Of all of the pop hits vying to turn into the tune of the summer time, Alex Warren’s “Ordinary” could be probably the most inconceivable: A stark and brooding ballad filled with lurid Christian imagery — “Shatter me with your touch / Oh Lord, return me to dust,” goes one line — it’s a few man searching for the sort of sexual-spiritual success not usually discovered on the seashore or at a barbecue.
But the tune, which has greater than 720 million streams on Spotify, simply logged its sixth week since early June atop Billboard’s Scorching 100 — greater than a month longer at No. 1 than Sabrina Carpenter’s “Manchild,” to call one of many sunnier tunes soundtracking the season. (Amongst Warren’s different rivals: Drake, who posted a picture of the present chart on Instagram on Monday exhibiting his tune “What Did I Miss?” at No. 2 behind Warren’s hit. “I’m taking that soon don’t worry,” the rapper wrote.)
“Ordinary’s” somber tone is all of the extra putting provided that Warren — whose father died when he was 9 and who grew up in Carlsbad with a single mom he’s described as an abusive alcoholic — first made a reputation for himself as a founding member of Hype Home, the early-2020s conclave of TikTokers identified for beaming out goofy bite-size content material from a rented mansion in Los Angeles. Half a decade later, Warren remains to be a trustworthy person of his TikTok account (with its 18.8 million followers), although today he’s principally driving consideration — typically with the assistance of his spouse, fellow influencer Kouvr Annon — to his music, which mixes the moody theatrics of early Sam Smith with the extremely buffed textures of Think about Dragons.
On Friday, Warren will launch his debut LP, “You’ll Be Alright, Kid,” that includes visitor appearances by Blackpink’s Rosé and by Jelly Roll, who introduced Warren to the stage at April’s Stagecoach competition to sing “Ordinary” and to premiere their duet “Bloodline.” Warren, 24, mentioned his journey throughout a current journey to L.A. from his new dwelling in Nashville, the place he lives not removed from Jelly Roll and Teddy Swims. “I was just texting Teddy,” Warren says as we sit down. “I got off tour and immediately was like, ‘Oh, I want to buy a go-kart.’ Teddy FaceTimes me, he goes, ‘You a—hole. I’m trying to buy a go-kart right now too.’ Apparently, I bought the last go-kart in Tennessee.” These are excerpts from our dialog.
“Ordinary” is clearly drawing in your identification as a Christian. But there’s one thing virtually sacrilegious concerning the tune. I get that criticism rather a lot.
To me it’s what makes the tune attention-grabbing — the erotic vitality in a line like “You got me kissing the ground of your sanctuary.” I’m worshiping my spouse in a approach — she’s the very best factor that’s ever occurred to me. You may’t simply write a tune like that and be like, “Oh, baby, you’re my everything.” Everybody’s already achieved “You’re my world,” you understand? I needed to do one thing completely different — virtually Hozier-esque. I wrote into it being like, I actually love my spouse, and I’ve a relationship with God — that’s one thing I can evaluate it to.
Because the tune has gone out, I’ve heard quite a lot of Christians’ opinions on it, and a few individuals are like, “F— this guy.” There’s additionally so many individuals who suppose it’s a brilliant die-hard Christian tune and don’t prefer it both. I’ve to be OK with either side hating me.
You’ve led a peculiar life, which clearly lends context to your music for anybody who is aware of the small print. But “Ordinary” is sufficiently big now that many listeners — possibly most listeners — are listening to it with out realizing something about you.This new tune I’ve been teasing [“Eternity”] is about grief, and individuals are like, “I can’t wait to play it at my wedding.” It’s cool that individuals are making it their very own. It jogs my memory of Lewis Capaldi’s “Someone You Loved,” the place individuals have been like, “Oh my God, this is a breakup record.” No, he wrote it about his grandma.
Are you a Capaldi fan?I like Lewis. I don’t appear to be a Justin Bieber/Shawn Mendes conventional pop star, however it’s cool as a result of Lewis sort of made it fashionable to not give a f—. Lewis and Ed [Sheeran], I’d say — I imply, I’ve seen Ed’s closet, and it’s simply 9 white Prada T-shirts.
