Skip to content
Search

Madeleine Peyroux Sought ‘Truth, Justice and Love’ in America. Did She Find It?

Madeleine Peyroux Sought ‘Truth, Justice and Love’ in America. Did She Find It?

Madeleine Peyroux doesn’t have a television or a radio at her home in New York, but she still can’t help feeling inundated by politically charged news, ads for hygiene products, and even the loud music from cars passing by.

“We’re being bombarded by so much stuff, all the time. I can’t even hide inside my own house,” the jazz-folk singer tells Rolling Stone.


But Peyroux didn’t allow all that stimuli to suppress her creativity. Rather, she let it foster it and guide her toward some challenging issues, resulting in her latest album Let’s Walk. Her first full-length record in four years, the album amplifies the jazz stylings on which she built her career, but unlike past efforts, which included a regular dose of cover songs, from Bob Dylan to Leonard Cohen, Let’s Walk is 100 percent Peyroux.

Peyroux co-wrote all 10 tracks with three words as her mantra: truth, justice, and love. The songwriter latched onto the phrase after hearing the activist Cornel West use it as a slogan of his 2024 presidential campaign.

“There is something very powerful about those three words, and the presentation of yourself as somebody that believes in those three words,” she says. “With this record, I don’t want to convince individual people of that for my sake, but I want to be able to say something clearly along those lines, that this is what I believe.”

Among the tentpoles of Peyroux’s beliefs is an end to violence and racism. She addresses both in the album standout “How I Wish,” a song written about the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery in 2020.

“There’s a lot of different ways to look at race in America and to look at our social situation, but I didn’t hear any of the conversations that I think deserve equal time,” she says of the song, which imagines countering “each heinous act” of American history “to which I’ve been a part” with tenderness.

Born in the U.S. but raised in Paris, Peyroux has a particularly informed view on the cultures of the U.S. and France. But she refuses to view one as superior.

“We’re all the same. Some things are worse there and some things are worse here. The quality of life is worse here, but there’s more people here. We’re more of a third world country than we realize,” she says. “We don’t know ourselves in this country. And a lot of us refuse to talk about it. I see myself as being very ignorant, or at least looking the other way, in the sense that I haven’t been engaged civically.”

In “Find True Love,” a mental and musical journey to New Orleans, Peyroux challenged herself to look inward and confront hard truths. “I promise to be open to feel joy and pain/the only way to make a life is to fail and try again,” she sings.

In a statement that accompanied Let’s Walk, Peyroux said the ideas in “Find True Love” allowed her to “imagine a place where I can become a better me.”

So, did she?

“I only find that place when I perform,” she admits. “It’s in the process of being in that transient moment that music brings me to, that allows me to really appreciate life. But that song is very dear to me. For months, I was singing the phrase, ‘Let’s go down to the bayou/and eat, pray, love,’ because I didn’t know what other way there could be to say that concept.”

She found it in “truth, justice and love,” and now proudly wears those words on a T-shirt when she’s walking around New York.

“A guy just stopped me in the street yesterday,” Peyroux says. “‘Truth, justice, and love…I like that,’ he said. And I said, ‘Yeah, I do too.’”

More Stories

Pearl Jam Will Unveil New Drummer in September: ‘It’s Our Mystery Wrapped in an Enigma’

Pearl Jam perform during the 2025 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival.

Tim Mosenfelder/WireImage

Pearl Jam Will Unveil New Drummer in September: ‘It’s Our Mystery Wrapped in an Enigma’

When Pearl Jam announced plans to headline the 10th annual Ohana Festival earlier this month, many fans had the same question: “Who will be playing drums?” The band hasn’t played a show since Matt Cameron announced his departure last year, and they’ve yet to indicate who is going to replace him.

