Thursday, October 6, 2022

Margo Price releases memoir Maybe We'll Make It

Margo Price discusses her new memoir and family roots with Sid Evans for Southern Living's Biscuits & Jam podcast. 

Here's the scoop...
When Margo Price was nineteen years old, she dropped out of college and moved to Nashville to become a musician. She busked on the street, played open mics, and even threw out her TV so that she would do nothing but write songs. She met Jeremy Ivey, a fellow musician who would become her closest collaborator and her husband. But after working on their craft for more than a decade, Price and Ivey had no label, no band, and plenty of heartache.

Maybe We'll Make It is a memoir of loss, motherhood, and the search for artistic freedom in the midst of the agony experienced by so many aspiring musicians: bad gigs and long tours, rejection and sexual harassment, too much drinking and barely enough money to live on. Price, though, refused to break, and turned her lowest moments into the classic country songs that eventually comprised the debut album that launched her career. In the authentic voice hailed by Pitchfork for tackling "Steinbeck-sized issues with no-bullshit humility," Price shares the stories that became songs, and the small acts of love and camaraderie it takes to survive in a music industry that is often unkind to women. Now a Grammy-nominated “Best New Artist," Price tells a love story of music, collaboration, and the struggle to build a career while trying to maintain her singular voice and style.

Get a copy of Margo Price's memoir Maybe We'll Make It via University of Texas Press right here. Listen to her interview for the Biscuits & Jam podcast followed by the video for "Change Of Heart" off her forthcoming album Strays (due January 13th, pre-order it here: https://i.margoprice.net/Strays) and a list of upcoming book tour dates and you never know who might show up. 
 


Margo Price fan Leslie Jordan recently turned up at a signing. 






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