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Faith Miller
Singer/Artist
HomeTown
Kirksville Missouri
Style
Pop, Country, R&B

Kirksville native and Missouri pop artist Faith Miller taps in for The Answer Session, where she shares her takes on relationships, honesty, on-stage moments, comfort food, and the state of music today.
Would you rather your friends tell you the truth and hurt your feelings or lie to protect you?
Truth. I am around grown men who want me to succeed. They do not sugarcoat anything. They tell me straight up when I am messing up. I have thick skin because of that, so I want people to keep it real with me.
Would you rather forget your lyrics on stage or have a voice crack on a high note?
Forget my lyrics. I have already done that a handful of times. I would still rather that than a voice crack.
What is your death row meal? Appetizer, main, dessert, and drink
Crab rangoon from China King. A whole bag of goons.
Dessert is tiramisu. My dad put me on that.
Drink is a good tequila, something like mezcal.
So I am going out with tiramisu, goons, and tequila.
What is a controversial music opinion you stand on no matter what?
Social media changed the way people listen to music. People do not care about full projects. Labels want artists to chase viral moments instead of building a real brand. Everyone looks at numbers. No one looks at quality. It makes it hard for artists to grow.
Which is more important today, vocal talent or marketing?
Marketing. I wish it were vocal talent, because there are so many talented people who do not get their flowers. Marketing is what wins right now. And the people who really know how to market deserve props, because it is a real skill.
Should your partner post you consistently or keep the relationship off social media?
For me, it depends on intentions. I think intentions are the most important thing in a relationship. Sometimes people want to do too much too fast, and that speaks louder than the post itself. There is no way you have known someone for three days and suddenly need to tell the whole world about it.
Would you rather have one smash hit that defines your whole career or a catalog of great music with no billboard number ones?
A catalog. I do not want to be put in a box. One smash hit would lock me into one sound forever. I want people to appreciate my versatility. Maybe I will revisit my answer later in my career, but right now, I pick the catalog.
