Meghan Elizabeth Trainor was born on 22 December 1993, in Nantucket, Massachusetts, and she began singing at age six, at a Methodist church with her father, who was a music teacher and organist. Her family encouraged her to pursue her musical interests, and she had told her father she wanted to become a recording artist, so she began writing songs and recording them using the digital audio workstation software GarageBand. At the age of 12, she began performing as part of the cover band Island Fusion, which also included her aunt, younger brother, and father, staying with them for four years, singing and playing piano, guitar, and bongo drums. She and her family left Nantucket when she was in the eighth grade, temporarily relocating to Orleans, Massachusetts, before moving to North Eastham, where she attended Nauset Regional High School and studied guitar, played trumpet, and sang in a jazz band for three years. While she was a teenager, her parents encouraged her to attend songwriting conventions, and at 15, she took guitar lessons from former NRBQ member Johnny Spampinato. During this time, Trainor used Logic Studio to record and produce her compositions, and later worked independently in a home studio built by her parents. Between the ages of 15 and 17, she independently released three albums of material she had written, recorded, performed, and produced, with her debut album 'Meghan Trainor' being released on Christmas Day 2009, followed by the acoustic albums 'I'll Sing With You' and 'Only 17' the following year. Though she'd been offered a full scholarship to the Berklee College of Music, she decided to pursue her songwriting career and signed with Big Yellow Dog Music in 2012, starting out as a songwriter-for-hire, because of her ability to compose in a variety of genres, but being unsure about becoming a recording artist herself.
Throughout 2013 she travelled to Nashville, New York City and Los Angeles, where she wrote and helped produce country and pop songs, singing lead and background vocals on demos for other artists, and her vocals were occasionally used on the final recordings. In June 2013 Trainor met producer Kevin Kadish in Nashville, and they found that they both liked retro style music and began recording together that month, later writing 'All About That Bass' together. The duo offered the song to several record labels, all of which rejected the doo-wop song because it was not "synth-y, pop-y" enough, but she when she performed the song for Epic label boss L.A. Reid, he signed her 20 minutes later. 'All About That Bass' was released as her debut sonhle on 30 June 2014, and it reached number one in 58 countries, and it sold 11 million units worldwide. Her debut EP, 'Title', with songs composed by Trainor and Kadish, was released in September 2014, and peaked at number 15 on the US Billboard 200. Her three self-released albums were removed from sale in the build-up to the release of her major-label debut studio album 'Title', which replaced her EP of the same name on the iTunes Store, and it was released on 9 January 2015, debuting at number one on the US Billboard 200. Singles from the record, 'Dear Future Husband' and 'Like I'm Gonna Lose You', reached the Hot 100's top 20, and she began her first headlining concert tour, That Bass Tour, on 11 February 2015, but just before starting her "MTrain Tour" in July, she was diagnosed with a vocal cord haemorrhage, and her medical team ordered her to undergo complete vocal rest, delaying the first two dates of the tour.
In August she announced the cancellation of the remainder of her North American tour, undergoing surgery "to finally fix this once and for all". In March 2016 she released the first single from her new album, with 'No' peaking at number three on the Billboard Hot 100, which was followed by 'Me Too' in May, the day before her 'Thank You' album appeared, and although it received mixed reviews, it still debuted at number three on the US Billboard 200. In December 2017 Fox announced Trainor as one of the judges on the show 'The Four: Battle For Stardom', along with Sean Combs, DJ Khaled and Charlie Walk, with the show's first two seasons being broadcast in 2018. Her third major-label studio album, 'Treat Myself', was scheduled for release on 31 August 2018, but was delayed because she wanted to write and record more songs for it, and its lead single 'No Excuses' was released in March 2018 and peaked at number 46 on the Billboard Hot 100, followed by 'Let You Be Right', 'Can't Dance' and 'All The Ways', and 'Treat Myself' was given a January 2019 release date, although it was not actually released until 31 January 2020. Trainor wrote enough material for four albums while trying to adapt to new trends in the music industry, and the final track listing was drastically different from the original incarnation, and it received mixed reviews on its release, only reaching number 25 on the US Billboard 200. In the end only four songs from the original track list made it to the actual album, with even the title track being removed, and so this early version of 'Treat Myself' is almost a completely new album for you to enjoy.
01 Treat Myself
02 No Excuses
03 Let You Be Right
04 Hard To Please
05 Evil Twin
06 I'm Down
07 Foolish
08 Look At Us
09 Another Opinion
10 Don't Think About Leavin'
11 Can't Dance
12 All The Ways
13 After You
14 Good Morning (feat. Gary Trainor)
Tracks 01, 03, and 11 released as singles.
Tracks 06, 07, 12 and 14 later released on 'The Love Train' EP.
Tracks 02, 05, 09 and 13 kept for the official album.
Tracks 04, 08 and 10 previously unreleased.
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