterman: It was definitely very weird for me in the beginning because Iβm soΒ good in a room with other people and when you can really connect. Most of the time for writes, too, you sit down with people and youΒ Β kind of talk about where you are in life before diving into an idea.Β Β And with writing for this EP, you sit on Zoom and it was immediatelyΒ like, βok whatβs everyoneβs ideas?β Weβre all just stuck in ourΒ Β apartments just trying to make sense of it all. But the great thingΒ Β about it was that I was able to write with people I never wouldβveΒ Β written with β oversees, people in London, one guy in Sweden. ItΒ gave such an opportunity to work with so many other creatives. AndΒ I really enjoyed that.Β
The Knockturnal: I love that. You have such insightful things to say about all of your Β music. You were talking about 4AM and you said it was that periodΒ in time where it doesnβt feel like morning or night. Can you walk meΒ through some of the creative processes behind your lyrics?Β
Eloise Alterman: Yea, so with β4 in the Morning,β I had written after I had felt thatΒ about that weird time of day. Trying to get over someone I think is one of the most difficult things to do, as we know. And for me, I need to take a second and step back and check in with myselfΒ Β usually to understand exactly how Iβm feeling about somethingΒ Β before writing about it. And I think with lyrics, they have to be soΒ Β concise. If you think about it, you can have a million feelings but tryΒ to fit it into one sentence or two minutes or something. But I usually start with a notebook and I just will free-write for a long time. Itβll justΒ be random thoughts, random titles, and they wonβt even haveΒ Β meaning behind them sometimes. But then once I go into a roomΒ Β with another co-writer, Iβll speak them out loud and theyβll say, βwhatΒ does that mean to you?β and itβll just come to me.Β
The Knockturnal: I really love that. Now tell me a little bit about your music video. What can viewers expect to see in it and what are you trying toΒ channel?Β
Eloise Alterman: I mean, the song is pretty self-explanatory. I was in love with someone who was in love with someone else still. And we were together and it was really difficult on me. I had never experiencedΒ jealousy like that and also changing how I viewed myself. It was kind of this unraveling that happened out of nowhere while lovingΒ him and while watching him still be in love with someone else. IΒ Β wanted the music video to really, really encompass that, instead ofΒ tell a story of the girl and the guy and the fight and all that kind ofΒ Β stuff thatβs so surface level, when what was really happening was IΒ was falling apart on the inside but trying to keep it together on the outside. And so, I wanted to create a really beautiful dreamlike world that started to go darker and darker as the music video went Β on and show how easy it is to pretty much just unravel in front of someone.Β
The Knockturnal: Thatβs incredible. What was the filming process like?Β
Eloise Alterman: It was a crazy day. It was really fun, though. It was my first music video, butβ¦ it was on the beach in Malibu. An early set time. We also were doing the photo shoot for the EP, so in between takes weΒ were doing a photoshoot, as well. So it was quite stressful. But I actually thrive off of stressful environments, but the first two takes IΒ was just like, βokay.β I think I kind of got settled into what felt goodΒ and it honestly was just really enjoyable to be at the beach all day long and experience what a hustle it really is to get through that long of a day videotaping yourself all day long. Lots of cameras onΒ you β thatβs something I was not used to β but good thing for a glam team thatβs got you in check the whole time. So yea, it was aΒ really cool experience.Β Β
The Knockturnal: Absolutely. Youβve been writing all these songs for a while. How long has the EP been in the works for?Β
Eloise Alterman: So Iβve been writing the songs for about two years. The EP was Β originally supposed to be an album when I signed, and so I wrote it Β as an album. But as we were talking β as a new artist, too β and with peopleβs attentionβs spans, especially breaking through in the beginning, I didnβt know if I wanted to come out with a huge projectΒ of songs. I think some of them could get lost within each other. AndΒ so we came up with βThe Hurting Phaseβ being the first phase. Thatβs what I was really feeling in the beginning of heartache. The process since then has kind of just beenβ¦ my favorite part is the creative part after the writing, you know? Coming up with the cover and kind of what I want to come across and picking the songs for it, too. Going through and remembering the order Iβd written them in and staying true to that because I donβt want to put songs on there Β when I was starting to feel even a little bit better. This EP is supposed to really encompass the roller coaster in the beginning ofΒ feeling really sad.Β
The Knockturnal: Speaking of roller coasters β just from talking to people today,Β hearing what people have had to say about you, about the set and Β everything β so many people are so excited for your music and youβre starting to get a lot of attention. How does that feel? What are those emotions like?Β
Eloise Alterman: It makes me feel really, really special. And itβs such an interesting feeling. I donβt know if Iβve ever felt like this in my life before. But, you know, life is hard as a teenager, and middle school and even just moving to Nashville and not feeling special in so many different Β phases of my life. Itβs so weird now to have all these people who care a lot about you but also care a lot about your career. It really does take a team and I would not be able to be doing any of it withoutβ¦ I mean, thereβs so many hands on deck with just even getting this music out. And being able to have that weight lifted Β where I can focus on the writing and the stuff Iβm actually good at instead of the business side and all that. But itβs really crazy to lookΒ around and be like, all these people are like, itβs like having a family a little bit. Just a support team. It also makes me more creative. Because when you know you can bounce ideas off people, thereβs Β someone to listen to you all the time. I love it.Β
Stream Eloiseβs New EP Sad Bird here!Β
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