It was less than an ideal environment to begin work on album two – “near impossible”, as grandson puts it. “I wasn’t yet sure what I wanted to do, so I was working on these alternative rock, pop-rock songs and the focus was, ‘I’m going to write this song and it’s going to do this for me and get me to the places I want to go in my career because I’d like to play these big stages myself someday,’” he remembers. “I was struggling to feel like any of it was authentic. I started to resent alternative pop and rock radio; it was just leaving this inauthentic taste in my mouth. I felt uninspired, and I was running out of time – it had, all of a sudden, been two years since my album came out. I was dealing with this feeling that if I didn’t figure this out, then everyone’s going to move on and forget about it.”
Consequently, he changed tack, regrouping in Los Angeles last summer to knuckle down on what became his second album, I Love You, I’m Trying. He made it as social a process as possible – “the opposite of a pandemic album” – and although it doesn’t feature many collaborations in the traditional sense, he brought in the voices of family and friends, as well as girlfriend Wafia, to give the record an extra, personal dimension. The other major force, however, that knocked the album into shape came in the form of the mushroom-induced epiphany that directly inspired downtrodden lead single Eulogy.
“While I was on these mushrooms, I realised that I had been feeling more pressure to build consequence into my life,” grandson explains. “I felt like the only way to be taken seriously as a songwriter was to sacrifice part of your health or sanity, and live life that teeters on the brink. It was just not a healthy place for me to be in.” He went back to therapy, and permitted himself to let go of the pressure he had piled on himself. Instead, he wrote the album he needed to hear.