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Bio: Mary Chapin Carpenter
One of life’s most satisfying sensations is the click of a realization. Something blurry coming into sharp focus.
Mary Chapin Carpenter can vividly recall just such an epiphany.
“A novel that I've loved for years is My Name is Lucy Barton, written by Elizabeth Strout,” says the singer-songwriter. “There's this moment where the main character is taking a creative writing course, and her teacher says to her, ‘You will only have one story. You will write your one story in many ways.’ I remember reading that line and taking an audible breath. In that moment, I said out loud to no one, ‘Oh, that's what the songs are.’"
Carpenter has been writing that story for nearly 40 years, enjoying commercial success through numerous hit singles and 17 million albums sold, universal critical acclaim, a bounty of awards — including five Grammy wins from 18 nominations — and the respect of multiple generations of her songwriting peers, earning herself a place as one of 22 women in the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. Her most recent album, “One Night Lonely” from 2021, received a Grammy nod exactly 30 years after her very first nomination. In “Personal History”, her 17th album, she presents a set of songs more autobiographical than any collection that has come before, offering songs as memoir, when the wisdom that comes from growing older becomes a north star, whether one is celebrating life’s joys or navigating life’s inevitable losses. The title is taken from the album’s opener, “What Did You Miss.” The music is both buoyant and wistful, as she sings in her rich alto, “I’ve been walking in circles for so long/Unwinding the mystery/I’ve been writing it down song by song/As a personal history.”
The track’s blend of pandemic musings with more joyful distant memories — of steamed-up dive bar windows and late-night porch sessions — suggests what will follow, with memory, time and place guiding the narrative from a young girl’s love affair with songwriting to a woman at peace with her choices and where they have led her. “It's not necessarily chronological,” however, she says of the album. “The sequencing traces life backwards and forwards. But every song is connected to something deeply personal.”
“Paint + Turpentine” flashes back to Carpenter’s mid-20s and 30s and a missed opportunity: an invitation from Guy Clark, a hero of hers, to sit down and write together. “It’s about finding peace with a long-held regret of mine,” she says of being too intimidated to sit with the legend. But thankfully, “life allows you to eventually understand and accept how things turned out. Some gifts take their time.” “Bitter Ender,” with its keening harmonica, is a self-lacerating ode to her history of dying on clearly indefensible romantic hills. “Know thyself,” says Carpenter with a laugh. The sacred spaces offered in the natural world and the concept of our souls returning to cosmic stardust inform several songs including “Hello My Name Is”, and the enveloping “New Religion,” about the passing of someone Carpenter adored as a teenager, who helped shape her belief that “nature is my church.”
Other songs, including the moving “Home is a Song”, featuring the singer/songwriter Anaïs Mitchell, “The Saving Things”, and the vividly sketched “Girl and Her Dog,” find Carpenter taking stock of life in various ways after passing a milestone birthday. “Girl and Her Dog” is definitely a meditation about growing older,” she says of the tune, inspired by a salt-and-pepper-haired woman she spied in a vintage pick-up truck with her two pups while out on a walk. “As she drove by, I made up this story for her. Maybe she's a writer or a painter or a poet, and she's about to sit down at her kitchen table —which is where I like to work for myself — or work in her garden. I think I had just turned 60 and I was casting about: What am I doing? Who do I look up to? Who do I want to be? These are questions that you would think you would have the answers to long before that age, but I'm still asking them. And I hope I’m still asking them until my last day.”
“When you're younger, you're racing around trying to figure out where you belong, what you are you good at, how do you shine. And failure is this terrifying idea. But when you're older, you realize, hopefully, that failure is your most valuable companion because it teaches you so much.”
“By the end of that walk, I had done this deeper emotional excavation, sort of a heart and soul inventory and eventually it became that song.” If songwriters are often described as craftspeople, there may not be a better example of Carpenter’s skills in this regard than “Say It Anyway”; here she takes words and phrases more aptly labeled as cliches, and creates a musical scaffolding to show their truthfulness, spirituality and utility. Similarly, in “The Night We Never Met”, the listener is transported back in time, both musically and lyrically, to a chance meeting that only happened in someone’s imagination.
The recording sessions for Personal History brought Carpenter together with a mix of newer partners and longtime friends. Carpenter first encountered producer Josh Kaufman ((The Hold Steady, Bob Weir) while recording her January 2025 release Looking for the Thread, her collaboration with Scottish folk musicians Julie Fowlis and Karine Polwart. “I loved that experience, and I felt like he was the right person to help me shepherd these new songs into the wider world,” she says.
