Q&A With Melissa Lawson, Nashville Star Winner - The 9513 Exclusive Interview

With the sound of her children chattering in the background, Melissa Lawson insists to me that she’s just a regular person. And even though she currently has the hottest country song on iTunes (she knows this because she’s checked the charts herself), the John Rich-produced “What If It All Goes Right,” on this day, her first day home in Texas after claiming top honors on Monday night’s Nashville Star finale, the now-famous mother of five is preparing to do something regular for the first time in a long time: go shopping at Target.
Before Lawson was whisked away to perform on the hit NBC series, few people knew her name and she had all but given up on her dream of country music stardom. But the five million viewers who weighed in on the show’s final ballot had other plans, and this strong and passionate woman, who will leave soon to perform at the Olympic Games in Beijing, stands on the brink of a career she not long ago thought impossible.
Jim Malec: First of all, congratulations to you for winning the highest rated season of Nashville Star ever. Has that hit home yet, or is it still a surreal feeling?
Melissa Lawson: It is finally starting to sink in. I had a couple of moments yesterday that really made that happen. One is that when I was over at Warner Brothers, they showed me the video for the single. And so, while I’m watching the video that’s getting ready to go out to CMT, in the middle of it they show me winning. And of course I hadn’t seen a replay yet of the moment. So I was like, ‘oh my gosh, I did actually win’. And also just the single going on all the radio stations everywhere, and I’ve been having all my friends calling me and going, ‘I just heard you on the radio.’ So it’s starting to hit.
JM: I haven’t seen the video yet.
ML: It’s got basically little clips of my journey on the show, and also of me in the sound studio recording the single. And in the end it shows the winning moment.
JM: I understand they kept the contestants very insulated while participating in the show. You weren’t allowed any phone or internet access?
ML: Right. we didn’t have anything at all. No email, no internet.
JM: So you were very insulated from the buzz. I’m curious, then, whether or not you were you prepared for all the attention you’d be receiving once the show was over? These past two and half days must have been crazy for you. Have you experienced a moment of realization where it suddenly hit you that now millions of people know your name? That’s a pretty big change from when you first went in for the show.
ML: Oh definitely! I’ve still been fairly insulated from it. I just got home late last night around 8:30–that was pretty crazy getting off the plane, there was a couple hundred people there waiting for me, which was very exciting.
I’m getting ready to go to Target in a little while, so that will be an interesting trip. My husband’s like, ‘you’re going by yourself?’ It’ll be fun though, I don’t mind [the attention] at all.
JM: What was the most difficult challenge you faced during your time on the show?
ML: Just being away from the kids and not having any contact at all. It’d be one thing if I could talk to them on the phone and stuff, but without being able to talk to them at all, that’s been the hardest.
JM: Did you go the entire duration of the show without talking to them?
ML: It was about six weeks. And then I had just a few minutes with them, and then it was another five weeks or so.
JM: It seems like there has been more discussion about your backstory—your weight, your family, etc.—than about your voice or your music. Tell me: who is Melissa Lawson, the artist?
ML: Gosh, you know…I’m just me. I’m just a person. And I just love music and I love to perform. I’ve had a really great time because I feel most comfortable when I’m on stage. And it’s been a great experience to have fans out there supporting me. And I think, too, that having an opportunity to move forward and having the single out, which is just going gangbusters on iTunes—yesterday when I checked it was #13 on iTunes most downloaded songs in all genres, so not just country music, it’s #1 on the country music side….that’s very, very exciting. I think you’ll find that the music to come will be influenced by early Trisha, Martina McBride, anything that’s vocally challenging but at the same time still appeals to the fans.
JM: When you go into the studio with John Rich, what kind of album do you hope to make?
ML: I think people have voted because they not only like that I can sing and perform, but also because they like me as a person–and I want to make sure I’m staying true to that. I’m not gonna be going out and singing songs about cheating and stuff like that. It’s just not who I am. And I want to stay true to who I am as a mom, and as a family-goer, and as a church-goer. So, I think all those things will come into play when we put the album together.
JM: Do you think that approach meshes well with country music, which has a history of cheatin’ songs, drinkin’ songs, and generally gritty lyrics?
ML: Absolutely. I’m not sayin’ I wont do anything about troubled times, because families go through troubled times all the time. I’m just sayin’ that I want to make sure it stays true to who I am in my heart.
JM: What’s the best country album you’ve ever heard?
ML: Wow. You know what, it’d have to be the Trisha [Yearwood] album that has “The Song Remembers When” on it, and also “On A Bus To Saint Cloud.” That’s my favorite Trisha album of all time, anyway.
