Gwyn Parow’s song has changed.
As a teenager, the Morgantown native took refuge in music by forming an alternative pop duo with her best friend.
“In high school, when I was making music, it was mostly coming from a place of feeling very lost, that I didn’t fit in. That was the driving force behind a lot of the lyricism and the themes,” she said.
Parow couldn’t envision a future career intertwined with her artistic pursuits. Music felt separate from real life. Something to squeeze between homework assignments, relegated to weekends and after the 9-to-5, if she was lucky.
Then she came to WVU. She found out about the Music Business and Industry major at the College of Creative Arts and Media. She found out about the student-run label Mon Hills Records.
Parow joined the Mon Hills content team. In her first year at WVU, she found herself doing creative work, shaping how artists show up in the world.
“I have gotten to do everything that I love while learning the ins and outs of the industry,” she said. “I have made my own music, but I’ve also dipped my toes into making content for other artists on our student-run record label.”
Now a junior, she builds entire brand identities and manages the creative direction for artists on the label in her role as Mon Hills content director.
When the label signs a new artist searching for a clear direction, Parow creates a mood board aligned with the artist’s sound and goals, then refines a vision that will be the foundation for elements ranging from visuals to promotional strategy.
Good content starts with authenticity, she said, pointing to Charli XCX’s “Brat” campaign as evidence of audiences’ preference for “real” over polish.
“It’s refreshing to see somebody who isn’t afraid to show a messier side of themselves,” she said. “Building imaging that fits the music, and what people need to see, not what they want to see, is really cool.”
For each campaign, Parow considers audience, platform and purpose.
“I think from the perspective of who we’re pitching to. ‘What does that group want to see?’ If I’m on TikTok, what makes me jump from a social media app to a streaming service to play an artist’s song?”