Jack + Eliza: The Best of What’s Next
Members: Jack Staffen and Eliza Callahan
Hometown: New York, NY
Albums: No Wonders EP
For Fans Of: She & Him, The Mamas & The Papas, The Beatles
As college sophomores, Jack Staffen and Eliza Callahan just released their debut EP. They have a record label and a PR team that does social media for them when they’re feeling too embarrassed, helping their single rack up more than 100,000 streams on SoundCloud without even having a release to support it.
For listeners, each new fact gleaned about Jack + Eliza seems to necessitate replaying The Faces’ 1973 “Ooh La La,” a folksy ditty about generational wistfulness. In its impossible-to-forget chorus, Ronnie Wood wistfully sings, “I wish that I knew what I know now when I was younger.”
It’s easy to think back on Ronnie’s prophetic lines and yearn for the youth of the two singers. Yet somehow, those lyrics seem vastly irrelevant to Jack and Eliza. Even at their young ages, they pretty much have it together.
For the most part, anyway. Eliza is late, racing back from a sculpture class at Columbia University for the conference call. A visual art and English literature double major, she meets Jack in her parents’ living room and the two fumble with the dial-in and access numbers while trying to figure out if they should just share a phone.
Before Eliza gets back, Jack tells me about his own studies at New York University. He, too, is double majoring in political science and history, although he’s not sure which era to specialize in just yet.
It’s just a few days before Jack + Eliza released their debut EP No Wonders on vinyl and through iTunes. The two childhood friends signed with Yebo Music during their freshman year, but their musical collaboration actually began much earlier. Both started playing music individually at young ages for completely different reasons—Jack subscribed to the YouTube methodology of watching his idols like Kurt Cobain in order to learn how to play loud rock and roll, and later began singing lead in an barbershop quartet. Eliza studied the Suzuki method of playing guitar. Both, too, began writing very young. “The first song I wrote, I think I was about 9 or 10 and it was called, ‘Close My Eyes,’” recalls Jack. “The poppiest of pop!”
Eliza, who later became the youngest winner of the prestigious John Lennon Songwriting Contest “Song of The Year” award at just 15 in 2011, remembers, “My [first] song was like a 10-minute George Harrison impersonation attempt and I was singing in a British accent!”
Growing up in the West Village, Jack and Eliza didn’t meet through in school or living near each other. In a seemingly simple twist of fate, they met through music. As Eliza begins to tell the story of how the drummer in Jack’s eighth grade band walked out of rehearsal, Jack tries to curtail his laughter.