But in a new interview on SiriusXM’s Pearl Jam Radio, guitarist Stone Gossard strongly implied they’ve made their pick. At the very least, they’ll make it official once they take the stage at Ohana on Sept. 27. “There’s not enough mystery in the world,” Gossard said. “I think the band is very excited that we’re actually getting to play. It’s been a while and the fact that we get to do it at Ohana makes it even doubly exciting. And the fact that nobody knows who’s going to play drums with us even makes it triply exciting. So, it’s our mystery wrapped in an enigma and we’re relishing in it right now.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Ed Sheeran Parts With Longtime Label Warner: ‘This Isn’t a Disgruntled Artist Situation’

Ed Sheeran on June 23, 2025 in London, England.

Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images

Ed Sheeran Parts With Longtime Label Warner: ‘This Isn’t a Disgruntled Artist Situation’

After 15 years, Ed Sheeran is no longer part of Warner Music Group. On Friday, the musician shared a newsletter with fans revealing he split from Atlantic Records and Asylum Records last month. “This isn’t a ‘disgruntled artist leaves record label’ type situation,” Sheeran wrote. “This is a boy who started as a teenager on the company with different priorities, to the father of 2 man who exists now, who feels like he needs a shift and change in the way he does things professionally.”

Sheeran released his first album, Plus, under Atlantic/Asylum in September 2011. The labels would go on to oversee the release of six more albums, including Multiply, Divide, Subtract, Equals, and the new series starter, Play. During this stretch of time, Sheeran went from couch surfing pub player to one of the biggest pop stars of his generation.

Keep ReadingShow less
Niall Horan Says Goodbye to Liam Payne on New Song ‘End of an Era’

Liam Payne and Niall Horan

Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for iHeartMedia

Niall Horan Says Goodbye to Liam Payne on New Song ‘End of an Era’

Niall Horan holds onto the good times with a tight grip on his new single, “End of an Era.” The musician initially wrote the record with the intention of “looking back on the past with nostalgia, being happy with what you had, excited for what’s going to happen,” he recently told Rolling Stone, but returned to it with a new perspective following the death of his One Direction bandmate Liam Payne.

In the first verse, Horan sings, “Time passes so fast that I couldn’t tell you goodbye.” He uses the song as a way to say what he couldn’t before. “Careless times, yeah, we sure had some/Naive eyes, yeah, we sure looked young/Tears fall down like the future comes/Slowly, and then all at once,” he sings. “Feels like letting go of/Things we’re not supposed to/One breath and it’s over/The end of an era.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Paul McCartney Looks Back in Splendor With a New Solo Masterpiece
Illustration by Brian Lutz

Paul McCartney Looks Back in Splendor With a New Solo Masterpiece

Paul McCartney wants to tell you a story. Have a seat, and listen as he paints the scene in soft-spoken words: “I used to walk past your house,” he begins, his voice a little hoarser these days but no less tender. “Every night, I’d look up at your window. The light was on. I saw your silhouette on the blind.…” It’s a bittersweet memory from long ago, something like the Beatles“No Reply,” but with all the resentment replaced by gentler feelings. “Do I ever cross your mind as you lie there?” he asks that ancient crush. Then the band kicks in — actually, it’s mostly just Sir Paul himself, playing at least nine instruments — and there it is: All these years later, there are still few greater pleasures in pop music than hearing this one guy rock out.

Keep ReadingShow less
Watch Olivia Rodrigo Unravel as She Searches for ‘The Cure’

Olivia Rodrigo performs on stage during an exclusive Billions Club Live show to celebrate the partnership between Spotify and FC Barcelona before El Clásico on May 8, 2026 in Barcelona, Spain.

Xavi Torrent/Getty Images

Watch Olivia Rodrigo Unravel as She Searches for ‘The Cure’

Following her double-duty pull on Saturday Night Live, Olivia Rodrigo has released “The Cure,” the second single from her third album.

In the video for the new track, Rodrigo stars as a nurse attempting to find the cure for what appear to be broken hearts as she sings, “My head is full of poison, and my heart is full of doubt/I got toxins in my bloodstream and you tried hard to suck ’em out/And it feels like medication, and it’s good for me, I’m sure/But it don’t matter how your love feels anymore.”

Keep ReadingShow less