As part of a series called My Big Break, All Things Considered is collecting stories of triumph, big and small. These are the moments when everything seems to click, and people leap forward into their careers.

A run-down bar in rural Alaska isn't any place for a kid. But when she was a child, that's where songwriter Jewel found her voice — on dingy stages at lumberjack joints.

Jewel Kilcher was 8 years old when her parents divorced and her mom left the family. What was once the Kilcher family band turned into a duo — just her and her dad. They'd sing at bars and taverns, putting on shows for down-and-out drinkers and drifters passing through.

"It was the smells I remember the most, you know, that stale beer smell when you walk in to do your sound check earlier in the day," Jewel says. "It was the people that really stuck with me. Just watching what a woman would do for a compliment and what she would give up. Watching men try and outrun their pain. Watching how these people ended up."

"I was probably the only fourth grader that went from elementary school right to the bar," she says.

Jewel outlines her childhood in her new memoir, Never Broken: Songs Are Only Half the Story, out on Tuesday. She also has a new album out this week called Picking Up the Pieces.

By the time she was a teenager, she was out on her own. Her father had become physically abusive, so she moved into a cabin with no running water, hitchhiked her way around the country and reconnected with her mom in San Diego.

She ended up moving in with her.

"I was paying the rent and just working in a coffee shop and then in a computer warehouse," Jewel says. "And my boss took me out to dinner one evening. I realized halfway through the dinner that he was propositioning me."

Jewel grew up bar-singing, so she was used to the whole routine. She joked about it, turned him down and moved on. Her boss didn't even seem that upset.

"My rent was due the next day and so I went in for my paycheck and I walked into my boss' office, I was like, 'Hey, I'm here for my paycheck.' And he never would look up from his papers — he ignored me. And it became very clear very quickly that he wasn't going to give me my paycheck. And that he obviously was quite mad that I didn't sleep with him, that I turned him down."

She was humiliated. With no paycheck, rent would be late — again. She knew her landlord would kick them out this time.

Her mom suggested they start living in their cars.

"So that's what we did," Jewel says. "We each lived in our separate cars. I had a small Datsun hatchback. We did that for awhile and then she ended up going back to Alaska and I ended up staying behind in San Diego."

Jewel was just scraping by back then, and had kidney trouble. She couldn't hold a regular job because she'd get sick so often. And then the car she lived in was stolen, so she became homeless for a year.

"To be that desperate, that down-and-out, I was suffering from agoraphobia, I had been shoplifting, I really wasn't doing well," Jewel says. "And I started just baring my soul in these songs and talking about my worst shame and my worst fears."

She figured that if she couldn't hold a regular job, maybe she could book gigs at local venues.

"I started writing a lot of songs so that I would have a whole set's worth of material," she says. "My big break was at a coffee shop called the Inner Change in San Diego."

The owner, a woman named Nancy, desperately needed clientele because she was going out of business. She told Jewel she could play a show there every week and get whatever money they made at the door.

The first night, only a couple surfers showed up. But word spread.

"More and more people came and after a couple months, it was kind of packed," Jewel says. "Three or four months more, it was standing room only and three or four months more, it was people spilling out and standing in the pouring rain just to watch me through a window."

That's when record labels took notice.

"When labels started coming down to see me and hearing about me, these limousines would show up and it was like being Cinderella," she says. "It was an incredible thing and I ended up having a bidding war after me. Every single label in the entire country wanted to sign me. It was pretty incredible."

She ended up signing with Atlantic Records. Her debut album, Pieces of You, was released in February of 1995.

"You realize that so much of success, whether it's personal happiness or career, is really just about not giving up," she says. "It's about who has the grit to keep standing. And that's what my life's been about. It's brought me to my knees again and again.

"I basically invited my fans to say, 'I'm on a journey of trying to figure my life out. And if you guys are on the same journey, let's do this together.' "

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

ARUN RATH, HOST:

Rundown bars in rural Alaska aren't places for kids, but songwriter Jewel found her voice on their dingy stages. Jewel Kilcher was eight when her mom left the family. Her dad taught Jewel singing and yodeling and took her along when he went to perform. They'd sing at lumberjack joints and taverns, putting on shows for down-and-out drinkers and drifters. She was a long way from her big break.

