
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Imposter syndrome is super common amongst womxn and nonbinary artists, especially when it comes to taking the reins in the recording studio. What we will learn today is that even when you grow up knowing that music is in your DNA and is a possible career path for you and/or your innate talent and passion gets you into one of the best music schools in the country, that doesn’t necessarily spare you from struggles with self confidence, or escaping the challenges of navigating music’s male dominated spaces and industry. Madison McFerrin was born in 1992, the daughter of Grammy-winning vocalist and songwriter Bobby McFerrin, and granddaughter of Robert McFerrin, Sr., the first black man to sing at the Metropolitan Opera. A graduate of Berklee College of Music, this singer, songwriter and producer first put out a pair of independently released, a-cappella-based EP’s called Finding Foundations Vol. I in 2016, Vol II in 2018, and then began to flesh out her sound on the 2019 EP You + I, a collaboration with her brother, musician/producer Taylor McFerrin. In today’s conversation, we’ll hear how Madison overcame her own imposter syndrome, took the production reins, and made her most fully realized album to date, I Hope You Can Forgive Me.
 By Carmel Holt & Talkhouse
By Carmel Holt & Talkhouse5
4040 ratings
Imposter syndrome is super common amongst womxn and nonbinary artists, especially when it comes to taking the reins in the recording studio. What we will learn today is that even when you grow up knowing that music is in your DNA and is a possible career path for you and/or your innate talent and passion gets you into one of the best music schools in the country, that doesn’t necessarily spare you from struggles with self confidence, or escaping the challenges of navigating music’s male dominated spaces and industry. Madison McFerrin was born in 1992, the daughter of Grammy-winning vocalist and songwriter Bobby McFerrin, and granddaughter of Robert McFerrin, Sr., the first black man to sing at the Metropolitan Opera. A graduate of Berklee College of Music, this singer, songwriter and producer first put out a pair of independently released, a-cappella-based EP’s called Finding Foundations Vol. I in 2016, Vol II in 2018, and then began to flesh out her sound on the 2019 EP You + I, a collaboration with her brother, musician/producer Taylor McFerrin. In today’s conversation, we’ll hear how Madison overcame her own imposter syndrome, took the production reins, and made her most fully realized album to date, I Hope You Can Forgive Me.

91,072 Listeners

38,484 Listeners

6,727 Listeners

38,718 Listeners

30,070 Listeners

3,871 Listeners

144 Listeners

383 Listeners

1,419 Listeners

87,135 Listeners

4,303 Listeners

229 Listeners

933 Listeners

4,582 Listeners

5 Listeners

374 Listeners

1,517 Listeners

58,206 Listeners

367 Listeners

2,200 Listeners

93 Listeners

16,030 Listeners

149 Listeners

129 Listeners

13,079 Listeners

209 Listeners

14 Listeners

9,964 Listeners