Why Margaret Glaspy Took The Time To Grow As A Songwriter Before Releasing Her Debut

17 February 2017 | 2:47 pm | Chris Familton

"It'll be an evolution all the time for me I hope."

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With so much work going into the writing, recording and producing of debut studio album Emotions & Math, Glaspy had both high hopes and realistic expectations of how her album would be received by both critics and music fans. "When I was making the record the big success was that it would be finished and I'd get it to where I'd like it. Anything else was going to be the icing on the cake,' she says humbly. "I take it with a grain of salt in terms of measuring success. I know I'll probably make some records in my career that others will hate and hopefully they'll like a few of them too. I can't take it all too seriously but I'm certainly appreciative."

"I started to write songs when I was 16 or 17 and now I'm 28. I don't know if that's a success story or a failure story, but it's my story."

Getting to this point, in her late 20s, has meant Glaspy has had plenty of time to develop and refine her songwriting and guitar-playing since she first ventured into that world in her late teens. "That's evolved quite a bit and changed over time, slowly. I started to write songs when I was 16 or 17 and now I'm 28. I don't know if that's a success story or a failure story, but it's my story," she laughs. "My love for music has always been very consistent and I think my skill level has changed for sure but when I listen back to snippets of things I recorded back then, I can see what I was going for. I see what I was trying to accomplish. I'm glad I waited a bit longer until I was a more mature artist though."

The album's title refers to that conflict (or healthy co-existence) between emotional and reasoned responses and feelings that we all encounter daily. Glaspy found a way to draw that omnipresent part of her personality into her songwriting. "It is in everything I do. There's always some measure of discipline or logic or practice and then there's the side that just happens. The skills you learn work alongside the natural flow and keep it on track. The reason why the record is called that is that I see it rise in my life a lot. I see both sides of that rage pretty hard all at the same time. I'm very analytical and very emotional and I think they complement each other but sometimes it's difficult. I've always felt I wanted to be either a left or right brain person and label myself as one, but it's not that simple. Everybody has their own chemistry that makes us special and unique and human."

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Glaspy already has one eye on recording her next album, once this touring cycle concludes in September. It promises to be another stage of her journey as a songwriter. "I'll never make this record again and I look forward to that and I'm happy about that. My DNA is to evolve and make new things. Our responsibility as artists is to take people some place and not just leave them in the same place all the time. It'll be an evolution all the time for me I hope. That's the goal."