 
   Photo: Courtesy of Parker Fitzgerald   
 We developed a total fan girl crush on Anya Marina when she covered  rapper T.I.’s “Whatever You Like” on season three of  Gossip Girl. If  you didn’t catch that episode, you’ve probably heard the  songstress’  soft, childlike voice on other hit shows, including Grey’s  Anatomy,  90210, and How I Met Your Mother—not to mention her big screen  debut on  The Twilight Saga: New Moon soundtrack. In addition to making  the  rounds on TV shows, the Michigan-born singer-songwriter has also  toured  with acts like Jason Mraz, Spoon, The Virgins, and, most  recently,  Nikka Costa at NYC’s Highline Ballroom. We caught up with Anya while she  was out promoting her new album, Felony  Flats (released in March) and  chatted with her about producing her own  music, life on the road with  Jason Mraz, and whether she’s Team Edward  or Team Jacob.   
 ELLEgirl (EG): How were you discovered? Anya Marina  
 (AM): I guess I was discovered by Alexandra Patsavas at Chop Shop  Records when I was a DJ in San Diego and I was part-timing as a  musician. I had  recorded my own album, Miss Halfway, and she heard the  title track from  that and put it in a show that she was music  supervising called Grey’s  Anatomy, and that was my big break if you  will.  
 EG: You used to act. Do you incorporate acting bits into your onstage  performances?  
 AM: I think I can’t really help my somewhat entertainer personality—it   comes out during shows, so there’s certainly an element of that. But I   don’t think about it, I just like to connect with the crowd and get   whatever is in my head out—it’s very therapeutic to connect with people   that way. I don’t do a standard music show where you just play songs  and  say “good night.” I like to also talk to people. It’s not an  elevated  rock show either, it’s a little more casual. I think once I  had Shaun  Cassidy come up and sang a song with me. Just a couple weeks  ago, I  grabbed a person onstage with me who was one of my seatmates on a  flight  and made him tell me half the stories he told me onstage.  Sometimes  some stories get told about my mom, she’s Russian, so there’s  all that,  but it’s really whatever went on that week or whatever  things are  bothering me. I tend to overshare.  
 EG: Your song, “Satellite Heart” was featured on the The Twilight Saga:   New Moon soundtrack. Why do you think the song and its lyrics worked so   well in the movie?  
 AM: I think that the director, Chris Weitz, thought that it really spoke   to the Bella character. I wrote it for her in mind, I got to see the   movie before it came out. I just felt really moved by that character’s   sense of really feeling lost and spun out without her soulmate, and I   think that is such a romantic idea to have a soulmate and someone that   you really feel lost without…I wanted to write a song that spoke to that   real romantic Shakespearean love where you feel lost without someone.  
 EG: Are you Team Edward or Team Jacob? AM: I have to be Team Edward,  it’s so obvious. I don’t know, it seems  like it would be a person  without arms if she wasn’t with him.  
 EG: You’re probably sick of hearing this, but your sound is quite   different from T.I.’s. Why did you decide to cover “Whatever You Like”?  
 AM: I loved the melody of that song and I thought it was really catchy   obviously. I heard it in a club and everybody was singing. It has sort   of childhood lyrics…it’s such a sort of nursery rhyme-y childlike   refrain so that called back to me. I think I was seduced by the melody   right away, and of course the lyrics. I really wanted to showcase the   lyrics and I think that comes across [in the song].  
 EG: What was it like touring with Jason Mraz? AM: I love touring with  Jason, not only because he and I go way back and  are friends from San  Diego days but also because he has a wonderful  woman named Tricia  Huffman who was his “joyologist”—she would lead us in  yoga every day  and prepare these amazing raw vegan meals. I felt really  high on life  because we were eating this really fresh organic amazing  food and  playing music and it was amazing to really take care of  ourselves and  play music, so it was just a lot of fun. And we had a lot  of dance  parties on the bus.  
 EG: You live in Portland, which is known for its trendy hipster style.  Did it influence how you dress?  
 AM: It’s influenced me in that I don’t wear as much makeup as I used to.   There’s not really such an emphasis on covering up or looks as much. I   think it’s a very natural sort of place, and obviously everybody’s   interested in organic this and that, so I think it’s really influencing   in that way. I don’t wear makeup a lot of times.  
 EG: You produced your new record, Felony Flats, all by yourself. What  were the struggles you faced?  
 AM: The biggest struggle I faced was just doubting I could do it, and   once I got over that, it was really fun. And I had a great engineer that   helped me out, Gregg Williams, and if it wasn’t for him, I couldn’t   have gotten a lot of the sounds that I needed to get, and he had so many   great ideas too. It was really fun. It was really empowering to know   that I could do something that was completely out of my wheelhouse.  
 EG: A lot of your first album, Miss Halfway, talked about your ex’s.  What does Felony Flats focus on? Has your sound changed?  
 AM: [The sound is] not totally far off. In fact, I just listened to Miss   Halfway a few days ago, and even though it sounds a lot different, a   lot of the spirit is the same—there’s still the same themes that pop up   here and there. Felony Flats is much more tough and confident, and as a   sound, I’ve definitely graduated to a place where I don’t think I’ll   look back on this record and cringe.  
 EG: Do you cringe when you listen to your first record?  
 AM: I really didn’t know how to arrange songs that well yet and   everything sounds so sweet sometimes to me, but when you really listen   to the lyrics, the edges are still very much there. It’s still got a lot   of snark and pain and yearning and honesty, so I’m really proud of   that. Even though something can sound really pretty, that doesn’t mean   that it lacks heart. A lot of [Felony Flats] is just believing in   yourself, like that song “Believe Me I Believe”…moving, transitioning—I   was moving from L.A. to Portland—saying goodbye to old relationships,   there are a lot of subtle things. You kind of have to listen to it and   figure it out for yourself. For me, it’s mostly that transition and   really digging deep and getting over hurdles and growing up.