JEWEL KILCHER: It was the smells I remember the most, you know, that stale beer smell when you walk in to do your sound check earlier in the day. But it was the people that really stuck with me. Just watching what a woman do for a complement and what she would give up, watching men try and out-run their pain, watching how these people ended up.

RATH: By the time she was a teenager, she was on her own. Her father had become physically abusive so she moved into a cabin with no running water, hitchhiked her way around the country and eventually reconnected with her mom in San Diego.

KILCHER: And I was paying the rent and just working in a coffee shop and in a computer warehouse. And my boss took me out to dinner one evening, I realized halfway through the dinner that he was propositioning me. And, you know, I grew up bar-singing so I'd been propositioned since I was way too young to mention. So I just joked it off. I didn't think a ton about it. He didn't seem offended. And my rent was due next day so I went in for my paycheck, and I walked into my boss's office. I was like, hey, I'm here for my paycheck. And he never would look up from his papers. He ignored me. And it became very clear, very quickly that he wasn't going to give me my paycheck, and he was obviously quite mad that I didn't sleep with him - that I turned him down. I left there humiliated. I had no idea, no recourse.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "EVERYTHING BREAKS SOMETIME")

JEWEL: (Singing) It's hard to believe it's boiled down to this.

KILCHER: And I sat in my car and cried because I was like my mom and me are going to be kicked out of where we're living, and I don't know what we're going to do. And my mom, oddly, didn't seem upset. She was like, you know what? We'll live in our cars, it'll be no big deal. So that's what we did. We each lived in our separate cars. I had a small Datsun hatchback. We did that for a while. Then she ended up going back to Alaska, and I ended up staying behind in San Diego. And I was sick quite a lot. I had bad kidneys, and it was hard for me to get a new job because I kept missing work because I was sick. And then the car I was living in got stolen, but at least I wasn't in it, and I became homeless for about a year.

(SOUNDBITE OF JEWEL SONG, "EVERYTHING BREAKS SOMETIME")

KILCHER: To be that desperate, that down and out, I was suffering from agoraphobia. I had been shoplifting. I really wasn't doing well. And I started just baring my soul in these songs and talking about my worst shame and my worst fears. And so originally, I thought, well, maybe I can just get a gig if I can't hold down a regular job. And I started writing a lot of songs so that I would have a whole set's worth of material.

My big break was at a coffee shop called the Interchange in San Diego. They really needed a clientele because this was a coffee shop that was going out of business. It was off the beaten path. I had no following, but I said if I get people to come, can I keep all the door money and you can keep all the coffee and sales? And she agreed to it. The first time I ever handed out fliers was on the boardwalk to a bunch of surfers. Then I played every Thursday night, and they said, yeah, it's a girl named Jewel. She sings at a coffee shop called Interchange. More and more people came. And after a couple months, it was kind of packed. And three or four months more, there was standing room only, and three or four months more it was people spilling out and standing in the pouring rain just to watch me through a window.

When labels started coming down to see me and hearing about me, man, these limousines would show up, and it was like being Cinderella, you know. It was an incredible thing, and I ended up having a bidding war after me, every single label in the entire country wanted to sign me. It was pretty incredible. You realize that so much of success, whether it's personal happiness or career, is really just about not giving up. It's about who has the grit to keep standing, and that's what my life's been about. It's brought me to my knees again and again. I basically invited my fans to say, I am on a journey of trying to figure my life out. And if you guys are on the same journey, let's do this together.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "LOVE USED TO BE")

JEWEL: (Singing) Dig a six-foot hole inside my chest. Heart like a gravestone. Lay it down...

RATH: Songwriter Jewel Kilcher. Her memoir, "Never Broken: Songs Are Only Half The Story," comes out on Tuesday. Her album "Picking Up The Pieces" is out this week.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "LOVE USED TO BE")

JEWEL: (Singing) Love used to be. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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