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Week 5 of the Making of Unnamed Album - February (Songs finished: 2)

Charlee Remitz • May 14, 2026

A mere two weeks had gone by since week four, and I was scattered. I flew into Philly, drove along the Delaware coast in sought of its mostly underwhelming lighthouses, then on to DC, where I spent the weekend with my partner for Valentine’s Day. Sunday the 15th , I was back on I-

95 to Richmond, fog rolling in. It was elaborate ping-ponging. In a voice note to a friend, I tried to explain the multitudes of switching gears in rapid succession—lighthouses, relationship, studio. My head was spinning, grateful as I may be.


It had begun to wear on me—the great push to do it all. I pulled up to my Airbnb in the rain, feeling particularly disdainful towards the cement steps. I needed a day off. I could feel it in my bones. I needed a moment where I could lay on the couch and remember what it was like to have nothing to do. I felt it in my shoulders as I dragged each suitcase into the bedroom, thinking about dinner, and how tiring even the concept of figuring out a place to eat seemed to me.


I can’t remember what it was like to have nothing to do. There is always something to labor over; some creative burden hanging over my head. And in the narrow gaps where something somehow wasn’t, my Instagram was.


In the months since I’d begun recording this album, I had built a full-fledged platform. Or perhaps the full-fledged platform had occurred. And it had become so familiar to me, I was starting to resent it. I used to consider this kind of micro-influence well out of my reach as a member of the imposter horde, and now my free time was a commodity of which I was in a near constant deficit trying to keep up with it all.


When I was home, I was meant to be resting between bouts at my computer booking boat charters to remote lighthouses and mapping out the most efficient routes to see as many lighthouses in as little time as possible. But social media was a beast of impossible hunger, and if it didn’t eat three to five quick meals every day, it stomped around noisily, making sure I was always side-lined by its incredible appetite. So, I laid around as best I could, but mostly I created and scrolled and wore myself thin, and as a direct result, I was showing up to the studio with a set of songs I knew to be incomplete—as in, finished but not quite right.


I pulled recording equipment—a microphone, interface, headphone adapter, etc.—out of my carry-on and arranged it on the feeble desk in my Airbnb’s bedroom with a sense of agony at all my edges. Somehow, I would have to find time to re-work the songs. To iron out creases with my life force at an all-time low.


Everyone I was close to seemed to be worried about me.


In weeks past, Lawrence, my co-producer, and I had a sort of trade-off. If he was tired, I was awake. If I was struggling to be creative, he was having the big ideas. If he felt clouded, I could give him some clarity. In December, he’d undertaken a large renovation project, turning a small shed in his backyard into a recording studio, complete with a kitchenette and plumbing. For the most part, like my lighthouse project, this side quest was manageable. None of it bled into the studio.


Until this week.

Person taking a mirror selfie in a red-lit room with framed wall art and a neon sign.

This week, there was demo going on in the backyard. I sat, stretched out on the chartreuse studio couch in between takes, waiting for the noise to abide, watching a muted movie on the TV with subtitles. Something intoxicating usually happened when you got into the studio and started hearing the invention come to life. I imagined my songs, and then my songs became. Certainly, I won’t do the process justice with words. But it was an enormous feeling that took over. A feeling of plenty or arriving right on time to a party you thought you were going to miss. The invention was part of the why of it all. But this week it was part of the why so many quit.


Some walls feel purposeful. Like the one we hit on the second song of this batch—thirteenth song overall. For hours, we’d been recording guitar lines with no words of encouragement uttered in between. No “that sounds great” or “we’re onto something here.” We listened back over what we had, looking nowhere in particular or off into the void, wordless and avoidant, disinterested in a diagnosis. And then, we’d carry on. It was cowardly really. And eventually, there was no way around it. A short guitar riff at the top of verse two worked and the rest of it was noise. The riff was shiny and bright and everything around it got sucked into it, like a reverse black hole. I could perhaps deal with an album filler, but a reverse black hole?


We were cooked.


A polarizing moment such as this had not happened to us before, and I guess I should call us lucky for that. It had always been decidedly fixable. A sound was missing. An arpeggiated bass was needed to contextualize the guitar. An adlib could fill a pocket of space we’d been trying to color with a synth. But here, on this song, there was no miracle fix. It was not working. And the only way forward was to scrap the slop and let the sparkly riff reign.


So, that’s what we did. We looped the riff, molding it into the shape of a song I could write over, then I took it home, loaded it into Ableton, and was visited by a little burst of creativity that resulted in a short ballad we both came to love for its simpleness, wit, and movement. It was an age-old lesson I’m psychic enough to know I’ll be learning for my entire life: it doesn’t always have to be so hard.


I love the song “Everybody Wants to Rule the World”. When Tears for Fears wrote it, they insisted it was of no great consequence. They sat down, it came up, and the rest is history. Some call this muse. I think it’s something of a chaos demon. But then again, I’d come to Richmond with songs that were, in some way or another, missing the sauce as Gen Z would call it. And the universe was merely agreeing with me.


