This interview has been edited for clarity.
βHonestly I feel like at the time I first started conceptualizing what a project would look like for myself and what I would be called, it was kind of trendy to do the all-caps pseudonym name,β OSTON says with a laugh.
LA-based musician Austin Wolfe ββ known professionally as OSTON ββ has been releasing music since 2018. When she first started, there was another musician named Austin Wolfe and βa really famous male porn star named Austin Wolfe dominating the SEO,β so she decided to try another angle. Her bandmate at the time coined her now-trademark phrase βBoston without the Bβ to remember the name.Β
Much of her songs comment on her personal experiences, referencing places sheβs lived or people sheβs met throughout the years. OSTONβs latest work, an EP titled Saint Rich, drops May 16.Β
βThe whole project was this necessary reflection period that I think I had to go through before I could start writing happy songs again,β she says. She laughed and added, βI think I kind of realized that I had all this unresolved mental energy that I had to work through with a past relationship.β
Itβs common to see artists reference their personal lives in songs. However, the most successful artists write about their lives in hidden messages, allowing fans to decode them or interpret their own meanings. OSTONβs music features these hidden messages, referencing specific locations or people that fans can use to relate to the music, as well as piece together the incredibly personal story OSTON is telling in her work.
βAll of the songs off this EP are about my life in Chicago when I was with this person,β she shares. βItβs kind of like this tell-all about my relationship and this period of my life.β In the singles released from Saint Rich, OSTON creates a heartbreaking atmosphere by name-dropping specific locations throughout the city. In βWtf u want.,β she sings the lines: River North and gin martinis/Back when you thought I was pretty. She references the city again in her song βMolly.β starting with the opening lines: Molly I gave you a shot/Spinning around in the park in Chicago.
Itβs exciting to see songs about the city that arenβt Djoβs βEnd of Beginning,β although it is a fantastic piece. Similarly to Djo, OSTON credits much of her early adult experiences to living in the Windy City.
βI feel like thatβs where I grew up,β OSTON says, βlike thatβs where my brain developed.β She first moved to the city at 18 for college and lived there for five years before moving to Los Angeles. βI became this adult person with views of the world according to living in a city with so many different cultural influences, music influences and food influences. I became who I am because of that city.β
In her teens, OSTON had βa weird aversion to pop music.β Most of the songs she grew up listening to were from very indie folk singer-songwriters, which felt fitting for her small town in Utah. βListening to pop made you very uncool,β she shares with a laugh. OSTON felt like she had to hide that she was listening to the likes of Carly Rae Jepsen, Taylor Swift and Ariana Grande.
When she first arrived in Chicago, OSTON worked at a studio where industry professionals ββ producers, writers, instrumentalists ββ were taking pop music seriously. βI was able to fall in love with that part of me again,β she says of the pop genre. βThat part of my writing has remained with me no matter how my sound changes over the years.β OSTONβs last two projects ββ βMelancholiaβ and Iβm Definitely Talking Too Much ββ were made alongside her partner and producer Drew Polovick. Leading up to her junior EP, OSTON wanted to experiment with new perspectives and sounds by working with a variety of producers.
βI actually went around and was writing with a lot of people for this project,β she says. Although it was a bit of a challenge, OSTON found excitement in this. βI was writing something so personal,β she says, βso I had to go in and dump my entire lifeβs sob story on them.β
Music is a form of storytelling. Sound, lyrics and presentation have equal weight in a longer project; an artist needs to be vulnerable with their collaborators to achieve this. OSTON ended up collaborating with producers/musicians Nydge, Austin Armstrong, Michael Blum and Nicci Gomez for the majority of the EP.
βItβs the first project where I feel there are different tracks that have different storytelling methods because theyβre from different people,β OSTON says. Although her longtime collaborator is her partner, she found that working with new people ββ people who donβt know her as well as Polovick does ββ pushed her to be more βvulnerable and honest with the storytelling.β
Artists like Taylor Swift or Olivia Rodrigo tell some of the most personal stories through their songs, but they are also known in the industry alongside their collaborators. Their producers Jack Antonoff and Dan Nigro, respectively, have had a significant influence on the shifts in the sound of pop music over the last decade. OSTONβs most recent song βWtf u want.β was released on March 15 and will be featured on her EP. Complete with a catchy bridge and heartbreaking choruses backed by a dance beat, youβll be grateful when βWtf u want.β is stuck in your head.
