Photo:FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty
FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty
With six golden gramophones now in his possession — including two from last month’s Grammys ceremony —Jason Isbellis ready to reveal the secret to his success.
“I try to be the only person in the category voters have ever heard of,” the 45-year-old says in this week’s issue of PEOPLE, his tongue firmly in cheek. “Either you’re Beyoncé, or you find a niche genre. [Recording] Academy voters don’t listen to roots music, so all I want from them is to recognize my name. Now, to do that, I’ve had to make a lot of mistakes: I had to be an alcoholic and get a divorce. But now they say, ‘Oh, I’ve heard of this guy!’”
The current titleholder of best American roots song (for “Cast Iron Skillet”) and best Americana album (forWeathervanes, an album he and his band, the 400 Unit, released last June) can laugh now, but it’s taken some time.
Isbell, who began his career with the Drive-By Truckers before going solo in 2007, has been candid about his near-flameout, getting sober after a 2012 intervention and finding redemption and creative inspiration in fiddle player and one-time bandmateAmanda Shires, whom he married in February 2013. In December, Isbell filed for divorce, two months before the couple’s 11th anniversary, news that shocked fans.
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“I’m a far better self-soother than I used to be,” says Isbell of how sobriety has given him perspective on change. “I’ve been equipped for emotional hardship for a long time. So I’m grateful I’m on the right path, even though sometimes it’s difficult.”
Isbell’s professional path has taken him in unexpected directions in the past year. He made his big-screen debut inKillers of the Flower Moon, playing Bill Smith a former horse thief who marries into the Osage tribe. Sharing space withdirector Martin Scorsese and star Robert De Niro, he admits, gave him a serious case of imposter syndrome.
“Before I got on set, I was like, ‘What do I call these people?’ he recalls. “Someone said, ‘It’s Marty and Bob.’ I was like, ‘Are you serious? This is not a joke? I’m supposed to call them Marty and Bob?!’ Man, I was terrified.”
True to his tried-and-true life strategy, Isbell replaced the fear with gratitude (“That’s how you get to do the cool s—,” he says) and things got easier: “I realized I could stand there with Leonardo DiCaprio and think, ‘Well, if I f— this up, I’ll recover from it.”
One Hollywood aspiration Isbell doesn’t mind throwing out to the universe and any open-minded casting directors: “I want to play [Little Feat frontman] Lowell George in the Linda Ronstadt movie,” he admits, grinning. “All I know is,Selena Gomez is playing Linda, and I immediately told my manager and my agent: ‘’If there’s going to be any Lowell George in this movie, I want to play him.’ I can even bring accurate equipment — I have the Dumble, I have the amplifier, I have the guitars. I’ll show up with all the stuff; they don’t have to rent it from Norman’s Rare Guitars, which is what they usually do.”
For now, there’s always the day job. Isbell and the 400 Unit are currently on tour in support ofWeathervanes. “I’m going to get up in the morning … and play shows with my buddies," he says. “And that is still my favorite thing.”
For more on Jason Isbell, pick up the latest issue of PEOPLE, on newsstands Friday, or subscribehere.
source: people.com