About
Music can be the tipping point. A song might inspire you to finally settle on that decision you’d been debating or take the last step necessary to change your life for the better.
Aaron Friend & the Enemies craft rock music that teems with humanity uplifted by fuzzed-out distortion, head-nodding hooks, and unfiltered honesty about life, love, and relationships. The Nashville-based singer, songwriter, guitarist, and producer incites emotion in between the crunch of power chords and the echo of heartfelt melodies.
The songs on his 2025 independent EP, Sunset Clause, will make you think, feel, move, or maybe even make that change…
“When you listen to the EP, I’d love for you to be empowered with what you’re doing, own your decisions, and know you can make a difference,” says Aaron. “There’s so much passion in this, and I’m writing truthfully. That’s the message I want to bleed through.”
Born in Cleveland, Aaron embraced music as a kid and never let go. During high school, he cut his teeth in various bands, opening for the likes of Lifehouse and Maroon 5-precursor Kara’s Flowers throughout New York, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. Forgoing an opportunity to attend Berklee College of Music, he graduated from Middle Tennessee State University with a degree in Music Business Management. Between cooking up tracks of his own, he launched a career behind-the-scenes, spending 10 years at BMI in licensing. Eventually, he joined a business management firm as a Senior Royalty Manager, fighting on behalf of clients and gaining invaluable perspective on the intricacies of the industry itself.
“I always liked being able to balance the business and creative sides,” he notes. “With whatever you do, it comes down to showing up. I’ll leave the office, get home at 6:30pm, and immediately grab an acoustic guitar every day.”
In 2018, he unveiled the Colors EP as his debut for Aaron Friend & the Enemies. Processing the aftermath of a divorce and enduring the Global Pandemic, he continued to record, unveiling 2023’s A Friend 4 A Season EP. 2024 saw him craft what would become Sunset Clause, working with frequent collaborator Ryan Truso and Nick Brown of MONA as co-producers.
“Nick is an Ohio guy, and we’d met a few years back,” recalls Aaron. “MONA put out this record called Smiley Creatures, and it’s insane. It had reignited a few things in me about rock music that were missing in my other two records. I realized it was about being passionate. Last year, Nick and I reconnected, so I sent him a
handful of demos. We just clicked, and the songs effortlessly came together with a lot of honesty.”
You can hear it loud and clear on the likes of “Good Times.” Palm-muted guitar tiptoes underneath his understated verses. Turning on a dime, distortion overflows on a chantable chorus as Aaron admits, “I’d give anything, if the good times, if the good times would come back around.”
“It’s a feel-good song,” he comments. “I was working on ‘Good Times’ with my synthesizer player. One night, we had a bottle of wine and played old Sega Genesis games like Sonic The Hedgehog. I thought, ‘These are the good times.’ You’re with your boy. You’re having a drink. You’re playing stupid games and acting like you’ve got nothing going on the next day. It’s Saturday night, and everything is good. Sometimes, you’ve got to remind yourself life is not that serious.”
“Back To Zero” revolves around an ethereal riff, glitchy feedback, and a steady drumbeat. It climaxes on a seismic refrain as he defiantly declares, “It’s coming back to this. I ain’t taking what you’re giving.”
“We’re constantly struggling for balance in relationships,” he goes on. “Even with maintaining healthy habits, it’s a big push-and-pull. So, ‘Back To Zero’ is me nodding to my musicianship, creativity, and artistry and diving back in. You’re not overthinking; you’re letting loose.”
Elsewhere, “Game Of Fools” layers swooning vocals atop a loose guitar-driven groove. It culminates on a vulnerable chorus, “I can’t be sorry for breaking your rules. Who’s gonna lose in this game of fools?”
“We’re in a society where we’re always trying to cater to the needs of others,” he observes. “It seems like we’re constantly apologizing for who we are. If you’re trying to please everybody else all the time, how can you ever be yourself? ‘Game of Fools’ is me waking up for the first time, finding my voice again, and being unapologetic about it.”
Airy synths ebb and flow on “Fight The Feeling” until another bold hook takes hold. Then, there’s “Something I Never Had.” Backed by a simmering beat, heartbroken verses give way to acceptance on a hypnotic refrain, “I think I lost something I never really had.”
“I had closed a chapter with my divorce, and Ryan was going through the end of his marriage,” he goes on. “After a relationship, you still have emotion and love deep down for this person even though you were treated poorly. The song pulls you out of the darkness and back into the light. You essentially realize that you can’t be broken over something you never truly had.”
“Sunset” transfixes with a cathartic final word accented by Wurlitzer transmissions and soft percussion. Thematically, he applies the concept of a Sunset Clause to a relationship.
“After a management contract ends, a Sunset Clause requires an artist to continue to pay the management company for a number of years—or in perpetuity—even though they’re no longer working together,” he elaborates. “I likened it to a relationship. If you’re done with a friendship, go through a divorce, or lose a family member to death, all of those experiences are foundational. You think it’s over, but some of the emotional baggage and trauma comes back year after year. If you work through it, you can learn from it. ‘Sunset’ wasn’t just the closing of a marriage, but it was the start of a new life. I took time to reset and recalibrate my love for music and start over.”
Ultimately, Aaron’s music could encourage and empower you to do the same.
“There’s nothing better than watching music bring people together,” he leaves off. “Rock ‘n’ roll is a way to be unified. I hope it can maybe awaken passion for listeners.”