Los Angeles Times

Queen of country

Miranda Lambert defied the odds, Nashville to get there on her own terms

- BY MIKAEL WOOD POP MUSIC CRITIC

NASHVILLE — When Miranda Lambert was preparing to open her Casa Rosa Tex-Mex Cantina here last year — it sits across Lower Broadway from Jason Aldean’s Kitchen + Rooftop Bar and a few doors down from the joint owned by Lambert’s ex-husband, Blake Shelton — someone on the country singer’s team tried to persuade her to make a prominent space for the oversize birdcage she occupies in the music video for her 2019 hit “Bluebird.”

Lambert had misgivings. Jammed with memorabili­a from her nearly twodecade career, the black- and pink-bathed Casa Rosa is the first of Nashville’s many celebrity saloons to be branded by a female country star; as such, she was after a certain vibe. “It had to be, like, girly,” she said. “Nashville is No. 1 for bacheloret­te parties” — the city not long ago surpassed Las Vegas for that title, according to Lambert — “so I want them to have somewhere they can feel comfortabl­e, because it’s a female-driven bar.” She laughed.

“I’m not having girls dancing

in cages here.”

Lambert settled on putting it in a corner of the VIP balcony, mostly out of sight of any potential leering dudes, above the main stage, which is where she was rehearsing on a recent evening ahead of a launch party for her excellent new album, “Palomino,” and an upcoming Vegas residency.

Lambert, 38, took a sip of her Tito’s-and-soda as her band eased into the loping groove of the LP’s slyly gender-bending lead single, “If I Was a Cowboy.” It’s about a woman imagining herself with the freedom of an oldtimey gunslinger — and with “a little lady on the front porch wishing my heart would start settling.”

“You thought the West was wild, but you ain’t saddled up with me,” she sang, grinning out at the empty room. “If I was a cowboy, I’d be the queen.”

In truth, Lambert might be the freest member, male or female, of Nashville’s ruling A-list; certainly, she’s making more interestin­g use of her stardom than any of the other nominees she beat out last month, Luke Combs and Carrie Underwood among them, for the Academy of Country Music’s entertaine­r of the year award.

“Palomino,” which is now out, follows 2021’s Grammynomi­nated “The Marfa Tapes,” a seriously strippeddo­wn collection of love songs and drinking tunes that she and fellow singer-songwriter­s Jack Ingram and Jon Randall recorded around a campfire in the Texas desert with two microphone­s and two acoustic guitars.

With its full-band arrangemen­ts and glossy production by Lambert, Randall and Luke Dick, the new album isn’t as radical as “Marfa.” But it’s still full of daring and idiosyncra­tic touches: an opener, “Actin’ Up,” built on a low-slung psychedeli­c-soul riff; a funky party song, “Music City Queen,” featuring the B-52s; the gutting “That’s What Makes the Jukebox Play,” about an “old dive bar with the hand-drawn heart hanging lonely on the bathroom door”; a rowdy cover of Mick Jagger’s “Wandering Spirit,” with background vocals by gospel’s McCrary Sisters. The music is steeped in country-rock tradition — think Loretta Lynn meets Tom Petty — yet alert to the thrill of disruption.

“People are afraid to try s—,” said Natalie Hemby, who co-wrote half the tunes on “Palomino” and who plays in the Highwomen with Brandi Carlile, Maren Morris and Amanda Shires. “But Miranda’s attitude has always been: Hold my beer — watch this.”

Taken in tandem with “The Marfa Tapes” — and with “Drunk (and I Don’t Wanna Go Home),” Lambert’s bacheloret­te-bait duet with Elle King that just became the first track by two women to top Billboard’s Country Airplay chart since 1993 — “Palomino” posits that Lambert has reached a point where she’s more or less doing whatever she wants even as she’s come to a kind of understand­ing with the hidebound country-radio establishm­ent that hasn’t always valued her work.

“Basically, I don’t expect too much, and they don’t either,” she said of a format that routinely marginaliz­es women in favor of cookie-cutter male acts.

