Updated May 12, 2026 at 4:30 PM EDT
Singer-songwriter Jewel shot to stardom in the 1990s, then stepped away from the spotlight for a couple of years. But now, she’s back with a number of new projects.
Her art exhibit, “Matriclysm: An Archeology of Connections,” just opened in Venice, Italy, this week. She released a new single, “Upon Meeting the Goddess of Love.” And Jewel’s been revisiting her first album, “Pieces of You,” one of the best-selling debuts of all time, with acoustic performances that she’s been posting online.
She said she’s written hundreds of songs, but hasn’t released most of them.
“I think I’m lazy,” she said. “Writing is the fun part. Releasing and promoting and producing, there are like a million things that stop me from doing all that.”
What is it like to put out a new song into the world? Does it feel the same way as it did when you were a teenager trying to make your way as an artist?
“I write hundreds of songs. I have thousands of unreleased songs and I don’t know why I don’t release them more. And it dawned on me when I was doing this little acoustic series on my first album, why don’t I just release it [‘Upon Meeting the Goddess of Love’] acoustic and live?”
Let’s talk about this exhibit in Italy. It includes painting and sculpture, textile design and immersive sound as well. Was that side of you, that type of artist, always there?
“Yes, I started in visual art before I started writing songs. I was trained as a sculptor and then started writing, maybe six months after that. And my music career took off, thankfully, amazingly. And I kept drawing as a private practice and then, of course, got into mental health.
“Finally, about two years ago, I couldn’t keep siloing these aspects and wanted to bring them all together. And this is the result.”
The exhibit is called “Matriclysm: An Archeology of Connections Lost.” Can you explain or translate that for me?
“[Matriclysm] is a made-up word of ‘matriarchy’ and ‘cataclysm.’ It’s an investigation, as my music is, into my own life and my own psychology. And so it speaks in a really personal way about my own relationship to my own femininity, to my mothering, to my mother, and globally.”
Watching your performance of the song “Foolish Games,” you can tell that you’re still feeling that song after all these years. You were just a kid when you wrote that first album. How does it resonate with you today?
“It’s interesting, a lot of those songs, they always hit me. [They’ve] always felt very emotionally intense, which is really my style. If something isn’t hitting me hard, I would tend not to finish the song. And so it is interesting to see those songs all these years later still moving me, at least to perform them.
“I got to really benefit from reading so much Pablo Neruda and Leonard Cohen. It really is lyrically standing on the shoulders of mature lyricists that I think gave me a head start at that young age.”
Bob Dylan was a mentor. What did he teach you?
“He was. You know, my first album was considered a failure, and so I quit touring it and went back in the studio to make a second album. That never [happened] because Bob asked me to go [on tour] with him. And he loved the album. He loved ‘Who Will Save Your Soul.’ And I was like, ‘You know what? If Bob Dylan is the only person that likes this song, I’m okay.’”
You’ve been very open about your life before you signed the record deal and before this sort of fame came to you. You’ve written about growing up with alcoholism in your family, abuse at home, moving out, living in your car, shoplifting and panic attacks. I’m just curious what fame was like for you as a young person.
“When I got discovered, I was homeless. I was offered a million-dollar signing bonus, and I almost didn’t sign the contract because I was very scared. It was like being handed plutonium and being told this was going to be the best thing in the world. And I knew that with my difficult background and with my mental health, it was probably just a recipe for disaster. And even though I was homeless, I had just begun to learn some mental health skills that helped me stop having panic attacks, helped me get a grip on my shoplifting, and I didn’t want to give it away for this pipe dream, possibly, of a record deal. And then, God forbid, what would I do if I got famous?
“So I made myself a promise that I would sign the record contract only if my number-one priority was to learn to be a happy, whole human, not a human full of holes. I wrote [that] down. My number-two job was to be a musician, and under that, I wanted to be an artist more than famous. And I knew that if I made myself that promise, I wouldn’t be stubbornly loyal to that decision-making tree.
“Then [the albums] ‘Spirit’ and ‘Hands’ were successful, and I quit after that because that level of fame, in all honesty, didn’t work for me. I didn’t like it. And that’s a very hard thing to admit when you worked so hard to get it and when everybody else would kill to be you. But I’m a writer that likes watching other people. I didn’t like being watched, and so I quit for two years and decided I could be anything — did I want to be a chef? What else would I do? It turns out that I loved being a musician. I loved learning. I liked experimenting. I just didn’t like being that famous.
“I realized that within two years of quitting after ‘Hands’ that I got unfamous fast. By the end of that two years, I was grocery shopping without a bodyguard, and I was like, ‘OK. Note to self: I love music. I’m going to change genres. I’m going to push myself, I’m going to save my money.’ So it’s not like I have to be liked or I have to have a hit. I’m willing to step off the popularity bandwagon to be an artist and to do this at a pace that works for me. It meant I would have to work more to make the next album a success, but I can work hard. That was no problem.”
Hearing a song like “Hands,” do you feel any nostalgia for those days, looking back?
“I don’t know about nostalgia. I wasn’t proud of myself in real time. My life felt like a fist fight: so much anxiety, so much struggle. It’s nice to be 53 sitting on a rooftop in Venice, Italy, and hear that song and be able to be proud of myself retroactively.”
This interview was edited for clarity.
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Emiko Tamagawa produced and edited this interview for broadcast with Todd Mundt. Tamagawa adapted it for the web.
This article was originally published on WBUR.org.
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