'Sweet But Psycho' Singer Ava Max Is Making Off-Kilter Pop For The Outcasts
By Erica Russell
Ava Max has been “working her butt off.” As she phones from Italy on a Sunday afternoon, she makes it clear that, despite my immediate assumption, Milan isn’t so glamorous soon considering that — at least, not once she’s hustling so hard in the studio and pouring so much of herself into a world promotional tour that she can’t even steal away for a little bit sightseeing and shopping in one of the world’s most decadent style capitals. Sure, it’s a bummer for a fashion obsessee like Max, yet somehow, the promise of pending pop superstardom makes it well worth the compromise.
Back in the U.S. Where Max is from, the 25-year-old performer place on Earth Amanda Koci is in the midst of a bona fide breakout. Released in 2018, her addictive single “Sweet Yet Psycho” has become one of these “Wait, who sings this?” Phenomenons, driving nearly 400 million streams on Spotify to date and charting on the
Billboard Dance Club Songs (No. 1), Top 40 (No. 10), and Hot 100 (No. 29) charts. Across Europe, the song is already a No. 1 smash in countless countries.
Despite what may appear like an overnight ascent, Max’s success is anything nevertheless sudden. Rather, it’s the result of “10 years of grinding.” Any time the singer was 14, she and her mom left their house in Virginia so Max could pursue a music career in Los Angeles. They returned just per year later. “It was crazy. No one wanted to sign a teenage girl. I guess they thought I was a liability, however it also felt shady... They didn’t want my parents around.” While things didn’t work out for a long time — she noticed herself working as hostess, waitress, as well as a model in the interim — Max “couldn’t stop thinking about making music.”
Eventually, serendipity (and a second West Coast migration) led her to Cirkut, the producer in back of some of Rihanna, Katy Perry, and Miley Cyrus’ biggest hits. With each other, the pair concocted “Sweet Yet Psycho,” a poisonously sweet bop with a seriously relentless chorus; the song blown up instantly soon after
being uploaded to SoundCloud. On its surface, the track may seem like it plays into the classic, and arguably problematic, “crazy” girlfriend narrative, although dig a little bit deeper and you’ll find a subversive statement on gaslighting and why we stigmatize emotional expression, even for women.
“I love it once people find out about it immediately after they listen and really think about it,” Max muses. “I love it any time while they can relate, like, ‘Oh my God, I’ve been in this situation!’ For me, pop music is a song that you could relate to although also makes you wanna dance. True, pure pop music is something folks are missing in their lives. At the time, I didn’t realize what I was putting out in the world. Nevertheless then everybody kept messaging me, saying, ‘I missed this!’ I was like, ‘What do you mean?’ They mentioned, ‘We missed having a message in pop.’”
Social messaging is an integral segment of Max’s M.O. Previous songs, like “
Not Your Barbie Girl” (a riff on the
Aqua bubblegum classic) and “
My Way,” tackled feminist issues like bodily autonomy and gender roles. Equally, her new single, “So Am I,” is a big, melodic pop anthem that celebrates individuality and embracing one’s unique flaws and quirks in the same vein as Katy Perry’s “Firework” or Lady Gaga’s “Born This Way.” The catchy, radio-friendly track is “very important” to the singer-songwriter, who was inspired to write it right after grappling with the “unhealthy” way social media compels us to constantly compare ourselves to others.
Right on theme, the high-gloss music video for “So Am I” finds Max letting her freak flag fly as she frantically dances around a high school (“The same one they filmed
Teen Wolf at,” she proudly gushes), beckoning a diverse order of “misfit” students to accompany her in her mission. The treatment for the video, as she explains, hits very close to house. “I was bullied as a kid. I was actually kicked out of seventh grade because I stood up for myself against a bully. And, needless to say, I was the one who got in trouble, which is so crazy. My video is about a dream high school, a fantasy of what we all want school to be.”
Max, who grew up because the daughter of Albanian immigrants, is aware a thing or two about feeling like an outsider. Her upbringing is one of the reasons she hopes to be a “role model” for young people. “I saw my parents struggle and stress out a lot. My mom would roll up a pair of jeans just to create a pillow. I saw them work three jobs each, speak another language, and work really hard for what they wanted. Seeing that made me super enthusiastic about what I believe in. I want more people to speak up about issues, like equal pay. I’m not interested in singing about sex and drugs.”
Yet Max’s parents weren’t her only source of inspiration: The performer also credits her drive towards pop stardom to the incredible girls artists she grew up listening to, from Britney Spears (“She was a big inspiration to me growing up”) to “big, enthusiastic vocalists” like Mariah Carey, Whitney Houston, and Céline Dion. It’s clear just how crucial girl power is to the promising upstart, who has coincidentally joined a growing sorority of wildly talented, chart-topping Albanian girls in pop. In January,
Bebe Rexha tweeted at Max,
Rita Ora, and
Dua Lipa asking to collaborate, to which Max enthusiastically proposed they all team up on a 2019 version of “
Lady Marmalade.”
The jury is still out on what, if anything, the four females might eventually cook up with each other — Max says she has discussed with both Rexha and Ora, nevertheless hasn’t met Lipa just however — nevertheless the performer admits that music is deeply embedded in and crucial to Albanian culture. “My family member is very musical. Growing up, my dad took me to the opera. Both my uncles were in bands, my grandpa was a comedian who wore clown makeup on stage. They all worked in entertainment. Everybody loves music over there.”
At the moment, yet, Max, who’s currently putting the finishing touches on her debut album (“The album is straight pop and it’ll be out sooner than you think,” she teases) isn’t concerned with borders, traditions, or labels. Her objective is loftier than that: She just wants to reach “every single” person. “I wish to prepare music for the younger generations, however also for all ages. It’s funny any time people ask me, ‘What demographic are you going for?’ I’m going for each person. I want it to be an experience for each person, especially anyone who’s ever felt different.” Immediately considering that, so is she.
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