I went to Edo’s Squid that night to celebrate, drinking Campari spritzes and red wine from Picardie tumblers at the bar. And the next day marked the beginning of the end. Song number fourteen. Another album, complete.


Lawrence came out of the gate swinging that day, laying down guitar after guitar while I looked on, struggling to match his or the song’s energy. He was concerned with overpowering the vocal and wanted to get a scratch down to help inform the arrangement. This seemed like an impossible ask to me, but I dragged myself to the vocal booth anyway. I thought about this bottle of champagne I’d purchased at Ellwood Thompson’s earlier on in the week to commemorate it all—the triumphs, the long hours, the lighthouses seen—but especially the adverse moments like this. I love watching PGA tour players celebrate a win, and I imagined myself in that same

aftermath, hooting and hollering. Maybe a few tears.


After, there was always the question of what do we do next? Because there were a million things we could do. Lawrence added bass and drums. We toyed with the idea of synths. But vocals, they really were the crown jewel—the Fresnel lens of the song. The only thing about tracking vocals is how many of them there are. Harmonies, adlibs, doubles, crowd vocals. At that moment in time, going into the recording studio to get it all down felt like I was going on a long work trip. Perhaps, I’d come out with gray hair and a cane.


I was fresh out of confidence and life force by then. My eyes were heavy. I felt like I was swaying on my feet. I couldn’t bear it. I could think only of the couch at the Airbnb, and how much I wanted to be on it watching the Olympics and eating Sweetgreen. Though, really, I would have settled for anywhere. As long as it wasn’t there. But I was there, belting take after take into the mic, my vocals, despite no significant utilization, absolutely wrecked, cracking and breaking when I needed them to carry. After a while, Lawrence suggested we take a break and eat. I wasn’t hungry, but I agreed.


When we got downstairs, it had begun to lightly snow. The house was cozy, warmly lit thanks to an evening spent in their living room debating lightbulbs and kelvins. I ate hummus and vegetables and drank warm tea, and when we went back upstairs, I turned How to Win a Date With Tad Hamilton on, feeling revived by the snack, but only just.


And then, we were back to square one.


The song was a victory lap. An energetic ballad. Effort aside, I was failing it greatly by trying to sing these words I wrote at the peak of yearning and sorrow when I was emotionally, physically and spiritually drained. What I needed was angst, and what I had was exhaustion.


“I’m letting the song down,” I explained to Lawrence through the mic.


We called it an early night. I went to Sidewalk Café and ate Greek nachos. Went home, went to bed, got up and did it all over again.


I had hit a wall the day before, and it still wouldn’t budge. Despite Lawrence’s bag of tricks. Despite frequent breaks and warm tea. Despite that bottle of champagne we had chilling in the fridge beckoning. We sat talking about options, him in the studio, me in the vocal booth. I could come the next day before my flight—a cram sesh, effectively—I could change my flight, or I could just come back.


But to come back. Oh, to come back. Please tell me I wouldn’t have to come back. That was the most unwelcome and hostile option of them all, and frankly, at that moment, I wouldn’t even entertain it.


I left my laptop on the Wurlitzer, told Lawrence I’d change my flight, and left.


On the way to the Airbnb, I called my mom, and I told her of my predicament. I sat parked in front of the little townhouse I now considered a second home, watching cars go by in the dark. She asked me what I wanted to do—what I really wanted to do. Not what I should do. Not what would be cheapest. But what would feel the best to me right then. I told her, quite simply, “I want to be done.”


“So, be done then.”


I turned the car around and called Lawrence.


Forcing ourselves to work through something that clearly doesn’t want to be worked through was no proper sendoff. No finale. No appropriate culmination of the work we’d put into this incredible project. And the work I’d put into myself.


Things were different now. I was different now. I had given up the grind for intention. I had promised to be patient, understand the process, and go with the flow.


He suggested that when I come back for my computer, we open the champagne anyway. It was the end of something. Not an album. But a cycle of abandoning myself in the impossible pursuit of perfection.


On an Instagram story later that night, I reflected on the novelty of this. I was no longer living in a world where there wasn’t enough time for me to be human. The great push to do it all came at too great an emotional cost. Like I said, it was a lesson I would learn for my entire life.


It doesn’t always have to be so hard.