Unlike the similarly adventurou­s Kacey Musgraves, who grew up about 20 minutes from Lambert in smalltown East Texas, Lambert hasn’t abandoned Nashville; she’s still got a foot planted firmly in the biz here, as she demonstrat­ed when she fielded softball questions from a chipper iHeartRadi­o host during that party at Casa Rosa. But she’s clearly playing by her own rules, and in doing so, she’s found huge success — including being named the Country Music Assn.’s female vocalist of the year a record seven times — and become a key influence on the generation of country singers behind her.

“Miranda was already making it when I was just getting revved, and I remember thinking, ‘How cool is this person?’ ” said Ashley Monroe, a bandmate (along with Angaleena Presley) in the Pistol Annies, with whom the singer has released four albums. “She’s beautiful. She’s feisty. She doesn’t care what anybody thinks. It’s like she made everyone realize you don’t have to be so prim and proper and delicate.”

Added up-and-comer Hailey Whitters, who stumbled into a Lambert concert at a county fair when she was in junior high: “Miranda has such a strong sense of self that was so attractive to me as a young artist.” When fans tell Whitters that she reminds them of Lambert, she takes it as a compliment. Yet when execs would make the comparison as she was hunting for a deal, “It was more as a deterrent — like, ‘We’ve already got a Miranda,’ ” she recalled.

“I’d be like, ‘Well, you’ve got 10 Jason Aldeans...’ ”

Lambert broke out in 2005 with “Kerosene,” the revenge-minded title track from her major-label debut, after she appeared on Season 1 of “Nashville Star” (a.k.a. the country “American Idol”). That TV gig is what got her signed at age 19, but by then, she’d already been writing songs and performing for years in honky-tonks in Texas, where she’d seen the likes of Ingram and Pat Green and Robert Earl Keen build audiences before her.

“Knowing that I’d been doing pretty good at home gave me the confidence to say, ‘I’ll always have a place to sing and play my music,’ ” she said the morning after the rehearsal. In person, Lambert is warm and chatty — the type to make you laugh more than once with an account of the busted ice-maker (and the resulting leak) she woke up to at home that morning.

RUNNING WITH IT

“I didn’t have to change my appearance or lose 80 pounds — whatever Nashville was gonna ask me to do to make it — because all my heroes made careers out of playing Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Louisiana.”

Having taken the baton from the Dixie Chicks and Gretchen Wilson, Lambert ran with the tough-talking act for 2007’s “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend,” which spun off her first top-10 single in “Gunpowder and Lead”; soon, though, she was showcasing her flexible singing voice — dreamy and yearning yet shot through with an essential Lone Star State honesty — in all kinds of songs, from grandly emotive ballads like “The House That Built Me” to frisky slow jams like “Fine Tune.” Lambert’s catalog might be the most consistent of any current country star’s. But nobody has taken more chances with her sound than she has.

In 2011, Lambert married Shelton, then becoming a household figure thanks to his role as a coach on “The Voice,” which brought a new degree of tabloid scrutiny that registered as “a shock to my system,” Lambert said. “I’m a Scorpio, so I’m already very private and protective. And choosing the job I chose — I get onstage, I’m in front of people. But I didn’t choose random photos of moments when I wasn’t at work.”

Country stardom had promised “a family feel,” she said, adding, “TMZ has tried to come to Nashville three times, and we keep running them out. We’re like, ‘Nope, not here.’ ” Yet living parttime with Shelton in L.A. was different. “It taught me that Hollywood is not anything I want to be part of.”

The couple divorced in 2015, an experience she described as “horrible — like the death of something”; the next year, Lambert released an introspect­ive double LP, “The Weight of These Wings,” which earned rave reviews and won album of the year at the ACM Awards.

Asked what she thinks of the rootsy breakup records that have followed hers of late — Musgraves’ “StarCrosse­d,” Adele’s “30,” Carly Pearce’s “29: Written in Stone” — Lambert laughed and said, “I see all these women getting divorced, and I’m like, ‘You got one year, then no more wallowing. Let’s cry these tears and move on.’ ” (Lambert remarried in 2019 to Brendan McLoughlin, a former New York City cop she met when he provided security for the Pistol Annies on “Good Morning America.”)

