Country
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Keith Urban released his new song, “Street Called Main,” on Friday (Oct. 28), and the single artwork will look a tad familiar to fans of a certain 1980s movie.
On Instagram, Urban shared a photo of himself in a long trench coat and standing in the middle of a street, holding a boombox over his head. The image is strikingly similar to the iconic scene in the Cameron Crowe-directed 1989 romantic teen comedy movie Say Anything.
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In the movie, the character Diane Court (played by Ione Skye) is awakened by the sound of music and looks out her bedroom window to see Lloyd Dobler (played by John Cusack) standing in front of his car outside of her house, holding a boombox over his head as it plays Peter Gabriel’s “In Your Eyes.” The gesture is meant as a reconciling moment between the couple, who had previously broken up.
Urban said of “Street Called Main” via a press release, “Some memories are triggered by the simplest of things, like finding yourself anywhere in the world – even on a ‘street called main’ – and suddenly ‘she’ comes flooding back.”
The country star is currently in the studio working on a new album slated to release in 2023, and recorded “Main” in Nashville with his longtime producer Dann Huff. He has also been criss-crossing the country on his The Speed of Now World Tour 2022, which will conclude its U.S. run with shows in Wisconsin, Illinois and Minnesota, before heading to Australia.
Urban’s current radio single, “Brown Eyes Baby,” is at No. 34 on Billboard‘s Country Airplay chart.
Maren Morris is saying “Boo!” to Brittany Aldean, Tucker Carlson and anyone else who doesn’t support trans rights. In a hilarious Thursday (Oct. 27) Instagram post, the 32-year-old singer-songwriter shared her idea for a Halloween costume this year: “Lunatic Country Music Person,” aka the title she was given by the Fox News host after she hit back at transphobic comments made Aldean, who is married to country artist Jason Aldean.
Morris’ post comes on the heels of a popular meme that’s taken off on the internet in the past few days, in which people creatively edit a photo of a Spirit Halloween package to look like a fake, funny costume idea. For her take on the trend, the “Middle” singer plastered a photo of herself on the package, labeled “Lunatic Country Music Person.”
The faux costume set features a list of included items: “tambourine, inclusive fans, pickleball paddle, wig, beef with transphobes.”
That last item is likely a nod to her highly publicized feud with Brittany Aldean, which started in August when Morris took shots at transphobic comments Brittany made on Instagram.
“It’s so easy to, like, not be a scumbag human?” the Grammy winner tweeted about Brittany, who went on to say gender-affirming care was equivalent to the “genital mutilation of children.” Continued Morris, “Sell your clip-ins and zip it, Insurrection Barbie.”
Carlson entered the ring not long after that. While interviewing Brittany in September about the online showdown, he blasted Morris for being a “lunatic country music person.” Not only did Morris take the jab in stride, but she also printed the phrase on a line of merchandise that ended up raising more than $100,000 for GLAAD’s Transgender Media Program and Trans Lifeline.
The “Make You Stay” artist also poked a little fun at herself, namely the height difference between her and her husband, Ryan Hurd, with whom she shares 2-year-old son Hayes. “Tall guy not included,” reads her fake Spirit Halloween package, referencing Hurd’s height of 6-foot-3 (according to Google).
And as a quip about her own 5-foot-1 stature, the bottom of the costume reads, “Child size costume.”
See Maren Morris’ “Lunatic Country Music Person” Halloween costume idea below:
Shania Twain will launch 2023 with a massive tour and a new album! The pop-country queen’s sixth studio album, Queen of Me — the first the singer-songwriter has released in six years — will arrive Feb. 3. The album marks her first recording under her new label deal with Republic Nashville.
Twain has released the lead single from the project with “Waking Up Dreaming,” and the new song “Last Day of Summer.”
“These days, I’m feeling very comfortable in my own skin – and I think this album reflects that musically,” Twain said via Instagram. “Life is short and I want to be uplifted, colorful, unapologetic and empowered. I want to carry a clear message, particularly as a woman, to always remember my power and I hope the songs are a reminder to you, of that same power inside you!”
Additionally, she’s taking her signature phrase “Let’s Go, Girls!” literally as she prepares to launch her upcoming 2023 tour, which will span approximately 50 concert dates. Her Queen of Me tour will launch April 28 in Spokane, Wash., and will cross the United States and Canada, and include several U.K. dates. Her opening acts on select dates will include “My Truck” hitmaker Breland, as well as several top-tier female singer-songwriters: Lindsay Ell, Hailey Whitters, Kelsea Ballerini and Mickey Guyton.
