Max Kaplanโs recent single, โMind on My Heart,โ sums up where he is right now.
โItโs about finding the relationships of your life and the people you love, while also trying to reach your fullest potential and doing the best you can at what youโre doing,โ Kaplan says.
Kaplan, 24, is moving onward and upward with his music career. In addition to recording new material, Kaplan has a new band name โ Max Kaplan & The Magics. In addition to lead singer/guitarist Kaplan, the band includes Jad Tariq on lead guitar, John Hay on bass, Danny Banks and Andrew McNeil on drums, Matthew Wilson on bass and drums, Benton Parker on bass, and Art Edmaiston and Marc Franklin on horns.
Tariq wrote the single. โWeโre all trying to find our path and our career and what weโre going to do with our life. But at the same time we have these strong relationships and friendships and people weโre meeting on the way. It struck me immediately, thereโs always this struggle, โHow much can I give to my relationships vs. how much can I give to myself? Where do your priorities lie? You donโt want to lose either one.โโ
The upbeat tune is an example of Kaplanโs new musical direction vs. the direction of his former music project, The Harbert House Band. โBefore the pandemic, we were playing shows and it was pretty much just straight blues. That was fun, but we werenโt truly expressing ourselves.โ
Now, he says, โThe single and all these singles going ahead are going to be soul-pop things. We love Memphis, of course, and all that great soul music that came out of here has definitely been a big influence on us as bands and especially in our writing style.โ
But, he says, โWeโve got this new soul pop thing going on the world. Bands like Durand Jones & The Indications and The Dip. These soul bands are really coming back to the forefront of the conversations again. So, weโd like to bring back the Memphis soul if we can.โ
A native of New York, Kaplan was raised on blues. โMy dad is a guitar player and he taught me. And, yes, thatโs what heโs known his whole life. When I got to Memphis I was exposed to soul music, which is very much an evolved form of the blues. The blues kind of came to Memphis, met jazz and other such forms of music, and became soul.
โSoul music really is the key to all of American pop music. It shaped what weโve got going in America here musically now. Thatโs my favorite stuff to listen to. So, when I write songs Iโm always thinking, โWell, I love old soul music, but I want to make something new. I canโt just be copying old stuff.โ What weโre trying to do is basically the same thing every artist does; take our influences and put our voice into it.โ
As for his influences, Kaplan says, โI studied at Rhodes, so Iโve got a little jazz influence. A little of that thing going on. Plus, Iโve got this deep blues heritage. In Memphis, I got injected with all this soul music. I finally got a unique voice. It came right down to when I play a single note on the guitar, itโs going to sound different than any other guitar player. When everybody else plays it, it sounds different, too. Everybodyโs got their own unique voice. What Iโm trying to do is put mine out there. And weโre developing as we go along.โ
The music that came out of Stax is one of their influences, but Kaplan says, โThis is a different time period. We are making music in 2021, so we are bringing all that influence into it. Stax was based in the โ60s and โ70s, so they were bringing influences of the world at that time into their music. Weโve got different things going on in our lives.โ
And, he says, โWeโve got the current Memphis professional musicians. The same kind of guys that might have found themselves on a record in the โ60s at Stax. Thatโs what weโre working for in Max Kaplan & The Magics and on our record.
โThe music scene has evolved over the past 50 years. Especially here in Memphis. The city has listened to a lot of new music since the โ60s and โ70s. A whole new set of influences. We have the benefit of looking back at everything. All the music that was produced during that time. This golden age of Memphis music โ โ60s and โ70s. Also the privilege of seeing where that music took pop artists like John Mayer, for example. When we produce this music now, we are able to take into account where other artists have gone with it. Youโve got John Mayer, and he is super influenced by blues and soul music. And he went into the direction โ with his coffee house kind of soft acoustic way with it โ into rock and all sorts of things.
โWe love the original stuff and seeing what other people took it to, and bring our own flavor to it. My guitar player has the benefit of being influenced by Albert King and B. B. King and Freddie King. He wasnโt influenced by only one. When you look at our song, โMind on My Heart,โ the main guitar lick is a product of us being able to listen to decades and decades of more music than our idols did.โ
Soul music was perfect for their band, Kaplan says. โPeople have always loved soul music. People will always love soul music because it touches your soul. People always love blues, too, โcause everybody has the blues. Thatโs the human condition, right? We always have something weโre struggling with. People love soul music in the same way because it reflects how they feel in their soul.โ
The new single, which was released on Color Red Records, was one of eight songs Kaplan and his band recorded in 2020. โWe recorded them all at once in my living room with my roommates in our little pandemic pod. I spent forever trying to find a record deal. I must have emailed over 250 labels.โ
They recorded the songs in October, 2020. โAnd sat on these songs until May of 2021. I didnโt get the deal until June 2021.โ
Kaplan and his band have evolved since those songs were recorded. โI have developed as a singer, as a songwriter, as a guitar player.โ
His band mates also have grown musically. โWe have three songs weโve been working on and we have yet to record, but weโre starting to play them live. So, those songs are going to be closer to our current musical voice.โ
In addition to performing at T. J. Mulligans in Midtown (October 1st) and Earnestine & Hazelโs (October 2nd), Max Kaplan & the Magics will open for Neal Francis at Railgarten (October 7th).
As for future plans, Kaplan says, โWe want to start touring. We want to get on the festival market. I want to keep putting out records and more albums. The goal is to have a band that travels the world and is successful enough to support themselves and their families with nothing but the music.
โAnd, really, the reason that weโre doing all this is because we love playing music. And the more we can do it, thatโs the goal.โ