JM: That’s a great answer. I hate to put you on the spot there. I actually think that’s two different albums though. “On a Bus To St. Cloud” comes from Thinkin’ About You, and “The Song Remembers When” is…is it on “Hearts in Armor?” No, it’s on its own album, if I recall.
ML: Maybe it’s the Greatest Hits one that I’m thinking of. I love all of her stuff. You give me any of her albums and I am just in love. [laughter] I love her to death.
JM: You talked once on the show–I think it was on the first episode–about there “not being a lot of time.” Why did you feel that way? Why do you think you had previously struggled to break into the industry as an artist?
ML: For sure, it had a lot to do with my weight. That would be the number one thing. And number two, I had a family. And those are really big things in this industry for someone that’s just walking in to any record label sayin’ ‘hey, give me a record deal’.
JM: Do you believe Nashville Star was your last chance? Do you think you would still be where you are now if you hadn’t made it on the show?
ML: No. Not at all. Nashville Star really was my last chance. I put all my eggs in that basket, and I’m just very grateful it turned out. And I’m grateful that the fans supported me because I realize that even though I can work as hard as I can work on any given day, if I didn’t have the fans supporting me I’d still just be a mom at home.
JM: In an article that appeared in Monday’s Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Matthew Clark, who is a colleague of mine here at The 9513, was quoted as saying that, “I just can’t imagine Melissa Lawson sliding into a CMT video rotation next to Carrie Underwood and Taylor Swift.” He was talking about your image and how it will play in the country music world.
Do you think you’ll be the exception to the Nashville rule that says you have to look a certain way and appeal to a certain demographic in order to be successful?
ML: Gosh it’s funny that someone would actually take the time to say something like that. That always blows me away, especially when there were over five million votes cast towards the winner of Nashville Star. That’s a lot of people voting, that’s a lot of people supporting me. And I think that really speaks for itself. You know, I feel like I can compete in this industry vocally and performance wise. I don’t feel like I ever will need to make an excuse for myself or for who I am. I just am who I am, and the fans say that that’s good enough. And I think because I represent most of America…you have the population of overweight people is at a rocket high, and I’ve lost seventy pounds since January on my own—not because of the show. You know, I had already started that journey before Nashville Star even came along, and I plan on losing more, for myself. I’m not in any race. I’m going at my own pace. So, if it has to do with the physicality of it, I don’t understand that when that’s most of America.
JM: I appreciate your candor and your openness about that subject. I know you must get tired of talking about that—
ML: –I actually don’t. I enjoy battling for every mom out there, because, you know, and I say this with the utmost respect to Carrie Underwood and every other artist out there that does fit the industry idea of what you should be…it just happens to be that I don’t, and it just happens to be that most of America doesn’t either. And they voted. They’re the ones that chose the winner, and I’m really, really grateful that they chose me.
JM: What are you most excited about moving forward?
ML: Cutting the new album, and being able to have something that the fans can sink their teeth in to. John Rich said to me, when the single came out, ‘this is where the rubber meets the road, this is where reality TV ends.’
We released [the single] in the morning, and by two o’clock it was the number one most downloaded song in country music on iTunes. That’s just a crazy, crazy number. You know, so quickly…that just doesn’t happen. And it’s not because of me, it’s because the fans are supporting me. And I’m looking forward to giving them something so that I can have a long-term career. I don’t want to be a one-hit wonder. I’m here for the long haul, and I’m gonna work my tail-end off to make sure that I stay around.
JM: Does John Rich wear that black cowboy hat while he’s in the studio?
ML: [Laughter] No, he does wear a ball-cap though. Generally it’s a cammo ball-cap with a Tennessee “T” on it.
JM: What is country music?
ML: Country music is one of the loves of my life. It’s a foundation for people to relate and become one. Music is the universal language that brings everybody together and country music for sure is that foundation to me.
Correction: It was initially reported in this article that John Rich is the songwriter of “What if All Goes Right.” That is incorrect. The song was written by Tania Hancheroff, Tammy Hyler, and Shaye Smith.
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August 7, 2008 at 8:14 pm Permalink
Great interview.
August 7, 2008 at 9:19 pm Permalink
After all the live blogging and such, there’s a lot to take in. As it is, Melissa definitely has a lot to learn … especially the university John represents on his hat.
August 7, 2008 at 9:22 pm Permalink
I thought I remembered seeing a longhorn as in The University of Texas mascot on his hat. I couldn’t find a picture to verify that, but is that what you’re talking about, Stephen?
