© 2024 SDPB Radio
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

On 'Midwest Farmer's Daughter,' Margo Price Hits Her Breaking Point — And Big Break

Country singer Margo Price's debut solo album, <em>Midwest Farmer's Daughter</em>, draws on her personal experiences of hard times.
Courtesy of the artist
Country singer Margo Price's debut solo album, Midwest Farmer's Daughter, draws on her personal experiences of hard times.

Margo Price knows hard times; her music practically aches with them. In the first song on her new album, she yearns to "turn back the cruel hands of time."

Midwest Farmer's Daughter is Price's first solo album, and even though she's been kicking around making music in Nashville for over a decade, the identity outlined by that title still defines her. Her family lost its firm in Buffalo Prairie, Ill., years ago during the tough times of the American farm crisis. Everyone — including her grandparents and uncles — had to find jobs in town. Price's dad took a job as a prison guard.

"It was never his plan that he would grow up and work in a prison," she says. "But life moves so quickly and you just have to put food on the table. They did everything they could to make sure that we were never without. It was a hard loss for the family; you know, it took a lot of the ornery out of him. Things were never the same."

Margo Price joined NPR's David Greene to talk about the rocky path that led to her debut album. Hear the radio version at the audio link and read an edited version of their conversation below.

David Greene: There is one line in "Hands Of Time" that goes by very quickly, but I know how significant it is. It's where you sing that your first-born died and you cried out to God. Can you tell me what happened?

Margo Price: Yes. I had twins. My first born, he had a heart condition — hypoplastic left-heart syndrome, which essentially means that he was born with half a heart. And I knew about that about 17, 18 weeks into the pregnancy. So the whole pregnancy was very difficult, knowing that he had this condition. We were at Vanderbilt, and it's, you know, the second-best place in the country to do this specific surgery that he was going to have to have as an infant.

You know, the surgery just did not work. And we lost him after a couple weeks. Nobody should ever lose a child; I would never wish that upon my greatest enemy. It was something that was really hard for us to get through, but we made it, somehow.

I'm so sorry. I can't even imagine.

It was dark days for a while. And it's very hard on a marriage, you know? People cope very differently when you lose a child. And my husband has been very supportive, and he's stuck with me to help us get through it.

It sounds like, from some of the songs on here, that one way that you were coping was turning to the bottle a good bit.

Yep. It's something that I think everybody has to watch, you know? Depression sneaks up on people, and, you know, after a couple drinks it doesn't feel so bad sometimes.

The song "Weekender" — I wonder if that represents a low point for you.

That was definitely the turning point. Everything just kind of snowballed. I was feeling so depressed and honestly thinking about checking myself into a mental institution or something. And that was kind of God's answer, I think, was like: "Alright, you want to be in a loony bin? Here you go, now you're in jail!"

So what exactly happened?

Well, I try to be as vague about it as possible to not hurt my grandmothers' feelings, because I'm sure they're probably listening out there. But, you know, I was staying out too late, and I was running around with the wrong folks, and I wound up making some really bad decisions that I'm not proud of and going to jail for the weekend.

After I got out, I just told myself, "I'm never going back there again. I'm never going to ever put myself in that kind of a situation where I would hurt myself or other people." And I went and I sought therapy for the first time, which I probably should have done immediately after I lost my son, Ezra. I should have done that immediately. But sometimes we have to take the long way around.

You say you don't want to hurt your grandmother's feelings, meaning, you don't want her to know the details of everything that happened?

I didn't tell anybody, really, what happened. I think I lied to everybody about that for a while. But now the album's out, so I guess they're going to know.

You know, a song like "Weekender," it is referring to what sounds like such a difficult, difficult time, but it really has kind of an upbeat tempo to it.

Yeah, it's in a major key, too. I'm just tricking people into listening to really sad things by putting happy compositions behind it. [Laughs]

What is it about country music, that tragedy can lead to such powerful songs? I feel like that's been a truth about country music since its beginnings.

It's true. It's the songs of the working man and real-life situations that make it honest, and make it something different than maybe pop music. I don't know what's drawn me to it so much, but I think a lot of the tragedy and the lonesomeness, there's something uplifting in there as well. It's like when you hear George and Tammy sing a song about divorce.

George Jones and Tammy Wynette, you're talking about?

Yes. Just the lost dreams — you somehow hear their voices trying to conquer it.

Was there some kind of connection between putting your life in order and getting your music career to where you have this debut album?

You know, I've been trying to figure all this out — how it happened, because I thought I was going to be cursed forever. I didn't think there was much of a chance. But a lot of it is about taking the bad things and, as cliché as it sounds, really growing from them and learning from them. And that's kind of like the phoenix rising from the ashes, you know? You can't let every bad thing that happens to you in your life overtake you.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.