
Episode 446 - Creative Catharsis: How Reeya Banerjee Turns Personal Pain into Powerful Tracks
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In today’s episode we’re thrilled to have Reeya Banerjee—writer, vocalist, voice‑over artist, and the raw, honest storyteller behind the critically‑acclaimed album The Way Up—joining host James Cox for a deep‑dive into the healing power of music.
We kick things off with a quick word from our sponsor, BetterHelp, reminding listeners that affordable, flexible online therapy is just a few clicks away (and you can snag 10 % off your first month at betterhelp.com/music‑speaks).
From there, James and Reeya wanders through the musical landscape that shapes her art:
- the Beatles’ “Something,”
- Springsteen’s “Thunder Road,”
- U2’s “The Sweetest Thing,”
- Fiona Apple’s “Criminal,”
- Peter Gabriel’s “Sledgehammer,”
- and Eminem’s “Lose Yourself.”
Reeya reveals how each of these tracks inspired her own songwriting, and why certain songs—like her own “The Way Up,” “Deep Water,” and the childhood‑memory‑laden “Snow”—feel easier to say when they’re sung. She also opens up about the mental‑health crisis she faced in 2019, the intensive therapy that helped her reclaim her voice, and the way music became her conduit for processing grief, insomnia, and the restless energy of a night‑owl musician.
Listeners get a sneak peek at Reeya’s upcoming August release “This Place,” a concept album that maps nine cities to nine core emotions, and we hear about the stories behind singles such as “Misery of Place,” “For the First Time,” “Runner,” and the soon‑to‑drop “Upstate Rust.”
The conversation rounds out with playful cover‑quiz challenges, a nostalgic look at the Hudson‑Valley bar that sparked her creative community, and a heartfelt promise that when words fail, music always speaks.
Stay tuned, grab your headphones, and prepare for an episode packed with candid conversation, lyrical insights, and a reminder that—no matter how dark the night—there’s always a melody waiting to lift you up.
And remember: when you need a mental‑health boost, BetterHelp is just a click away at betterhelp.com/music‑speaks.