Why Miranda Lambert May Be Our Fave Female Country Artist
I always forget to watch one of the finest shows on weekly television. Trust me, set your DVR to record CBS Sunday Morning. Each week there is a featured interview, often with a major celebrity which is just better than anyone else can do. We were traveling on Sunday and missed Miranda Lambert’s piece-we’ll get to that in a second. There are two artists in country music that I always associate with my/our career. The first is Garth Brooks. I was getting started in country radio as his first album was making impact, and I got to ride the Garth wave of country music popularity. The second, is Miranda Lambert. I’m not sure how much I’ve written about this before, but when we came to Charlotte in 2006, we were at a very low point in our lives. We were coming off a work situation in Birmingham, Alabama that had been devastating personally, psychologically, and professionally. Not long after our arrival, we spent about an hour in-studio with then “new artist,” Miranda Lambert. Her single at the time, sort of became our personal theme song. It was “New Strings.”
“I’ve got everything I’ll ever need. I’ve got this old guitar and a brand-new set of strings.” That was us. We had us. We had our belief in us. And we had a new chance to show the music we could make. Country 1037 was our “brand-new set of strings.” We like to think we have and are continuing to make the most of it-thanks to you. Then a few years ago, Miranda blew us away with a double-album, “The Weight of These Wings.” It is the most honest music I think I’ve ever heard anyone write and sing about his/her life. At the time, Miranda’s was a mess. Her divorce with Blake Shelton was very public and very embarrassing. And the video for the project’s first single, “Vice,” left me with my mouth open. The woman in this video was a portrait of what the music business and celebrity can do to the girl in the one for “New Strings.” I felt sad for the person, but so glad for the music from the artist. And make no mistake about it, as a singer/songwriter, Miranda Lambert is first and foremost an artist.
“All dressed up on a pretty black label, sweet salvation on the dining room table-waiting on me. Where the numb meets the lonely. It’s gone before it ever melts the ice.” That portrait of pain is hard to shake. In the time since this song and this album, Miranda Lambert has picked up the pieces of her personal life. She’s happily remarried to someone who IS NOT in the music business (a former NYPD cop) and is apparently devoted to her. She’s become a restaurant and retail entrepreneur. And her music has continued to reflect her life and its ups and downs. She’s got a new album out now, “Palomino,” which features her latest single, “If I Was a Cowboy.” Which leads back to the way I started this blog: the profile on CBS Sunday Morning. I like the Miranda shown here. And like the two DJs who came to Charlotte 16 years ago, I feel like she’s got a “brand new set of strings.”
https://youtu.be/nP2af-xzxpU
Look, I think we’ve got some GREAT female artists out there right now. Carly Pierce is fantastic. I could listen to Ashley McBryde all night long. However, for me, the best of them all (and maybe the best regardless of gender) is the current ACM Entertainer of the Year. Miranda’s brave honesty reflected in her music never wavers and never makes me want to do anything but stand in appreciation and applaud.
37 Of Miranda Lambert's Finest Songs, Ranked