βThat was a fun one,β OSTON says about the song, βmaybe the most go-with-the-flow of the whole project.β She worked with Austin Armstrong for the first time on this track, but the two ran in similar circles for a while. She also brought her close friend and fellow musician Katie Donnelly onto the song. βWtf u want.β was inspired by Charli XCX-hyperpop accompanied by an acoustic guitar to ground the piece.
After OSTON decided to put the song on βSaint Richβ she brought the track to Nicci Gomez, who took it to the βindie alt-pop worldβ from the βvery pop, hyperpopβ sound. βI definitely wanted it to be a single,β she shares, βbecause it was so jarring.β OSTONβs three most recent tracks ββ βWtf u want.,β βBurton St.β and βMolly.β ββ are part of her upcoming EP.
As her sound has evolved so has she. Early on in her career before she moved to LA, OSTON started releasing music to establish herself as a serious musician. OSTON says, βI think that first project I put out, I just donβt resonate with it anymore.β
Other artists have discussed similar struggles when reviewing early work. Maggie Rogers, who went viral in 2016, completely scrubbed the internet of any music she released before that viral moment. It wasnβt until she established herself in the industry that she re-released those songs. Similarly, Dove Cameron deleted any music released before βBoyfriendβ because she didnβt feel like her old songs represented who she truly was.
OSTONβs early songs felt like a version of herself that βdoesnβt exist anymore.β While she does want to take those early works off of streaming platforms someday, she also uses them as a βstepping stoneβ for who she is today. βI had to step on that to get to where I am now,β she says. Now on the brink of her junior EP, sheβs confident in herself and the stories she wants to tell through her music.
βI feel like everyone has that,β OSTON says about growth as an artist, βMiley Cyrus ββ looking back at Hannah Montana, Iβm sure sheβs like βoh my God, that doesnβt feel like me, but also itβs iconic.β It got her to where she is now.β
Itβs interesting to watch creatives talk about their past work. While some are proud to show where they came from, others prefer not to discuss their previous experiences. Zendaya, for example, began her career as a child actress on Disney Channel. Now, sheβs a two-time Emmy winner and blockbuster movie star. βYou have to start somewhere. Not that Iβm in any way, shape or form comparing myself to Zendaya,β OSTON adds with a laugh.
βItβs fun to look back at peopleβs origins,β she adds, βbut I definitely cringe every time somebody says they like a song of that [first] record.β OSTON enjoys looking back at other artistsβ work to see where they came from; itβs validating. Creatives understand that thereβs no such thing as an overnight success. Pop music fans are seeing this now with Sabrina Carpenter. While many believe she came into mainstream music out of nowhere, Carpenter has been working in the industry since 2012.
OSTON has been working as a musician for over six years now. There wasnβt anything particular that encouraged her to become an artist, but instead βthis innate desireβ she had βto do something creativeβ with her life.
OSTONβs parents have always been her biggest supporters. βI just think that if I didnβt have that support coming from them, I probably wouldβve given up a long time ago and gone into marketing,β she says. (Weβd like to finally address the unfortunate artist-to-marketing pipeline.)
Growing up surrounded by music ββ from going to concerts in the park to having the radio on in the car ββ it seemed obvious that this was the right path. Her momβs best friend was a professional musician and helped her write her earliest songs. βI just realized [from a young age] that I donβt know how Iβm going to do this,β she shares, βbut I canβt not try to be a musician.β
OSTON is going on tour with Hunter Hayes for the first couple of weeks of May. Throughout middle school and high school, OSTON was a huge fan of Hayes. When she was asked to be an opening act on his Flying Solo Tour, it felt entirely βfull circle.β
The whole tour is acoustic, so OSTONβs set will just be her and a guitarist. βItβll be a really stripped-down version of my songs,β she says, βwhich I donβt foresee doing again.β OSTON loves doing shows with her full band, so playing parts of her upcoming EP in this manner is both exciting and daunting. The songs on βSaint Richβ are incredibly emotional, so fans hearing them for the first time in this setting will really emphasize that.Β
OSTONβs junior EP Saint Rich comes out May 16. You can follow her on Instagram and TikTok for updates.
Annaliese Baker is a journalist and stand-up comedian based in Boston. Her writing has been featured in The Boston Globe, GBH and Alyssa Milano: Sorry Not Sorry, in addition to ECHO. Annaliese previously resided in New York City, where she worked at Comedy Central: Stand-Up and has performed at several venues throughout both New York and Boston. She’s currently part of the News Digital Team at GBH, Boston’s NPR and PBS affiliate, and is part of Emerson College’s writing and publishing program.