By ERIC SCHELKOPF
It truly will be a family affair when two Nashville bands perform at
Lazymoon Design in Chicago on Nov. 8.
As part of double headlining bill, Scott Collins will perform with his band The Sovereignty. Sharing the stage will be his brother's band, Justin and The Cosmics.
Also on the bill is Chicago-based artist Sarah Krohn. Doors open at 6 p.m. and the show starts at 7 p.m.
Lazymoon Design is located at 4642 North Francisco Ave., Chicago. Tickets are $33.85, available at eventbrite.com.
I had the chance to talk to Scott Collins about the upcoming show.
Q – Great talking to you. I guess life
comes full circle because, in 2011 and 2012, I interviewed Coley Kennedy
about his bands The Buddies and Welcome to Ashley.
Of course, you were a
member of The Buddies along with your then wife Kim and your brother, Justin. I know that in
2012, your wife was battling breast cancer and Coley started an online
fundraiser to help with her medical and living expenses.
Hopefully she
is doing well these days.
That's very thoughtful of you to inquire. Yes, Kim has been fully recovered from that situation for over a decade now.
Q – I see Coley was also involved with the album Bravery Is Necessary,
which you and your band The Sovereignty released in January. It is
great that you have had a strong relationship with Coley over the years.
Hopefully you will perform your song “Shittin’ Tears” from that album
at your show in Chicago. Your searing guitar work on that song is
amazing.
Thank you, graciously. "Shittin' Tears" is, in
many ways, the linchpin song for Scott Collins and The Sovereignty; the
song that started it all metaphysically for me as a solo artist and now
most live shows end with it.
Q – And, of course, your latest solo album, Capistrano Beach, was released on Oct. 10. What goals did you have for the album and did the end result exceed your expectations?
I suppose the fact that Capistrano
Beach is out and released as an official album in and of itself has
exceeded any expectations. It was originally recorded as a birthday
gift.
It was originally intended to be heard by only one person other
than myself and the studio engineer (and my best friend), Christopher
Lord Byrd. All the songs were played live, in order, one time, one
take...on the actual birthday which was 1 degree Aries.
It felt
inaccurate, unjust, and illegitimate to call this collection of songs
demos, although the eight songs on Capistrano Beach do also live in
different, fuller-produced versions as part of a 12-song album to be
released in early 2026.
Often people hear acoustic versions of songs
AFTER they hear fully-produced album versions, so I realized this was an
opportunity to flip that antiquated pattern on its head. It is, without
a doubt, the most intimate expression I've ever released.
Chris,
Claira, and I – all three couldn't stop listening to it almost daily
for weeks on end, so as an exercise in vulnerability and authenticity; I
said "fuck it"...[let's] put it out.
Q – The Chicago show will also feature
your brother’s band Justin and The Cosmics. I am sure that will make the
night even more special for you. Will there be any collaborating with
your brother that night?
Affirmative; high probability of a
Collins thunderstorm approaching. It is a rare storm these days.
Although I did play lead guitar in The Cosmics for a few years, and on a
couple of The Cosmics albums (Perf and Cool Dead), so there is a handsome cesspool to draw from.
I know the duo you had with your former wife
– The Smoking Flowers – is on hiatus right now. Do you see the band
doing anything in the near future?
The future of The Smoking Flowers is
not divulged in the crystal ball. I am holding
space for the best scenarios and outcomes possible in the future.
Q – What had been the best part of working with your former wife in not only that band, but also in other bands like The Buddies?
Traveling, seeing and feeling the
world through someone else's eyes in addition to your own can prove to
be revelatory. The ocean of experience to draw upon for creativity is
unrivaled.
The art, the story, the work, the purpose you leave in your
wake – no one can take from you. I think some loved and saw us as a
singular entity, not as two separate sovereign individuals.
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