August 7, 2008 at 9:59 pm Permalink
Yea….its most certainly a longhorns hat
August 7, 2008 at 10:29 pm Permalink
Interview Gabe Garcia.
Yes, the “r” was rolled.
August 7, 2008 at 11:06 pm Permalink
Definitely a good interview.
August 7, 2008 at 11:42 pm Permalink
I don’t do i-tunes, so I was wondering if Melissa’s single is a “featured freebie” or something people have to pay for?
Melissa definitely hooked the soccer mom demographic and maybe the Oprah audience demographic as well, and that’s a lot of women. The fact Nashville Star was on one of the four major networks this season, and was an off-season summer show gave it access to a much larger potential audience than the USA network version ever had. Was the total final vote 5 million or was that Melissa’s vote count? Doesn’t American Idol get over 70 million votes for its final episode? Also remember that voters on this version of NS could vote up to 10 times, so if everyone voted 10 times that 5 million votes could have come from as little as half a million voters.
It will be interesting to see how Melissa’s career plays out. Having a single ready right after the win was a great example of “Striking while the iron is hot”. The big question is just how long that iron will stay hot (ie if Top 40 radio will actually embrace and spin her singles). Time will tell….
August 8, 2008 at 12:01 am Permalink
The freebie this week is “In Color.” You have to pay to get Melissa’s song. It’s up to #10 on the all-genre chart right now.
August 8, 2008 at 8:10 am Permalink
Most of the Nashville Star winners have had singles ready to go right away yet that hasn’t helped.
I’m not gonna be going out and singing songs about cheating and stuff like that.
Great, I can hardly wait.
August 8, 2008 at 9:02 am Permalink
She seems great, and that is…great, but her sound will be like “early trisha & martina mcbride”?? I wasnt aware that those stages were too terribly different from “recent trisha & martina”, let alone all that distinguishable as a general “vibe”…
August 8, 2008 at 9:42 am Permalink
Did you warn her not to look at the liveblogs?
August 8, 2008 at 9:48 am Permalink
Man, I didnt even think about that?!?!? I dont mind if Coffey or Underwear boy do, but I hope she doesnt!
August 8, 2008 at 9:50 am Permalink
Chris N. reminds me of another thing:
We didn’t have anything at all. No email, no internet.
I’m really surprised that they did this. I know for sure that they didn’t do it last year, because they had a bunch of drama surrounding some of the contestants reading negative comments on the Nashville Star message board and getting really shaken up. Honestly, I think it would’ve helped a lot of this year’s contestants to read some of their press, however unpleasant it might have been.
August 8, 2008 at 10:15 am Permalink
I didn’t get into Melissa at all during the show and probably won’t buy her album, but I enjoyed this interview. She’s very well-spoken and has a good head on her shoulders. She knows who she is and where she wants to go, which is more than you can say for most people who walk into Nashville and simply say “Make me a star!” I also think she addressed the image issues very well. If she picks great material, her career will be interesting to watch. Let’s see if she can prove Matt C. wrong…
August 8, 2008 at 10:22 am Permalink
we might see a wave of “prison-songs” after this round of nashville star.
August 8, 2008 at 10:48 am Permalink
What was the point of keeping them away from their families in the first place?
August 8, 2008 at 10:56 am Permalink
How would the fat jokes have helped Melissa?
Nice interview, Jim!
August 8, 2008 at 11:19 am Permalink
Early Martina is very different from recent Martina: compare “Swinging Doors” to “How I Feel” or even “Life #9″ to “Blessed.” Martina’s sound changed sometime around “Valentine”/”I Love You”/”Love’s the Only House.”
Even with Trisha: some of the songs on “Heaven, Heartache & the Power of Love” harken back to a time when she could sing a song like “You Don’t Have to Move That Mountain” and every album didn’t sound like you were listening to “I Would’ve Loved You Anyway” over and over and over.
As a personality, Melissa Lawson doesn’t have to prove she’s “real folks” the way most new stars must; we’ve heard her life story ad nauseum, at this point. As for her music, I’ll buy as long as she doesn’t try to belt out a show stopper on every song (such as the Nashville Star performances were turning into). We know she has a strong voice but she doesn’t have to force that one big wailing note into every single song. Even early Martina and early Trisha knew how to sing softly when the song warranted it.
August 8, 2008 at 11:23 am Permalink
Great job, Jim!
There goes a reference to the damn Camo hat! How does someone from Texas NOT know the Longhorn logo?
