Getting to Know… Mount Moriah
Jenks Miller was in a band called Mount Moriah long before he even met Heather McEntire, but it wasn’t until the two came together that the sound fell into place. Taking the moniker as their own, the two began fooling around with alt.country-inspired, secular gospel harmonies and folk melodies, a sound wholly separate from other projects that had occupied their time and talents. Mount Moriah is set to release its debut self-titled LP April 12, but first we sat down with McEntire and Miller to talk Southern music, the road behind, and the music ahead.
Paste: How did you start playing together?
Heather McEntire: We met working at Schoolkids, a record store in Chapel Hill. I got Jenks a job.
Jenks Miller: That’s right. And I offered to record a demo for you. I’m not sure I ever did that. Did I ever do that? I don’t think I ever did.
McEntire: No, the first thing we ever recorded was the Un Deux Trois record.
Miller: We played in a pop band called Un Deux Trois and it was just the two of us for a long time and then we added bass for a little while. That band was much more upbeat.
Paste:: You lost interest in that?
Miller: Well, we didn’t consciously make a decision…
McEntire: It was just our lives took a more somber turn, not to be vague or anything, but we just—I was thinking about this today actually. I think that we started applying a seriousness to what we were creating—not that pop music isn’t serious.
Miller: You know, and actually there was a conscious decision there. We did have a conversation where we were like, “Well, okay, we’re reaching the point now where we need to decide if this is something that we’re gonna do.” You end up sacrificing so much in order to be even half serious about playing music that we had a conversation, “Is this worth not being able to have a real career? And being poor? And doing all these things?” So, in that sense there was a conscious decision to, like, dig our heels in and to work really hard and make it work and I think along with that sort of revelation we kind of had a more serious attitude maybe towards the music and said let’s tackle some heavier themes.
McEntire: I think we were kind of craving space, which I had not had in Bellafea [my rock band], or in Un Deux Trois and a different style of singing. I feel like Mount Moriah is different.