Interview with the talented artist, Terrence Leon

Terrence Leon

Terrence Leon is a hard-working artist who has been in the music game since 2015. Leon loves to create music that is unique and leaves the listeners wanting for more. He has given several hit tracks like “About Her”, “Rodeo”, and “Can’t Find”, along with many others, which earned him massive reception from listeners worldwide. Terrence’s songs are a perfect blend of hard-hitting music and free-flowing lyrics.

With passion and dedication towards music, Terrence is rapidly paving his way through the music industry.

 

Interviewer: From where do you draw your musical inspiration?

Terrence Leon:  At my core, I’m an R&B kid. I love all genres of music, mostly, but I get my foundation from 90s R&B music, as cliché as that sounds. Of course, I’ve had the luxury to grow with the changes since then but I’d say I lean on the stylings of artists like Chris Brown, Jeremih, and obviously The Weeknd. I try to listen to everything so I can grow constantly but listening to me, they’re who I’d say influences me the most.

 

Interviewer: Describe your music style for our readers.

Terrence Leon: My music style lies somewhere between R&B, Alt-R&B, Trap Soul, and Pop Adjacent. I can’t honestly say I stick to a lane, musically; I pull from too many places but R&B is the bedrock of it all.

 

Interviewer: Describe your musical journey to our readers.

Terrence Leon: I started making music in 2015, with Reign Down, with Ráuhsel. It took off like wildfire when we uploaded it in a sense. From there I released a mixtape, “Richest Man In Babylon,” and that was the moment I felt I could really do this. I had to take a break from music, but 2019 I came back with “You Don’t (Know Me But..)”. For “24 HRS” I tapped Tim Curry, my current producer, and it’s been lit ever since.

 

Interviewer: What is your upcoming single “Fake Love” all about?

Terrence Leon: Fake Love, my upcoming single, is about just that. I noticed the platitudes and inconsistencies in what we’re often told love is, versus what we actually experience. In our society we try to buy love, quantify love, or make it something intangible to those that aren’t deserving when the truth is; we’re all deserving of love by just existing.