Whiskey, addiction, breakups: Kalie Shorr is the new queen of country
With her acid wit and poignant lyrics, the US songwriter is being hailed as a successor to Nashville-era Taylor Swift
Country excursion ... Kalie Shorr
Had everything gone to plan, Kalie Shorr would have just wrapped her first UK tour. Instead, the 25-year-old country songwriter is stuck in Nashville, diagnosed with coronavirus and fighting trolls who accused her of faking it for publicity. Itâs the longest sheâs spent at home since music became her full-time gig seven years ago. She has been writing songs with her two housemates but, otherwise, lockdown has been an exercise in getting comfortable with her own company. âI am very extroverted and thrive on chaos,â she says with a guilty laugh.
Shorr is no stranger to it. Her 2019 debut album, Open Book, documents the worst year of her life: her older sisterâs fatal heroin overdose; a cheating boyfriend; an eating disorder relapse. âIâve never been worse, thanks for asking,â Shorr sings on the albumâs opening line. âIs it making you nervous, all this honesty?â Her poignant bleakness and acid wit (the latter honed at stand-up nights between gigs) did spook the famously conservative country industry. âTheyâre terrified to take a chance on something they donât understand,â says Shorr. So she self-released the album, a gloves-off evolution of Taylor Swiftâs Nashville years. It made the New York Timesâ best albums of 2019.
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Shorr is more strategic and resourceful than that chaotic exterior. Age 11, she told her dad she wanted to sign a publishing deal one day: âHe was like, you wanna write a book?â The pre-teen Shorr avidly read CD liner notes, researching the songwriters whose names appeared alongside those of the Dixie Chicks and Faith Hill. âFrom there I fell down a songwriting rabbit hole.â Shorr grew up âhonestly, just poorâ in Maine, shuttling between her divorced parents. In a home where religion was âkind of a replacementâ for psychology and therapy, she was sent to a pastor to address her anorexia, someone âwho has no qualification in talking to a teenage girl about how sheâs not eating cos sheâs trying to maintain control over her world and she doesnât have anyâ, Shorr recalls. She was left to figure it out on her own, and songwriting became a way of processing the world: âMaking it rhyme and being able to organise it into three minutes and 30 seconds.â
Shorr posted covers on YouTube to lure listeners to her original material. After travelling to Nashville to perform at a showcase organised by Perez Hilton, she realised she would have to move there if she wanted to make it. So she headed south aged 18 and took a forensic approach to her hustle, studying the industry up close, âtrying to pregame the whole thingâ, she says. âI wanted to brace myself for the worst-case scenario.â She worked by day in a clothing shop and took an all-night job at a hotdog stand. âIâd seen E! True Hollywood Story,â she says. âIf Faith Hill can work at McDonaldâs, I can most certainly work at the snack shack on Broadway.â
There was no worst-case scenario, at least not career-wise. Shorr joined Song Suffragettes, a female songwritersâ collective countering the industryâs gender disparity. Showcasing her song Fight Like a Girl (âwhen you push me, Iâll just push back harderâ) at its weekly live slot earned her a publishing deal. For a while, Shorr smoothed down her edges to try to write commercial material that might get playlisted on country radio. Then the beginnings of her bad year, in 2018, forced her honesty back out. âMy manager told me, âAll youâre doing right now is listening to Alanis Morissette and Fiona Apple and crying â channel that, thatâs clearly what you need to do on a personal levelâ,â she recalls. After her sister died, she wrote Vices, confessing to all her unhealthiest coping mechanisms: âI keep waking up next to my ex because he knows my body / And his new girlfriend, well she doesnât know / And hell, I wish I was sorry.â It was liberating, says Shorr. âItâs accountability, being able to admit that, because then itâs a lot harder to do it again.â
When she showed her manager another new song, the savagely funny kiss-off F U Forever, he leaned back in his chair. âHe was like: âFuck, I guess weâre doing this!ââ Shorr says. She recently revisited the songs she was writing at school. âThey were so much like Open Book,â she says. âThatâs so beautiful and reassuring that Iâm on the right path, because Open Book channels who I was when I was first using songwriting as a coping mechanism and a crutch â that raw emotion before youâre really taught you need to be ashamed of it. Iâm never gonna go back to writing songs from a guarded perspective.â
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Naming Open Book an album of 2019, the New York Times wrote: âEveryone in Nashville is likely hoping to sandpaper her into something just a bit less confrontational; fingers crossed that doesnât happen.â It hasnât. âI donât think anybodyâs tried to chisel me down because I really came in swinging,â says Shorr. âWhen you put out F U Forever, you canât go back.â Still, she is frustrated by the labelsâ resistance to her: âTheyâre like, âWe canât really sign another girlâ or âWe donât really know what to do with itâ. Well, the fans know what to do with it. People are finding this and we havenât had a marketing budget. I havenât even run a single Instagram ad â itâs as grassroots as it could possibly be.â Self-funding everything has been difficult. âBut I wouldnât change it cos of the level of control Iâve been able to have: owning my masters, controlling my own narrative, saying whatever I wanna say.â She recently rejected an offer to advertise a weight-loss aid. âThatâs not a detox tea, itâs literally laxatives,â she says. âI wanna maintain my righteous anger about this.â
Shorrâs life has improved since releasing Open Book. âThereâs definitely still struggle, but not the same struggle I sing about on the album,â she says. âI havenât had a âchase Jameson shots with Jameson on the rocks while smoking a pack of American Spiritsâ night since I finished it.â Sheâs been auditioning for film roles, presenting her show on Radio Disney Country and starting her own comedy podcast about oversharing. Recovering from coronavirus has given her a new perspective on her future. âItâs so easy when youâre in your 20s to feel invincible,â she says. âIf you listen to Open Book, itâs the journey of me figuring out that Iâm not.â