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Allison Moorer’s Gift Of A Second Act

Americana singer-songwriter Allison Moorer, who her lost parents to a murder-suicide as a teenager in south Alabama, reflects on the writing of her new memoir and companion album, Blood, for American Songwriter.

โ€œThere are no second acts in American lives.โ€ — F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Last Tycoon

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I had no idea what my next move would be. I was almost 43, single mother to a child with profound special needs, and up to my neck in the unfulfilled promise and shoulder-slumping shame of a career as a commercially unsuccessful singer-songwriter. Dwindling were the opportunities to consistently eke out a living as an opening act or tiny folk room headliner. Almost over was the publishing deal that gave me a dependable baseline income. Absent were sympathetic music industry executives who would take a chance on giving me yet another record deal. Disappearing was my artistic identity. 

It was the Spring of 2015. I had just released my ninth album and had managed to schedule exactly eight shows around its release. Due to the challenges of raising my son, that was all the time I could carve out for a tour. Eight shows werenโ€™t enough to make even a dent in the nearly impermeable atmosphere of a successful album promotion campaign and I knew it. I was afraid I was done. So on a crisp March morning, as my suitcase and guitar stood propped by the door of my apartment and my train ticket to DC, where I was to start the tour, waited in my carryon, I hit send on an application to the MFA Creative Writing Program at The New School in New York City.

Iโ€™d begun a memoir a few years earlier. The work had been prompted by none other than Dr. Maya Angelou, who asked me while I was taping an episode of her radio show a question that seared itself into my brain: Exactly what was I going to tell my then six-week old son about my tumultuous upbringing when the time came to do so? My early pages received favorable responses from those to whom I showed them, and Iโ€™d even managed to secure a relationship with a talented and empathetic literary agent who promised me that weโ€™d find a book deal when I was ready, but I knew ready was farther away than I wanted it to be. I didnโ€™t know, beyond my instincts, what I was doing as I took stabs at writing in the long form. However, Iโ€™d fallen in love with crafting prose. The urge to massage words into sinewy sentences and paragraphs gnawed at me daily. I also had a story to tell, one that Iโ€™d never quite successfully divulged through songs. With my career as a singer-songwriter all but dried up and my discomfort with chasing ever elusive success growing by the day, I had to make a move. 

It wasnโ€™t that Iโ€™d made no progress as a recording and touring artist. I had earned enough respect to keep record and publishing deals for, at that point, nearly twenty years, but Iโ€™d been robbing Peter to pay Paul for almost all of them and I knew the music business didnโ€™t work that way anymore. In an age where everyone is struggling to figure out how to make money using a constantly changing model, artists like me are indulged and kept around for being critically acclaimed much less often than we once were. I knew I had to get practical โ€” there was rent to pay, a child to raise, and I wasnโ€™t getting any younger. With a masterโ€™s degree, I thought that in addition to increasing my skills as a writer, I might be able to land a stable teaching gig that would provide a manageable schedule and lo and behold, benefits for my son and me.

I felt like an old lady when I walked into my first writerโ€™s workshop that fall. To my delight, Iโ€™d been accepted to the program to which Iโ€™d applied, but Iโ€™d graduated college over twenty years earlier and was nervous about the terrain on which I was about to try to walk. I didnโ€™t have an English degree, I hadnโ€™t published but a few things here and there, and was certain Iโ€™d be seen as the middle-aged, earnest newbie who asked too many questions, but I jumped in wholeheartedly. What I found within that program, and in what was a new way of life that included reading hundreds of pages per week and turning out stacks of my own that would be read by others, was wholly inspiring. I let go of the singular identity Iโ€™d worn as a singer-songwriter and allowed myself to expand. I found new tools to help me navigate unwieldy sentences. I found a new creative impetus. I found a new way to use my voice. I found a broken open, truer, deeper, and more joyous me. 

We are so often disheartened by failure โ€” the plan that didnโ€™t work out, the lifelong dream that gets fragmented into shards or even dashed completely. Admitting weโ€™re not where we want to be and arenโ€™t likely to ever get there is a hard pill to swallow. I knew, when I became a mother, that my life and my career would change, but I couldnโ€™t see at that time how that oh so important job, and the intensity to which I would have to do it because of my sonโ€™s disability, would give me the gift of having to figure out how to completely reshape my work life. I never dreamed Iโ€™d write a book before that question Dr. Angelou posed shimmied itself into my mind, but here I am, a published author. Iโ€™m also happy to say that Iโ€™m still making music and have now made my eleventh, and what I think may be my best, album. Iโ€™m excited about my work again, but better than that, I have deep gratitude for having found this part of myself. I know I probably wouldnโ€™t have found it had I not had to square up against what looked like the end and figure out how to make a new beginning. Sometimes there are second acts in American lives. All apologies of course, to Mr. Fitzgerald.