August 8, 2008 at 11:30 am Permalink
With all the references to the liveblogs she’s bound to check it out now, at least if she even stops by to read the feedback on this Q&A.
As far as Rich’s camo hat, I remember it being a longhorn on TV, but Lawson has spent more time with him in the studio than what was shown, so he might possibly have a Tennessee one, too.
@Chris: Maybe their resolve was being tested to see if they could handle the rigors of the music business; sort of like a music boot camp?
August 8, 2008 at 11:42 am Permalink
Brody,
You’re probably right about the camo hat. I still don’t understand why one wants to wear a camo hat with a logo on it? To me it’s no different than a pink hat/jersey with team name/logos on them.
August 8, 2008 at 12:38 pm Permalink
Joe, I think you’re right that there is quite a difference between early Martina and today’s Martina. I liked early Martina much more than the stuff that she puts out these days. I’d love her to go back to a sound like her Wild Angels album. Likewise, Trisha had a period that didn’t impress me too much as well, though I really like her current album.
I’m concerned about Melissa not wanting to sing songs about cheating or drinking, since those are my favorite kinds of country songs.:)
August 8, 2008 at 1:00 pm Permalink
Joe and Leeann: I’ll take your word for it, cuz I just dont see it….I think they’re fine and very talented vocalists, dont get me wrong, I just dont see the variation in the “phases and stages” the way y’all do i guess…
August 8, 2008 at 1:31 pm Permalink
Melissa is the every-woman, don’t think for one second selling power doesn’t come with that!
This is a time in her career (along with the rest of it!) that when fans stop her she can’t take the “leave me alone attitude,” if you really want to hit it you have to treat every last fan like a long lost friend. Spend time with them, sign for them, be nice to them. If you don’t genuinely appreciate your fans and just see them as dollar signs, you’ll never take off.
I really hope she gets out there, tours and does radio.
Melissa has a voice and I think she can go pretty far if given the chance, especially in today’s format. Most new music from female artists is geared towards the teen to early twenty audience. Melissa can hit the late 20’s on up audience which has just as much power if you can relate to them.
August 8, 2008 at 1:34 pm Permalink
“This is a time in her career (along with the rest of it!) that when fans stop her she can’t take the “leave me alone attitude,” if you really want to hit
it you have to treat every last fan like a long lost friend. Spend time with them, sign for them, be nice to them. If you don’t genuinely appreciate your
fans and just see them as dollar signs, you’ll never take off.”
I don’t get from her that she’ll take her fans for granted in the least.
I wonder how her husband is doing with all of this? It’s gotta be a huge change for him without much of the glamor.
August 9, 2008 at 9:18 am Permalink
Wait, wait, wait - back up the train! I wasn’t saying she didn’t, I was just saying that’s what she needs to continue to do.
August 9, 2008 at 9:53 am Permalink
Oh, I actually didn’t think that you were suggesting that she didn’t; it just seemed odd that you’d give her that advice. It just seemed to come out of nowhere, because I didn’t realize that you were saying that she needed to continue to do it. Sorry, I thought it was random advice.:) It makes more sense to me now.
August 9, 2008 at 10:34 am Permalink
“I wonder how her husband is doing with all of this? It’s gotta be a huge change for him without much of the glamor.”
To myself: Then again, it’s usually the other way around with the wives on the sidelines while their families lives are drastically changed.
August 9, 2008 at 1:21 pm Permalink
She seems like a nice lady, however, she comes across to me as somewhat naive about the industry and navigating through it — not just about weight and image but about all of it, including working with lables, being under pressure to perform certain types of music, etc. Also, while I did think she was fairly gracious about Matt C’s comment, the fact that she was shocked by it seems again to accentuate her naivete. While I don’t think she necessarily needed to read fat jokes about herself, that was and will be small potatoes compared to putting yourself out there as every artist does to have your songs and yourself scrutinized. Great interview, Jim.
August 14, 2008 at 5:05 pm Permalink
Is this chick related to Shannon Lawson - a struggling entertainer on the Muzik Mafia label? They bear a resemblance. If so, that’s not too cool is it?
August 26, 2008 at 11:18 am Permalink
I’m am old countrty gal that’s seen and heard lots of stars in my time and I think if Melissa wants to make it a career she has a good chance at succeeding long term. She has a voice that makes you want to hear more. She’s not a “cookie cutter” kind of singer and not a “lollipop queen of the year” type either. I think she has the true love of singing and not just a wish to be a star that will sustain her. And she’s got all those men in the family backing her and rooting her on. She also appears to be the kind of mom that will include her family in her career and not shut them out.
YOU GO GIRL!
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