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Trouble Is a Woman - Gwen Sebastian



     
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“My motto is, ‘Don’t settle,’” Gwen Sebastian declares. “Don’t give in. If
you’re not liking what you’re doing in your life, you’re not going to be the
person you want to be.”
That’s the guiding principle that led Sebastian to leave her tiny rural
hometown to go for broke in the topsy-turvy Nashville music world. It’s what
led her to spend the last several years paying her dues entertaining crowds all over the country, earning one
fan at a time the old-fashioned way. And it’s what shaped the full, rich musical personality heard on her
new six song EP from Open Road Records titled V.I.P.
It’s a lesson she learned as a kid, growing up on a farm about 15 miles down a dirt road in the southwestern
North Dakota town of Hebron (population: 800). Her house was filled with music—her father played guitar
and fiddle, her mother played bass, and both were singers; her younger brother played drums. She took
piano lessons as a child, and by 11 replaced her cousin as the organist at her little country church. The
impulse toward entertaining came early and easily. “Ever since I was little I put on shows in the living
room and tried to perform,” recalls Sebastian, whose early favorites were harmony-centric acts like the
Everly Brothers, Alabama and the Eagles.
She dreamed of making music her life, but wasn’t sure how to make that happen. “I always wanted to do
something like this,” she says. “When you’re a kid you think it’s definitely going to happen, but when you
get into high school you think, ‘Maybe I should go to college.’ I’m a planner. I always have to have a
backup plan.” She went to college, then lasted a semester at a nursing school in Bismarck, N.D., before the
lure of her musical dream became simply too strong to resist.
Once she made the move to Nashville, Sebastian found work as a property manager (“helping people get
their toilets fixed and collecting rent,” she says). She began learning her way around the business, writing
with some of country music’s greatest tunesmiths and earning her stripes on the stage. Rather than play
local showcases and writers’ nights like most aspiring artists in Music City, Sebastian took to the road. She
played her own shows, as well as opening for acts like Taylor Swift, Sugarland and Phil Vassar. “That’s
something that not a lot of artists get to do,” she says. “I was able to actually make a career out of that. I
didn’t have to have a day job, and I could be a songwriter on the side. I was lucky that way.” But make no
mistake about it, Gwen Sebastian made her own luck. “There’s a lot of talented people out there, but you’ve
gotta work too,” she notes. “Sometimes you don’t realize that until you get into it.”
Sebastian’s debut release from Open Road Records is an EP that offers a compact but comprehensive
introduction to the many facets of Gwen Sebastian’s talents. She co-wrote four of the six tracks, including
the single and title cut “V.I.P (Barefoot Girl).” “It’s something I wrote with Dean Miller and Brian Eckert,”
she says of the song. “It’s about how different my life was growing up in North Dakota versus if I had
grown up somewhere like L.A. It’s about how you remember your roots, and you always go back to them.”
The other tracks also reflect Sebastian’s personality and sensibilities. The breakup ballad “Nothing,” she
says, is really about “getting off the couch. There’s things in life you’re going to go through, and you can’t
just sit around doing nothing. You’ve got to keep on going.” The driving “Feel Your Love” is about taking a
chance on romance, but its themes are far larger. “It’s about not being afraid to take the big plunge and give
in to love,” she says. “But for me it’s also about going out on the road and pursuing my dreams, while
realizing there might be something back home that’s worth having as well.”
Sebastian has worked hard in pursuit of her dreams, and now that they’re in sight she has no intention of
stopping. She hopes to one day earn the level of respect afforded her heroes, artists like Dolly Parton, Linda
Ronstadt, Bonnie Raitt and Sheryl Crow. “So far, it’s pretty darn cool what’s happened in my life,” she
says. “But I definitely have some big goals.” She won’t settle for less. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

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Gwen Sebastian