True Believer

Album: Foxes in the Snow (2025)
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Songfacts®:

  • "True Believer" is a tear-stained breakup song. Stripped of the 400 Unit, it's just Jason Isbell playing acoustic guitar, reflecting on the breakdown of his marriage to the singer-songwriter and 400 Unit fiddle player Amanda Shires.
  • Isbell married Shires in early 2013 and filed for divorce just under 11 years later. The song lands like a postscript to their relationship, though Isbell is famously evasive about whether every line in his songs comes from lived experience. He told Uncut magazine:

    "They don't put songs on the shelf based on whether they're true. They do that with movies and books, but they don't do it with songs. That's the last things that matters about a song: did this really happen to you personally? All of it has happened to somebody. Besides, I'll be dead soon enough and the songs will hopefully still make sense even when I'm gone."
  • If you're looking for clues, "True Believer" offers them obliquely. "All your girlfriends say I broke your f--ing heart," Isbell sings, wincing in key. But the song closes on something that isn't bitterness: a vow, perhaps more to himself than anyone else.

    I'll always be a true believer, babe
  • "True Believer" is a track on Isbell's 10th album, Foxes in the Snow. He recorded it in just five days at Electric Lady Studios in New York using the same vintage 1940 Martin 0-17 acoustic guitar for every track, a subtle act of continuity in a time of personal fracture.
  • Isbell named "True Believer" among the most directly autobiographical songs on the album, along with "Eileen," and "Gravelweed." He wrote them as reflections on the unraveling of his marriage, the reshaping of his home life, and the ongoing effort to parent through the pain.
  • "True Believer" served as the closing song during many of his solo dates on his 2025 An Intimate Evening with Jason Isbell tour.

    "It was tough the first time I did it live, a few weeks ago in Mexico City," reflected Isbell to The Sun. "But I've had a lot of practice playing heavy songs."

    He added: "There's joy even in the saddest song. The act of singing about these things is like a celebration of surviving."

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