
“Sober me was competing with drunk me to whoop my own ass”: Jason Isbell on why quitting drinking made him a better songwriter
Back in 2012, Jason Isbell realised that he’d never find the solution to his problems at the bottom of a bottle. Following a stint in rehab, the musician swore off booze for good – and made it his personal mission to conjure up a sober record better than anything his drunk counterpart had ever released.
By transforming his sobriety into a game of one-upmanship, Isbell was pushed to pen the best tracks of his career. That’s how 2013’s Southeastern, a record he describes as a “career highlight”, came to be. “I really wanted sobriety to improve my work. It became almost competitive – sober me was competing with drunk me to whoop my own ass at songwriting,” he told Uncut in 2023.
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“When I was writing before, I’d get up at noon, have coffee, aspirin and some liquor, start writing at one and then at three or four it was time to go to the bar,” he admitted. “With Southeastern I was getting up, making a pot of coffee and working until it was done.”
Without the need to battle a hangover, Isbell’s output increased drastically. He’d work on more tracks in the day, and have more quality tracks to pick and choose between. “That meant that I had 12 great songs instead of just two [on the record],” he explained. “There were Cover Me Up, Elephant and Travelling Alone, but it was an entire record of the best I could do.”
When digging into Southeastern, plenty of tracks see Isbell tackling his boozy demons. For instance, Songs That She Sang In The Shower quite clearly sees him singing “so I pace, and I pray, and I repeat the mantras that might keep me clean for the day”.
Eight years on, Isbell would re-address those early years battling with sobriety with his 400 Unit band. Nearly a decade into his recovery, 2020’s Reunions record saw Isbell appreciating just how far he had come. “There was enough time behind me [and that version of me], so felt comfortable looking at the past on songs like It Gets Easier,” he said.
“I had worried there was risk in romanticising the way my life had been, but now I felt that risk had passed and I was stable,” he continued. “I wanted to look back at my life without romanticising it but also without beating myself around the head.”
In terms of Isbell’s most recent releases, he worked with Martin Guitars at the end of last year on two new signature models, the Jason Isbell 0-17 and the 0-10E Retro acoustics. Both were inspired by his beloved pre-war 0-17 guitar heard across the entirety of his 2025 record, Foxes In The Snow.
The post “Sober me was competing with drunk me to whoop my own ass”: Jason Isbell on why quitting drinking made him a better songwriter appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.
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