
Eve Maret (sounds like “muh-ray”) is a Nashville-based experimental artist and composer who employs a wide array of electronic media and techniques in her various disciplines, exploring the possibilities of personal and communal healing through creative action.
Over twelve tracks, her upcoming album Diamond Cutter is an exploration of the space where strength meets vulnerability. The title comes from an ancient Buddhist text of the same name, and it’s out April 17th.
Drawing inspiration from nineteenth-century orchestral and choral works, the Fluxus movement, Kosmische Musik and funk, Eve makes use of digital and modular synthesizers, a vocoder, clarinet, electric bass, guitar, and field recordings to create works that range from lush cinematic compositions to space disco. Eve’s music practice is a conversation with her numerous curiosities, manifested in the form of video art, drawing, dance, ritual, and cymatics.
Today, Eve shares the single, “Gethsemani.” The song came to her in a dream while she was visiting a monastery, and she later actualized the music she heard in her head. Named after the biblical garden, the track is inspired by Eve’s Catholic upbringing, a part of her past that she admits is complicated and racked with guilt. Fast forward to today and Eve had a bit of a viral moment on her Instagram page recently, where a clip in which she was dressed as a nun during a recent live set resulted in one of her widest audiences yet on the platform.
On the new single, Eve shares: “Growing up Catholic was…complicated. It was a decision that was made for me, and it’s all that I knew. I was taught that from the moment I was born, I was sinful. Not only that, but with a name like Eve, I truly felt responsible for anything bad that happened around me.
“Dressing up like a nun and playing music felt like a random idea at first, but in retrospect, my life has been building towards this culmination point for years. I’m re-contextualizing my wounds to empower myself. I’m taking the parts of Catholicism I appreciate and re-appropriating them. I am devoted to music, to knowing myself, and to having fun in the process.”
Check out the new video and single via YouTube, pre-order the album here, and see below for upcoming live dates in Knoxville and Memphis.
Eve’s music has been featured on Echoes Radio and Iggy Pop’s BBC radio show Iggy Confidential. “Synthesizer Hearts,” off of Eve’s 2020 release, Stars Aligned, appeared on BBC Radio 6 Music’s B-List in December 2020 and premiered on Mary Anne Hobbs’ BBC Radio show “Music From The Near Future.”
In 2021, Eve contributed to Moebius Strips, an audio installation and companion album honoring the work of electronic music pioneer Dieter Moebius. Other contributors include Geoff Barrow (Portishead, Beak), Sarah Davachi, Jean-Benoît Dunckel (Air), Mark Mothersbaugh (Devo), Phew, Hans-Joachim Roedelius (Cluster, Harmonia), Michael Rother (Harmonia, NEU!) and Yuri Suzuki. She has been praised by the likes of WIRE Magazine, Chicago Tribune, DJ Mag, Bandcamp, and more.
In 2022 and 2023, Eve and her collaborators Dream Chambers and Belly Full Of Stars composed a live-score for FW Murnau’s 1922 film, Nosferatu, which they performed in theatres across the United States. Collaborating is an important aspect of Eve’s creative path, and she has an on-going dance music project called GLAZIER with her partner Scott Glazier, as well as a synth-rock duo, Eardrummer, with longtime friend Adrienne Franke. Eve has performed across the United States and internationally, alongside artists such as William Tyler, Guerilla Toss, MATMOS, JEFF the Brotherhood, and Lydia Lunch.
In addition to her personal creative practices, Eve is committed to providing avenues for others to create and uplift one another. In 2018, She, Jess Chambers, Deli Paloma-Sisk, and Arlene Sparacia founded Hyasynth House, an electronic music collective and education center for female and LGBTQIA+ artists. Together they facilitated workshops, performances, and community-wide conversations in an effort to support and empower marginalized groups.
The founders went their separate ways in 2019, but Eve continues to lead electronic music workshops and to organize live music events in Nashville and beyond, including her work co-producing Nashville Drone, a 6-hour music experience featuring 13 regional artists across genres, in an effort to create an immersive space for the community to connect and recharge.
Eve Maret Live Dates
April 18 – Knoxville, TN – the Pilot Light
May 30 – Memphis, TN – Memphis Concrète