You’ve got an uncommon voice.Thanks — I believe?
It’s deeper than most pop voices proper now. Does it appear uncommon to you?No. I requested my spouse, “Do I have a basic voice?” She was like, “What are you talking about?” I used to be like, “I live with this voice, and I think it just sounds like every other bitch.” However I’m my No. 1 hater.
I went again and regarded on the sequence Netflix made about Hype Home.I’m so sorry.
There’s some important fluctuations in your weight, and I used to be questioning how working in a visible subject from a fairly younger age formed your concepts about consuming and train.After I began creating wealth, I didn’t know what to do with it and I simply used DoorDash each second I might. As time went on, particularly in Hype Home, you will have so many individuals’s opinions and everybody’s declaring your flaws, and the load was positively certainly one of them. After that I used to be like, “OK, how do I fix this?” I’m 24 now — I used to be 22, 21 on the time, and I used to be like, “I should be in the best shape of my life.”
However it positively does take a toll on you. Even now, when you go take a look at my TikTok feedback, hundreds of individuals are loving me. You go on Twitter, the primary 400 feedback are like, “He’s so ugly,” “His nose is crooked,” all this stuff. It hits a degree the place you will have a thousand individuals loving you, however these two individuals not — you’re like, “Wait, are they the ones telling me the truth? Is everyone else just gassing me up?”
Type of bleak.It’s such an odd profession. I’ve the Children’ Selection Awards on Saturday, and I’m like, “Should I be eating this the next few days?”
Would you say you’re in a great place when it comes to how you consider your bodily look?Wanting within the mirror, in all probability not. However in terms of having to approve a photograph, I don’t give a s—. I’ll approve no matter, double chin and all.
Is that true?Really, I don’t thoughts, as a result of I don’t suppose individuals are watching my movies for my attractiveness. That being mentioned, if I used to be lighter, I believe I’d be happier myself. However on the identical time, I don’t care as a result of these songs to me are extra about what they’re about and fewer about how I look. Additionally, it offers me some leeway if somebody catches me missing at In-N-Out.
Warren’s tune “Ordinary” now has greater than 720 million streams on Spotify and has simply logged its sixth week since early June atop Billboard’s Scorching 100.
(Ethan Benavidez / For The Instances)
You’ve mentioned you don’t actually drink or do medication however that you simply get drunk yearly. What could be the event?I simply received drunk with Ed Sheeran — I drank two Modelos and I received placed on my ass. This was at Santa’s Pub [in Nashville] — me, Noah Kahan and Ed Sheeran. That they had simply performed one thing, and Ed was like, “Do you want a drink?” I used to be like, “If I’m getting drunk this year, it’s getting drunk with Ed Sheeran.” So he gave me a Modelo, and I used to be like, “Whoa, I’m feeling this.” He’s like, “OK, dude, I’m on my 11th.” He arms me a second one, and my spouse needed to drive me dwelling.
So I’ve been getting a little bit unfastened with it. However it’s all the time beer — I don’t actually drink any onerous stuff. Nothing in opposition to it, I’ve simply all the time most well-liked Weight-reduction plan Coke. I want I favored alcohol.
I imply, you may domesticate this. It’s simple to do.I’ve been attempting. I had a sip of my good friend’s quaint. I assumed it was attention-grabbing — sugary, however I favored it.
Your tune “The Outside” on this new document talks concerning the illusory nature of happiness and success.I went into it wanting to put in writing concerning the issues that folks undergo to show to God or one other energy or one thing to get out of their very own heads. I needed to depict individuals discovering a way of objective.
“Hollywood wasn’t all that she thought / City of Angels but her wings got caught / She got high enough to think she met God.”You progress to L.A. to pursue a dream and also you see God after doing a hallucinogenic — that’s referencing a good friend of mine who’s now a Christian buff who did ayahuasca. The opposite [verse] is about well being care — watching my pals who don’t have it as a result of it’s so costly.
“‘It’s just stress,’ so the doctor says / His young heart’s beating out of his chest / Student loans and medical debt.”The Luigi Mangione case occurred across the time we wrote that document.