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Otherwise known as the week of the Southeastern Freeze. I think many would agree there’s a certain symbiosis between nature and the general, personified tone of human life. The freeze was jarring. It seemed to come out of nowhere. I was piloting my rental car off the ferry from Ocracoke, moving through a heavy fog along the liminal space between the dock and Cape Hatteras, when my co-producer, Lawrence, texted: "I don’t know if you saw but we’ve got perhaps this huge snowstorm this weekend so plan accordingly!" The weather, these days, was jarring. As was going online at any given moment. And then there was this: I sat on the leather couch in my Airbnb a few days later, discussing my music with a potential collaborator on Google Meets, who said she hoped I would consider integrating Blue Monkey and Charlee Remitz a bit more, as Charlee Remitz’s social media had, since September 2025, generated a large swath of followers. It occurred to me right then that she was right. My mother had said something similar ahead of this trip, which would kick off six months of nearly non-stop travel while I attempted to finish the album and see another 200 lighthouses. “Is there something we could do to make your life ten percent easier?” There was. And, like all else these days, it was a jarring realization. Then again, that’s how most things seem when you’ve failed to pay attention to the less urgent signs that precede desperation. The universe is always having conversations with us; we just haven’t learned to listen. First, I’d had a falling out with my band. Then, my beloved visual collaborator moved out of state. And finally, there was the absolute dread I felt at composing a post for Blue Monkey’s Instagram page. At a certain point, Charlee Remitz and Blue Monkey felt like they were on a level playing field in that area. Both had something to say. And then, quite suddenly, one had more to say and more metaphorical mouths to feed. There is tremendous responsibility in having and maintaining an audience, whether it be in person or online. I kept telling myself as the album neared completion, I’d find a lust for Blue Monkey’s social media once again. I’d find some pocket of energy I wasn’t already using to shape Blue Monkey’s page. The only thing was, Charlee Remitz’s sudden uptick in online popularity felt partially divined. There was no protocol to follow and no miraculous, undiscovered pocket of energy from which I could pull. I was using every ounce of my allotted cup to see lighthouses, maintain Charlee Remitz’s online presence, and record a 14-song, full length album. Whatever was left over I held in reserve for workouts, nourishment and the upkeep of personal relationships. In this life, little is worth the compromise of your body, spirit, community or mind. And so, it was halfway through this fourth week in the studio that I announced to Lawrence, as we sat chatting in his dining room, with the sun pouring in through the windows and a cold brew on the table before me, that I would release this album as Charlee Remitz. I can’t quite remember his reaction. I think it was a little awed. And then, the freeze came. First it hit Nashville, where my partner, at our townhouse on the west side, lost heat for two weeks, and power for six days. Then, it came to Richmond, where I prepared my Airbnb as best as I could without spending money on emergency supplies. I stocked the empty cabinet with boxed mac n cheese, and the empty fridge with vegetables and containers of shredded chicken. I asked Tatiana, the owner, if she’d stock me up with extra toilet paper and paper towels, in case things got really dire. And then, I drove to the studio like any other day. Lawrence and I tried to negotiate studio time with the weather, to limit my exposure to a city with a few odd snowplows keeping hundreds of roads passable. In sessions past, we had a system: two days per song, and one wrap day where we ironed out the creases. For a three-song week, that meant seven days. For a two-song week, five. And so far, we had been deeply prolific. We had a measure of earned delusion when it came to studio time by January. We really believed in our ability to make art on a timeline. Even with the snow, and the oncoming freezing rain, we refused to deviate from the plan. I found myself on back-to-back days, driving at a snail’s pace from one side of the city to the other, simply so we could stick to the schedule we’d laid out for ourselves. There was a sense of, “I’ll get this album done if it’s the death of me,” pushing me forward as I passed people sliding in the snow, their tires struggling for purchase. 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To dream without the years of music I’d already created dragging along behind her like noisy cans. I’ve taken to referring to Blue Monkey as my Disney Channel Deviation. Many of us watched as our favorite Disney Channel stars, feeling shackled to a certain image, took a bold right turn and did something so dramatic that it shocked people into submission. This was Miley Cyrus now: on her wrecking ball. This was Charlee Remitz in 2024: Blue Monkey. I’d had all these rules about Blue Monkey’s album when I wrote and recorded it in 2020. It couldn’t be pop. It couldn’t have too many electronic sounds. It needed to be folk. It needed a banjo and a mandolin. A harmonica. It needed to drive one thing home: I was not Charlee Remitz anymore. When I think of it now, I recognize part of this need to disappear into Blue Monkey as an aversion to who Charlee Remitz had become. She felt like a dead end. Where I saw happenstance and luck and viability in other music careers, Charlee Remitz felt like she’d come by her very flat and lifeless story by effort and effort alone. It was messy and tiring, and certainly it wasn’t meant to be because nothing was happening. I remember completing my final album, Heaven’s a Scary Place like I was running the last leg of a cross-country sprint. I was absolutely, certifiably done with Charlee Remitz and everything she’d become by that point. I couldn’t wait to be rid of her. And so, I got rid of her. Well, that version of her at least. That was when I found the lighthouses. Or maybe they found me. I’m not really sure who did the finding, but certainly I’ve done the keeping. And, now here we are, five years later, in love as ever before. I moved across the country with my partner. I wrote songs on a guitar that I had no intention of ever actually recording. I went on solo dates. I did things because I wanted to do things. 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