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Post by Admin on Aug 15, 2019 23:04:54 GMT
Miranda Lambert has announced the title and release date for her much-anticipated next studio album. The country superstar will release Wildcard in November of 2019. A press release reveals that Wildcard will come on Nov. 1. It's being produced by Jay Joyce. The full track listing (seen below) will bring 14 songs, including a collaboration with Maren Morris called "Way Too Pretty for Prison." Lambert's song "Bluebird" will be released on Thursday (Aug. 15). She debuted a new song titled "Locomotive" at CMA Fest in June, and the punk-country track fires up the kind of energy that she brought to her earlier songs, but with a more mature lyrical perspective. Miranda Lambert has announced a new album. Wildcard is out November 1 via Vanner Records/RCA Records Nashville. Lambert worked on the album with producer Jay Joyce, and it features the previously released tracks “It All Comes Out in the Wash,” “Locomotive,” and “Mess With My Head.” Today, Lambert has also shared the new song “Bluebird.” Check it out below, along with the cover art and tracklist. Wildcard is the follow-up to Lambert’s 2016 double album The Weight of These Wings. Last year, Pistol Annies—her supergroup with Ashley Monroe and Angaleena Presley—returned with Interstate Gospel.
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Post by Admin on Aug 21, 2019 17:49:27 GMT
Miranda Lambert's upcoming Wildcard album is poised to be one of the singer's most honest releases to date. It's her first first solo album since 2016's double-disk masterpiece The Weight of These Wings, and she's lived a lot of life since then. According to Lambert, her ups and downs will be showcased on Wildcard. That would presumably mean high-profile relationships with artists Anderson East and Turnpike Troubadours frontman Evan Felker are up for discussion. Lambert and East began dating in December 2015 and call it quits in 2018. Felker and Lambert had a short-lived romance that began in February 2018 and ended in August 2018. In February 2019, Lambert dropped unexpected news when she revealed via social media that she had married a New York City Police Officer named Brendan McLoughlin. The couple wed in a ceremony on January 26, 2019 in Davidson County, Tennessee, after meeting a few months prior in New York. In a candid new interview with Entertainment Weekly, Lambert admits that writing songs that reflect her real life is something she does "kind of subconsciously. "Because really it’s my truth, I’m just saying it a different way," she explains. "Everything I’ve ever lived through is in my music. Thirty-four had some bumps. Every year has some bumps. The way that I say it is how I feel about it, and how I actually treat it. I don’t live in the moment that’s not good [for me]. Somehow, I just move forward."
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Post by Admin on Aug 30, 2019 23:02:27 GMT
Miranda Lambert heads off-road for some good, clean, dirty fun in the new video for her current single, "It All Comes Out in the Wash." The clip shows Lambert in a huge white 4-wheel drive truck, heading out to some dirt roads and getting some mud on the tires as she enjoys some time out in the middle of nowhere with her friends. She's dressed colorfully in a leopard-print undershirt, a white T-shirt and a floral yellow top, jean shorts and high boots in the video, which depicts a carefree approach to life that mirrors the song's theme of getting past difficult times by reminding yourself they'll eventually pass. "'Cause it'll all come out, all come out in the wash / It'll all come out, all come out in the wash / Every little stain, every little heartbreak, no matter how messy it got / You take the sin and the men and you throw 'em all in / And you put that sucker on spin," she sings in the chorus.
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Post by Admin on Sept 6, 2019 4:41:12 GMT
Miranda Lambert is living easy on her new song “Pretty Bitchin’,” released Thursday (Sept. 5). The confessional tune has the singer admitting her flaws with acceptance alongside grungy guitars and a stomping beat. “Well I’m a pretty hot mess, but hell I guess I’m pretty sure it’s a family tradition/ I’ve got a pretty good time in the checkout line with all the free press I’ve been gettin’/ It’s pretty bitchin’,” she croons. “Pretty Bitchin’” is the latest song Lambert has released ahead of her new album Wildcard, out Nov. 1. It follows previous songs “Locomotive,” “Mess With My Head,” “Bluebird,” “Way Too Pretty for Prison” with Maren Morris and lead single “It All Comes Out in the Wash.”
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Post by Admin on Sept 25, 2019 17:52:31 GMT
When Miranda Lambert releases her seventh studio album, Wildcard, on Nov. 1, it will mark the first time in Lambert's entire career that longtime producer Frank Liddell didn't produce the project. For the next set of tunes, Lambert decided to use rock producer Jay Joyce – a big decision that she admits was far from easy. "It was quite a big decision for me to be honest with you," Lambert shared at a media event introducing her new record. "I made every single record of my career, including Pistol Annies, with Franklin Liddell, who I adore, love and trust so much. He's one of my best friends in the world. Like any long relationship, sometimes you reach a place where you have to regroup." Lambert invited Liddell to her house to discuss the idea of switching producers, even though the two of them had so much success collaborating together. "Me and him had a bottle of wine on the magic porch. The magic porch does some magic s—," Lambert said with a laugh. "Always involves some type of holy water if you will. But we just talked it out and we thought, you know what, we need to take a minute from each other and go get inspired somewhere else, and come back and revisit. He gave me his blessing in a way, which I needed because you know that's what long time relationships do. "So, I called Jay Joyce," she continued. "I knew that I needed to approach this record with the same energy and heart and open-mindedness and excitement that I approached my very first record with, which was in 2005 called Kerosene. And so I just kind of wanted to be open and push and Jay has made me do that. "And so I feel like in a way I reinvented a new rock and roll sound for myself on a few of these things," she added. "But also in a way, I've revisited the rock and roll sound that was invented in the first place."
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