Features : Jimmy Mallia takes a ride on a childhood Saturday memory with new song “Uncle”

Kurt Beyers, Publicist November 23, 2024
image

When Jimmy Mallia released his first song at the turn of the year, it wasn’t to start a career. He wanted to put out some of the music he had been writing for 15 years for somebody to hear.

“I had no thought I would actually sing them. I thought I would sell my songs to someone. I just wanted people to hear them. First and foremost, I’m a singer-songwriter, so, my first time was just to get the music out there, just to say that I did it.”

Four songs later, he will release his sixth song, “Uncle”. Like most of his songs, it is a folk/country ballad written from a story from his life. It will feature his guitar and more instruments than his usual.

Most of all, it will feature his distinctive voice, a rich deep bass with a fine-toothed saw at the bottom edge. The voice and his music together make you want to sing along.

“This particular song is about an uncle I had growing up,” he said, beginning a story that one day, when she finally heard it, horrified his mother.

Uncle, which is all Jimmy ever called him, is one of those people out of a storybook, he said. Rich, retired at 30, a lifelong bachelor, living with Jimmy’s aunt and grandmother in the family home, built before 1900, in Galveston, Texas.

“We happened to live around the corner and every other Saturday or so, I would go stay with stay with them, and my uncle and I got kind of a tradition of getting up Saturday morning and getting in the car. He would take me around town all morning, and it’s the story of those Saturday mornings.”

Uncle took Jimmy, age 6 or so, on a tour of his banks to visit his money and show off Jimmy, sometimes to the Walgreens lunch counter, and always — the part that his mother found so horrifying — bars. Plural.

Driving home, Jimmy often had to tell Uncle whether the light was red or green. From the chorus:

He was loud, he was mean and fun
He loved me, this much I know
Saturdays were our day alone
Just Uncle, me, best day I’ve known

“I think people probably hear it and get mortified. But for me, what a great childhood memory. I was king for a day.” The song’s perspective is that of the 6-year-old king for a day, not the alcoholic uncle.

Alcoholism and Jimmy’s recovery after more than 40 years of drinking are the perspective of his first song, “Hey Hey.”

“A lot of my songs are, with my own personal experience, intended to be something that people can kind of relate to. I’ve covered mental illness, alcoholism, death of a mother. But this is a joyful memory of childhood. Everybody’s got a story, and, hopefully, it will help some people look back and remember childhood was fun.”

Looking forward, he will release his seventh song the day after Thanksgiving, “All I Want for Christmas.” It will probably be, he says, his one and only Christmas song.

“It’s a fun song, about wanting all my daughters with me for Christmas. It’s very much a throwback. Hopefully everyone who hears it will think Bing Crosby, Nat King Cole, Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin. There hasn’t been a really good Christmas song released in a very long time. I think that’s how it started. Man, I miss that whole sound of Christmas.”

He says if “Hey Hey” had not done well, he would probably have quit. But that song quickly hit a hundred thousand streams, and three of the next four, did too.

“Which, you know, for beginners — not half bad. Especially considering there are like 8 million artists on Spotify. Then I’m like, ‘Well, heck, let’s try this again.’ And I’ve thoroughly enjoyed the process.”

The next mountain to climb for a singer-songwriter who never really thought about singing his own songs is live performances. He put his songs out on Groover to get the feedback, and he has received hundreds of comments.

“And people started complimenting on the vocals, and the timbre and what a unique sound. And I’m like, ‘Really?! Wow! Okay, thanks.’ I just wanted my song heard. Never did I think that the vocals would have anything to do with it, so, it’s kind of changed my direction a little bit. Now I’m like, ‘Heck yeah, I’m gonna sing ’em.’”

Take the Saturday tour and connect to Jimmy Mallia on all platforms for new music, videos, and social posts.

Amazon Music
Apple Music 
Spotify
YouTube

RELATED ARTICLES

Becky Hill Discusses The Punk Influences Behind ‘Rebecca’

Hill tells us about her Blur and Prodigy-inspired new album, hitting back at Jack Whitehall for "punching down" in calling her 'Wetherspoons Whitney' and feeling inspired by "watching other pop girlies have their authentic moment"

June 02, 2026 0 comment

Brian Turner Ushers In a Season of Faith and Resilience With “Come To Pass”

There’s a calm assurance woven into Brian Turner’s latest single, “Come To Pass.”

May 22, 2026 0 comment

Fearless Izzy Spring Releases Unapologetically Fun New Single ‘MEDIOCRITY’

A multi-instrumentalist, she brings her songs to life through vocals as well as harp, piano, guitar, and more, creating rich, layered compositions that reflect her diverse influences.

May 19, 2026 0 comment

Joy, Music, and Family: Matt Axton’s “MUSCLECHOPS” Brings the Funky Jams to Mountain Soul Rock and Roll

Songwriter. Performer. Inheritor of a family tradition. California-based musician Matt Axton is many things.

May 18, 2026 0 comment

Saved by Music, Lettie Law Encourages Divine Connection with New Single, “Christ, the Ultimate Sacrifice”

For about a year, Lettie Law felt she was dying. When she began to make music, her life turned around.

May 14, 2026 0 comment

Ladytron Break Down Their Creative Process

“We wanted to make a record closer to the dancefloor than recent ones. But the primary motivation was that we wanted to make our best album. If you’re not aiming for that then there is no point.”

May 06, 2026 0 comment

JULY Captures Fleeting Beauty and Quiet Luxury on New Single “Fashion Week”

Canadian singer, songwriter, and rapper JULY invites listeners into a moment they’ve likely felt but could never quite describe on his latest single, “Fashion Week.”

May 04, 2026 0 comment

Kenzy Kyx Returns with Uplifting Dance Anthem “Keep The Party Going”

Rising singer-songwriter Kenzy Kyx is back with a bold and uplifting new single, “Keep The Party Going.”

May 01, 2026 0 comment

Meet Joesph Blue, the Louisiana Artist Behind the Country Ballad, “Summer Nights Goodbye” from Black Sheep Records

The Louisiana artist behind the new country ballad, “Summer Nights Goodbye,” has an unusually spelled first name. Instead of the conventional “Joseph,” the name spells “J-O-E-S-P-H.”

May 01, 2026 0 comment

Leave a comment