Episode notes
She grew up singing country covers in a bookstore, played right wing on a boys' ice hockey team, and came from an evangelical family in a town of 5,000. Yet Avril Lavigne became the global face of 2000s pop-punk rebellion. We untangle that contradiction and the manufactured versus authentic debate that dogged her early career.
We trace how a stalled New York record deal was rescued when LA producers The Matrix tapped into the skater kid she already was, launching Let Go into the best-selling album of the century by a Canadian artist. From constant reinvention to the bizarre Melissa death conspiracy theory to surviving Lyme disease, this is the story of an artist who refused to be contained by the labels that made her famous.
- The $1.25 million deal she signed at 15 and the New York sessions that did not fit
- How The Matrix  ...Â