Take a listen to Connor Flanagan's latest album, Mountains, and you'll hear a lot of things worship, hip-hop, flavors of great artists of days past (like Paul Wright and Above the Golden State), great production. But if you ask Flanagan, the Cleveland-based artist says he hopes you hear his heart.
Mountains finds Flanagan in new territory, musically–or more accurately, in territory he'd always envisioned, but never was able to execute. But as he's settled into a singer-songwriter whose lyrics reflect a style that's both playful and vulnerable, he's poised to share his thoughts on life,[…]








