“Good afternoon, we are here today on Nashville Rising Star with one of the newest voices in country music, Bree Matthews. Bree, it’s nice to have you with us.”

“It’s nice to be here.” Bree took a few deep breaths and tried to still her racing heart. In the last year, she’d done a ton of interviews, but this was the biggest one to date. Alice Kingston was one of the most popular journalists in Nashville, and her show had a huge following. Bree was so thankful her agent, Zelda, was able to get this booking for her.

“Tell us, Bree, what’s it like to be one of the most popular up and coming faces in the country recording industry today?”

“It’s amazing,” Bree said with a giggle. Even though this was a radio show and podcast, she knew it was also recorded and put on YouTube and other sites. She was sitting in a radio station room a few feet away from Alice, who was a lot shorter in person, with giant red hair that would’ve looked perfect in Texas. Her producer, a man by the name of Frank Wilson, sat on the other side of a glass window in a little booth, signaling them mostly with his hands, unless there was a commercial, then he might talk to them.

“Have you always wanted to be a recording artist?”

“Absolutely. Ever since my grandma taught me how to play the guitar when I was a little girl, I’ve dreamt of living this life--playing my music for people. It’s certainly a dream come true.”

“That’s great. You say your grandma taught you how to play. Does she sing as well?”

“She does--though not professionally. We would sing at church together sometimes. And sometimes my mama would join us.”

“What a nice little family trio,” Alice chuckled. “What about your dad?”

“Oh, no. Daddy always joked if you gave him a bucket to carry a tune in, he’d still manage to trip and spill it.” That got Alice laughing again, which put Bree at ease.

The interview went on for about thirty minutes with a few breaks for commercials before Alice said, “Now, Bree, tell us about your most popular song. Anyone who listens to radio stations like ours that play up and coming singers will recognize it. It’s called ‘Meant to Marry Me.’ What was your inspiration for such a beautiful, heartbreaking song? You’re not old enough to be thinking about getting married, are you?”

Bree laughed, though Alice had asked a question that pained her to think about. “I’m old enough to get married now, but when I wrote it, I probably wasn’t really. I wasn’t ready to anyway. It isn’t really about getting married, though, obviously. If you listen to the lyrics, you’ll hear it’s just about growing up thinking your life is going to be one way--maybe you’ll have a certain job, or live in a certain place, or marry a certain person, and then you get there, and you find out it’s not really like that at all. You have to be able to say it’s not what I wanted, but I’m gonna have to move on, that’s all.”

a woman your age. How

when

now you’re,

“Almost twenty-four.”

these sorts of philosophical thoughts. We heard from a young man a few weeks ago who said on his Twitter feed that he was there the night you wrote it, that you’d caught your

shook her head. “No, not exactly. While it’s true that

the guitar player for the band Back Roads? It’s fairly common knowledge that the two of you dated and used to play

wasn’t even angry at him anymore. But she’d never give him another

the song?

of a lot of different people in my life. As we grow and change, we move on, and the people in our lives change as well. We go from being children who see our parents every day to adults who see them occasionally in the blink of an eye. The same can be said for our friends, neighbors, coworkers, everyone. Sometimes we think we’ve found someone who will be with us always, but they’re not. It can be hard. But we have no choice but

thoughts from a very talented young lady. Ladies and gentlemen, keep your eye and ear on this one. I guarantee Bree Mathews will

having me,” Bree said with

told them they were clear, and Bree

“That was great. You are such an

“Thanks.

guy, and while he’s

not about Sam. I

“But it is about someone specific, isn’t it? You can’t write emotion like that for a make-believe person or an

not gonna tell you who.” She winked

together with him, now that

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