The pair were joined by a coterie of musicians, veteran bandmates Duke Levine on guitar and pianist Matt Rollings, Cameron Ralston on bass and Chris Vatalaro on drums and percussion. Returning to Peter Gabriel’s Real World Studios in rural southwestern England and reconnecting with Grammy-nominated engineer Katie May (Peter Gabriel, Phosphorescent, and asst engineer for Harry Styles, The 1975, and Carpenter / Fowlis / Polwart’s Looking For The Thread), Carpenter said of the sessions: “It's such a privilege to be able be somewhere dedicated to the work at hand, where you're sharing the space, meals, hang time with everybody. When it’s time to press record, everybody's live on the floor. I've been so fortunate to work there for my last four records, and it's hard to imagine being happier anywhere else.”
The album closes on the hopeful glimmer of “Coda,” which looks back fondly on grainy childhood memories on Super 8 film, appraises the battles picked and fought, acknowledging that while all the big noise of life may not be as big and loud anymore, these new, quieter passages are just as rich as any other time than came before it,” says Carpenter. “The gratitude you have for where you have ended up brings with it the wisdom that what’s most important is to have felt loved in this life. That you've mattered to people.” A fitting coda indeed to one’s personal history.

Bio: Brandy Clark
11x Grammy-nominated singer, songwriter and musician Brandy Clark's new song, "Northwest," is out now.
Of the song, Clark shares, "Being born and raised in western Washington, it was all I knew until I moved to Nashville in my early 20s. It was so right in front of me that I didn't even see or feel just how awesome it all was. The first time I came home for a visit, I realized just how tall the trees were and how majestic the mountains in my childhood backyard would always be. This song is an homage to that beautiful place and time I grew up in."
"Northwest" is the third song unveiled from Clark's highly-anticipated new self-titled album, which was produced by 9x Grammy-winner Brandi Carlile and was released May 19, 2023 on Warner Records. Ahead of the release, Clark recently unveiled album tracks "She Smoked In The House" and "Buried," of which Billboard praises, "Clark continues to convey her inexorable talents as both a song-crafter and vocal interpreter," while Music Row declares, "a stunning ballad of ache and loss by one of our greatest living country songwriters."
The release adds to yet another landmark year for Clark, who is nominated for Best Original Score at the 76th Annual Tony Awards for Shucked, the new musical comedy she composed alongside longtime collaborator, Shane McAnally. Shucked is nominated for nine awards overall at the 2023 ceremony including Best New Musical.
Recorded at the famed Shangri-La studio in Malibu, CA, the new album features the most raw and intimate recordings of Clark's decade-long career, as she showcases her versatility across eleven songs that span the emotional spectrum. In addition to Clark and Carlile, the album also includes special guests Derek Trucks and Lucius as well as Matt Chamberlain on drums, Sebastian Steinberg on bass, Dave Palmer on piano, Jedd Hughes on guitar, Kyleen King on viola, Josh Neumann on cello, Sista Strings (aka Monique and Chauntee Ross) on cello and violin, Steve Fishell on pedal steel and Jay Carlile on background vocals and harmonica.
Reflecting on the project, Clark shares, "This album is a return home to me in many ways. Musically it's the rawest I've been since 12 Stories and maybe even rawer. When Brandi and I sat down and talked about working together, one thing that really intrigued me was her saying 'I see it as your return to the northwest.' (Since the two of us are both from Washington state). That comment inspired so much for me. It took me back to where and how I grew up. 'Northwest' and 'She Smoked In The House' were both a result of that early conversation. Working with another recording artist on this project was such a gift that I didn't even know I needed and changed the way I want to write songs and make records moving forward. My hope is that anyone who hears this album will feel the heart that I put into every note of it."
Carlile adds, "Brandy is one of the greatest songwriters I've ever known. And I feel like I now know exactly who Brandy Clark is through the portal of this singular brilliantly written album. When I heard the songs for this album, they took me back to the first time I heard Car Wheels on a Gravel Road. I was thinking about Tom Petty, The Pretenders, Kim Richey, Sheryl Crow, Shelby Lynne and the soul of 90s Americana before it had a name. Brandy's voice is like a friend you've had your whole life the second you hear it. I know I'm not alone in feeling this way. This is her moment. This is the one. Sometimes an artist only gets one shot at an album like this in their life. This is the time Brandy has chosen to reveal herself to the world as an artist and a woman and I was blessed beyond measure to be the person she trusted to support and facilitate that swan dive."
Clark is one of her generation's most respected songwriters and musicians. In addition to writing songs like "A Beautiful Noise," the GRAMMY-nominated duet performed by Brandi Carlile and Alicia Keys, and Kacey Musgraves' "Follow Your Arrow," Clark has released three acclaimed albums of her own including 2020's Your Life is A Record. The album landed on best-of-the-year lists at Rolling Stone, Entertainment Weekly, Variety and more and led NPR Music to call her, "a storyteller of the highest caliber," The New Yorker to declare, "No one is writing better country songs than Brandy Clark is" and Slate to proclaim, "one of the greatest living short-story-song writers in country (which really means in any genre)."
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