The result is a collection that captures a range of moods and emotions, like the spunky first single, "Heart of Gold," which calls out a relationship-phobic guy and lets him know what he's missing out on. "I write about what I know, and what I don't know," Huff says. "Not all of my songs are about things that have happened to me, but they deal with things I've thought about a lot and want to get out of my system."
According to the White Flag Songfacts, the lead single has nothing to do with relinquishing control, but rather trying out something new. Huff told MTV News: "Most people are like, 'Oh, what are you surrendering?' I'm like, 'Nothing, really, besides my heart.' I wrote it about something that actually drew from some life experience," she explained. "Some guy, like, likes you, tries to get your attention, [and] you don't necessarily blow him off, you just don't notice. And finally, you ... take a second and you decide, 'OK, I'm gonna give this one [a] shot. What do I have to lose?' and then it ends up being kind of awesome. The good kind of surrender — it's good for you not to control every moment of your day."
Huff's urge to express herself through songwriting is not surprising given her family background — music is in her blood. Her father, Dann Huff, is an in-demand producer and session guitarist who has produced albums by Keith Urban and Rascal Flatts and performed on hits by Michael Jackson, Madonna, and Faith Hill, while her grandfather, Ronn Huff was a sought-after arranger on Nashville's contemporary Christian music scene. Ashlyne was born in Glendale, CA, where she took naps in the music studios where her father was working. "The noise was soothing to me," she says. "I couldn't sleep in silence. My parents would put me in the car and drive me around with my dad's music on full-blast and I'd fall asleep instantly."
The Huff family moved to Nashville when Ashlyne was five, which was when she got bit by the performing bug. "I was watching Full House and Jodie Sweetin's character danced to the B-52s' ‘Love Shack.' That one episode changed my life. I decided to be a dancer." Huff began dance lessons at the age of seven and took it very seriously. "It was my sport; it was my life," she says. At age 11, she joined the Opryland Kids Club in the final year that the theme park was open, and realized she'd have to be able to sing if she wanted to continue to perform as a dancer. "I was actually afraid to sing because people came in and out of my dad's studio who could sing really well," Huff recalls. "But I did it and wound up singing all through high school."
After graduating, Huff enrolled at Nashville's Belmont University to get a degree in Music Business. "I studied publishing and copyright law and thought maybe I'd go into production," she says. "I used to do my homework in the studio with my dad and I liked the atmosphere and loved being around musicians. I learned how to use all the equipment, like Pro Tools, and started editing my own dance songs at 13. It was like my computer game. While everyone else was playing Nintendo, I was playing Pro Tools."
While attending college, Huff's love for songwriting blossomed. "My dad had told me when I was 12 that I would never be a writer unless I had something to say," she recalls. "At 19, I went through a bad breakup and I decided to write a song about it just to get my feelings out. Then I thought, ‘What if I could help someone going through the same thing? I'd feel better if I knew something I wrote helped someone else.' From then on, I was hooked."
In December 2006, Huff was approached by Anderson Merchandisers — one of the nation's largest distributors of pre-recorded music, movies, and books, which services retail stores throughout the U.S. The company was launching its own record label, Liquid Digital Media, and wanted Huff to be its first signing. Huff agreed if she could begin recording after she graduated from college the following year. Meanwhile, she auditioned for and won a part as a dancer in LeAnn Rimes' video for "Nothin' Better To Do." A year later, she re-enacted the performance along with Rimes and the other dancers at the CMT Awards. "It was a great experience," Huff says. "I wouldn't have missed it for anything." It was also the last time she found herself dancing behind another artist.
In early 2008, a song Huff co-wrote with Tommy Lee James and Stefanie Ridel, entitled "I'm Done," appeared on the Pussycat Dolls' latest album Doll Domination. Also last year, she began collaborating with songwriter/producers Mike Busbee and Mathias Wollo on the tracks that will appear on her debut album, which will be released in early 2010. In the meantime, Huff continues to attract fans with her powerhouse voice, upbeat personality, and relatable songs. "I really think there's something for everyone in my songs, no matter how old you are," Huff says. "I just can't wait for people to hear them."
http://www.ashlynehuff.com/
Sweet Nothing
Ashlyne Huff Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
It's like it knows
It knows that it's that kind
A couple highs but mostly lows
Gravity has come, forcing me to fall
Down to nothing
You were my conviction
Then it all came down
When luck was gonna turn
Gravity has come, it's done this once before
And now I'm feeling
Sweet nothing
Sweet, sweet nothing
I guess I tried
I guess I'm fine
I tihnk I'll try again sometime
Sweet, sweet nothing
You were my sweet, sweet nothing
I feel sweet nothing
The song "Sweet Nothing" by Ashlyne Huff is a poignant and emotional track that explores the feeling of loss and heartbreak. The opening stanza sets the mood with a gray and dreary sky, perhaps symbolizing the singer's mood or the world around her. She notes that the sky seems to know that it's a day filled with mostly lows and a few highs, hinting at the ups and downs of life. The mention of gravity forcefully dragging her down suggests a feeling of powerlessness or helplessness.
The next stanza talks about how the singer once found solace and happiness in someone else, a person she considered to be her "conviction" and "happiest concern." But all of that came crashing down when circumstances changed, and the luck that they previously had turned against them. It's unclear what exactly happened, but the mention of gravity suggests something external, a force beyond their control that brought them down. Now, the singer is left feeling like she has nothing - something sweet and comforting, like a loving partner or a stable life, has been replaced by emptiness and nothingness.
The chorus drives this message home, with the repeated phrase "sweet, sweet nothing." The juxtaposition of "sweet" with "nothing" is particularly striking, as it hints at how the things that bring us joy and happiness in life can also be the same ones that make the absence of them so devastating. The final lines of the song hold out a sliver of hope for the future, with the singer expressing a vague desire to try again someday.
Overall, "Sweet Nothing" is a beautiful, bittersweet song that will resonate with anyone who has experienced loss or heartbreak.
Line by Line Meaning
The sky is grey today
The current atmosphere seems dismal
It's like it knows
The weather's gloom matches my mood
It knows that it's that kind
The sky understands how I'm feeling
A couple highs but mostly lows
There were some good times, but mostly bad times
Gravity has come, forcing me to fall
I am experiencing a negative change in my life
Down to nothing
I feel like I have lost everything
You were my conviction
I believed in you completely
My happiest concern
My love for you was the source of my greatest joy
Then it all came down
Our relationship fell apart
When luck was gonna turn
When things were finally going to get better
Gravity has come, it's done this once before
I've experienced hardships like this in the past
And now I'm feeling
I am currently experiencing
Sweet nothing
A feeling of emptiness and loss
Sweet, sweet nothing
Emphasizing how empty and desolate I feel
I guess I tried
I did everything I could
I guess I'm fine
I am okay, even though I lost you
I think I'll try again sometime
I will keep on trying to find love
You were my sweet, sweet nothing
You were everything to me, but now I have nothing
I feel sweet nothing
The pain of losing you has left me numb
Contributed by Sophia G. Suggest a correction in the comments below.