Luigi was in your head as you have been writing?That second verse is actually about Luigi Mangione. To not get political, however the issues that I really feel are vital in life — it’s a must to pay for it, and it causes individuals to show to one thing like God. The tune ends with me being like, “I talk to my dad in the sky, hoping he talks to me back.” That tune means rather a lot to me.
Your music is extraordinarily tidy, which stands in distinction to the singer-songwriter mode of the Zach Bryans —And the Noah Kahans, the place they’re flat in some elements and it doesn’t matter as a result of the emotion’s there.
Why is your intuition as a musician to go for one thing neater?As a result of I don’t have the posh of with the ability to make what some individuals view as errors. Coming from TikTok to music, I really feel prefer it must be neat — it must be, “Oh my God, this guy can do this.” The subsequent album I’m engaged on, it’s extra rugged. I’m discovering completely different elements of my voice. I’ve been listening to quite a lot of older music too, which has been actually good.
Corresponding to?Corridor & Oates — dude, “Rich Girl”? Billy Joel too.
Is there nonetheless a Hype Home group chat?I’ve a gaggle chat with not all of them however the ones that — I’m not gonna name-drop them, however the ones getting fashionable with music. It was youth in my life — my school expertise, I suppose. We’re capable of look again on it and have a second of, like, “That sucked, but it was also awesome.”
Would individuals in the home have known as that you simply and Addison Rae could be those to interrupt out as musicians?No, I don’t suppose so — particularly not me. Perhaps Addison — Addison has all the time been cool. Everybody beloved Addison, even in the home, and he or she’s all the time been so variety. Even to at the present time, she’s a great good friend of mine. However nobody would have guessed me. I don’t suppose anybody favored me.
In the home?Simply normally. The Netflix present — quite a lot of it was faux, however that, I really feel like I’m such a greater individual now.
“The next album I’m working on, it’s more rugged,” says Warren, whose debut LP “You’ll Be Alright, Kid” comes out Friday. “I’m finding different parts of my voice.”
(Ethan Benavidez / For The Instances)
Are you glad that “Ordinary” occurred after the influencer second in your life — that there’s a little bit of separation?I began this in 2020, 2021 — I put out my first tune then, and I used to be nonetheless an influencer, vlogging, doing all these issues. Everybody’s like, “He came out of nowhere,” and I’m like, I’ve been doing this for 5 years.
However no one cared till effectively after your time as an influencer — which could be a great factor, proper? I’m unsure the overlap served Lil Huddy. In a bizarre approach, you may’ve gotten fortunate.I take into consideration that always. I made movies with my spouse — I by no means actually made movies with the content material home — and people movies have been profitable in their very own proper. I believe quite a lot of my followers right this moment have been watching me at the moment, however not for the Hype Home. Truly, no, that’s not true.
It’s onerous to generalize concerning the viewers for a tune this huge.All I do is put my head down and promote the information. I’m not listening to the scope of issues.
In fact you’re checking the numbers.I’m not understanding the scope moreover the numbers. My month-to-month listeners [on Spotify], somebody advised me it was 50-something million — that’s sick. However I can’t contextualize that. If I’m strolling down the road, how many individuals have heard the tune and the way many individuals know who I’m? I do know the tune is huge, however I’m underneath the idea that the document’s larger than I’m.
That appears true.OK, so what does that imply? I can evaluate it to a Lola Younger, or is it a Benson Boone? I believe that’s two separate issues proper now. Additionally, I don’t know the age demographic. If I stroll right into a bingo evening, are they gonna know who I’m?
A bingo evening? what I’m saying. The tune is No. 1 on Scorching AC — that’s grownup modern. Is it somebody’s mother? I don’t know who’s listening to the document. However I write songs about individuals passing away, and most of the people — regardless of wealthy, poor, no matter — it’s usually gonna be your 40-and-up who’re gonna relate to that document. Children don’t essentially cope with loss the identical approach.
Is it bizarre to suppose that a good portion of your viewers is individuals twice your age?No, that’s f—ing rad to me — the older viewers is the toughest to seize. I believe it’s secure to say that most individuals choose notoriety on whether or not their mother is aware of who they’re, proper? If that’s the place I begin, that’s cool.

