Mary Gauthier Channels Heartache In 'The Foundling' The American folksinger just released a new album inspired by her life story. Born in New Orleans, Gauthier was put up for adoption at birth and later struggled with alcohol and drug addiction. In The Foundling, she tells a story she says others might keep silent.

Mary Gauthier Channels Heartache In 'The Foundling'

Mary Gauthier Channels Heartache In 'The Foundling'

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Mary Gauthier just released The Foundling, an album in which she tries to make piece with the woman who gave her up for adoption. Courtesy of the artist hide caption

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Courtesy of the artist

Mary Gauthier just released The Foundling, an album in which she tries to make piece with the woman who gave her up for adoption.

Courtesy of the artist

Mary Gauthier just released a new record called The Foundling, which chronicles her attempts to reconnect and make peace with the woman who gave her up for adoption. The singer-songwriter says the abandonment fueled her own anger and sadness, which in turn contributed to her struggle with with drugs and even crime.

"Perhaps I've lived this story in order to tell it, because I'm not alone," she says in an interview with Weekend All Things Considered host Guy Raz. "In my journey, I've met people all over the world that can relate."

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Goodbye

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March 11, 1962

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In "Goodbye," the singer confronts her compulsive need to move on from her past. She sings of moving from town to town and leaving the people she loves behind.

"I was searching for something that I didn't have," Gauthier says. "Looking for something that I thought would be around the corner. That was really important to who I am, or who I was, or who I'm going to be."