USA TODAY US Edition

Lady Gaga’s ‘Joanne’: A new direction and a revealing triumph

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Joanne isn’t Lady Gaga’s country album. But perhaps it should’ve been.

Fans already knew that Gaga’s fifth studio album ( out of four), out Friday, would be a departure. In between the release of her last proper pop album,

Artpop, and now, she’s undergone a complete public-image makeover, changing the way fans hear (teaming up with Tony Bennett to record a jazz album) and see (trading her red-carpet meat dresses for classic Hollywood glam) the chameleoni­c star.

Joanne still bears traces of Gaga’s hit-making past, and is being marketed as such, in lead singles

Perfect Illusion and A-YO. But the rest of the album tells a different story, one of an artist stripping away the theatrics that have accompanie­d the rest of her releases for a collection of songs colored by country and western, invoking the genre’s familiar specters of trouble-causing cowboys, independen­t women and God. The album gambles that listeners care as much about Gaga the artist as Gaga the spectacle. And her gamble pays off, in the most sonically varied, emotionall­y honest album of her career. To speak in the language of 2016’s other big-name pop releases, the singer has always been more of a Lemonade artist, crafting a unified aesthetic around whatever direction she’s pursuing at the time, from Artpop’s neon circus to her Tony

Bennett-assisted vintage jazz period.

Joanne is more akin to Rihanna’s Anti, adventurou­s yet slightly scattered, showing an artist expanding her artistic vision and toying with different genres, while still including the customary pop tracks listeners have come to expect.

It’s a testament to the strength of Joanne’s vision that the songs that sound most like Gaga’s earlier hits, Perfect Illusion and A-YO, are its weakest moments. Gaga proves she can still make pop songs that fit Joanne’s twangier direction, nailing the balance on opening track Diamond Heart and the Josh Homme-assisted

John Wayne, two tracks we hope to hear at her Super Bowl halftime show next year. The album’s quieter tracks are among Gaga’s most honest performanc­es to date, her voice simple and human-sounding without the trademark theatrical pronunciat­ions she’s adopted over the years.

No song better illustrate­s Gaga’s newly realized potential than the title track, in which she adopts a classic-folk twang to sing a heartbreak­ing love letter to her aunt, sounding like a completely different artist than the one behind Poker Face and Bad

Romance. And when the old Gaga returns on Joanne’s poppier moments, bending the word “love” beyond recognitio­n on Perfect

Illusion, it’s not quite as thrilling, now that we know the power of Gaga’s own voice.

Download: Diamond Heart, Joanne, Sinner’s Prayer

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Lady Gaga’s stripped-down new album, Joanne, is out Friday.
RICK DIAMOND, GETTY IMAGES, FOR BUD LIGHT Lady Gaga’s stripped-down new album, Joanne, is out Friday.
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