Work on “Palomino,” Lambert’s eighth solo studio disc, began in 2020 when the singer convened a series of songwritin­g weekends with Hemby and Dick at her farm outside Nashville; this was peak pandemic, so they channeled their pent-up wanderlust into creating “a travel record while we can’t travel,” as Lambert put it, full of made-up characters in different settings around the United States.

“I met a trucker named Dwayne south of the 10,” she sings in the slow-rolling “Scenes,” which goes on to imagine “skinny-dipping in Havasu Lake” and a night of “fun money at the Gold Casino.” “Actin’ Up” ventures to Colorado and California in search of a “sunset ride” and a “velvet rodeo,” the latter of which she’s using as the name of her Vegas show set to open at Planet Hollywood in September. Before that, she’ll tour sheds and amphitheat­ers this summer with Little Big Town.

The ability to write from imagined perspectiv­es was something Lambert had long admired about Guy Clark and John Prine; developing those muscles herself was both artistical­ly and emotionall­y gratifying. “I kind of learned after ‘Weight of These Wings’ that I don’t want to live everything I write about,” she said. “That’s too much life — and too much heartbreak too.”

Which isn’t to say that she’s lost her taste for sad country songs. Lambert and her friends play a game called Death By, in which they try to one-up each another with the most miserable tune they can think of. (One favorite she keeps in her back pocket: Doug Stone’s “I’d Be Better Off in a Pine Box.”) “By the end, we’re all drunk and crying and loving it,” she said.

Still, it’s no coincidenc­e that “Palomino” is more up than down. Lambert said she’s “learned how to care for myself and to be cautious” since her divorce. “But I’m also one of those people that loves love, and I love big. So if I believe in it, I go for it.”

‘GREAT JOY’

She and McLoughlin spend most of their time in Nashville, though they have an apartment in New York, where he shares a young son with an ex, and make occasional trips to see Lambert’s parents in Lindale, Texas.

“They were the first people to sell liquor in our county, which gives me great joy,” she said of her folks, who run a winery called Red 55 with Lambert’s name attached to it. “Last time we were home, Brendan was like, ‘There sure are a lot of churches here,’ ” she recalled. “So I Googled it, and it turns out there are 212. I told my mom, ‘If you get a back door, you can get all the Baptists.’ ”

In March, Lambert played a gig in Dublin, and the couple stuck around afterward to vacation in Ireland; she even posted personal photos on Instagram. “My husband’s a big-time extrovert, which is good for me because I got so defensive from the PTSD of being on magazine covers for things that weren’t true,” she said.

She’s making more time for herself these days than she used to. “I was so into my career for so long that I feel like I was a little behind in getting to know myself outside of country music,” she said. This year, she skipped the COVID-delayed Grammys ceremony, even though “The Marfa Tapes” was up for country album of the year, because she’d already committed to throwing one of her oldest pals a birthday party that day.

Reckoned Hemby: “I think she’s just kind of chilling now. This girl’s worked her ass off for I don’t know how long, and I think she’s starting to enjoy the journey.”

A few years ago, Lambert might’ve been peeved by the fact that “If I Was a Cowboy” had peaked (at least so far) at No. 16 on the airplay chart, stuck behind more widely spun — if far less inspired — singles by guys like Cody Johnson and Dustin Lynch. But then neither of them has a restaurant with his name on it or can call himself entertaine­r of the year.

“I set all these goals, and that award was the last one on the list,” Lambert said. “I’m like, ‘Well, that’s a freakin’ great place to be.’ ”

 ?? Robert Ascroft ??
Robert Ascroft
 ?? Mark Zaleski Associated Press ?? MIRANDA LAMBERT performs “If I Was a Cowboy” at CMT Music Awards last month in Nashville.
Mark Zaleski Associated Press MIRANDA LAMBERT performs “If I Was a Cowboy” at CMT Music Awards last month in Nashville.
 ?? Vanner Records / RCA Records Nashville ?? Miranda Lambert ‘Palomino’ Vanner Records / RCA Records Nashville
Vanner Records / RCA Records Nashville Miranda Lambert ‘Palomino’ Vanner Records / RCA Records Nashville

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