Tickets for Twain’s Queen of Me tour will go on sale starting Nov. 4 at 10 a.m. at Ticketmaster.
See the full list of tour dates and her announcement below:
April 28 – Spokane, WA @ Spokane Arena ^April 29 – Seattle, WA @ Climate Pledge Arena ^May 2 – Vancouver, BC @ Rogers Arena ^May 3 – Vancouver, BC @ Rogers Arena ^May 5 – Edmonton, AB @ Rogers Place ^May 6 – Edmonton, AB @ Rogers Place ^May 9 – Calgary, AB @ Scotiabank Saddledome ^May 10 – Calgary, AB @ Scotiabank Saddledome ^May 12 – Saskatoon, SK @ SaskTel Centre ^May 14 – Winnipeg, MB @ Canada Life Centre ^May 16 – Madison, WI @ Kohl Center #May 17 – St Paul, MN @ Xcel Energy Center #May 19 – Lincoln, NE @ Pinnacle Bank Arena #May 21 – Denver, CO @ Ball Arena #May 24 – Salt Lake City, UT @ USANA Amphitheatre #May 26 – Mountain View, CA @ Shoreline Amphitheatre #May 28 – Los Angeles, CA @ Hollywood Bowl #May 30 – Phoenix, AZ @ Ak-Chin Pavilion #May 31 – Thousand Palms, CA @ Acrisure Arena #June 3 – Tulsa, OK @ BOK Center +June 4 – St. Louis, MO @ Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre STL +June 7 – Nashville, TN @ GEODIS Park + >June 9 – Camden, NJ @ Freedom Mortgage Pavilion +June 12 – Halifax, NS @ Scotiabank Centre ~June 14 – Moncton, NB @ Avenir Centre ~June 17 – Quebec City, QC @ Videotron Centre ~June 18 – Montreal, QC @ Bell Centre ~June 20 – Hamilton, ON @ FirstOntario Centre ^June 21 – London, ON @ Budweiser Gardens ^June 23 – Toronto, ON @ Budweiser Stage ^June 24 – Toronto, ON @ Budweiser Stage ^June 27 – Columbia, MD @ Merriweather Post Pavilion &June 28 – Charlotte, NC @ PNC Music Pavilion &June 30 – Cuyahoga Falls, OH @ Blossom Music Center &July 1 – Tinley Park, IL @ Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre &July 6 – Ottawa, ON @ Ottawa BluesfestJuly 8 – Syracuse, NY @ St Joseph’s Health Amphitheater at Lakeview +July 9 – Mansfield, MA @ Xfinity Center +July 11 – New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden +July 13 – Burgettstown, PA @ The Pavilion at Star Lake +July 15 – Noblesville, IN @ Ruoff Music Center $July 19 – Kansas City, MO @ T-Mobile Center $July 21 – Dallas, TX @ Dos Equis Pavilion $July 22 – Houston, TX @ Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion $Sept. 16 – London, UK @ The O2Sept. 19 – Dublin, IE @ 3ArenaSept. 22 - Glasgow, UK @ OVO HydroSept. 25 - Manchester, UK @ AO ArenaSept. 26 – Birmingham, UK @ Utilita Arena Birmingham
^ = w/ Lindsay Ell# = w/ Hailey Whitters+ = w/ Breland > = w/ Kelsea Ballerini~ = w/ Robyn Ottolini& = w/ Priscilla Block$ = w/ Mickey Guyton
Shania Twain will launch 2023 with a massive tour and a new album! The pop-country queen’s sixth studio album, Queen of Me — the first the singer-songwriter has released in six years — will arrive Feb. 3. The album marks her first recording under her new label deal with Republic Nashville.
Twain has released the lead single from the project with “Waking Up Dreaming,” and the new song “Last Day of Summer.”
“These days, I’m feeling very comfortable in my own skin – and I think this album reflects that musically,” Twain said via Instagram. “Life is short and I want to be uplifted, colorful, unapologetic and empowered. I want to carry a clear message, particularly as a woman, to always remember my power and I hope the songs are a reminder to you, of that same power inside you!”
Additionally, she’s taking her signature phrase “Let’s Go, Girls!” literally as she prepares to launch her upcoming 2023 tour, which will span approximately 50 concert dates. Her Queen of Me tour will launch April 28 in Spokane, Wash., and will cross the United States and Canada, and include several U.K. dates. Her opening acts on select dates will include “My Truck” hitmaker Breland, as well as several top-tier female singer-songwriters: Lindsay Ell, Hailey Whitters, Kelsea Ballerini, Mickey Guyton, Priscilla Block and Robyn Ottolini.
Tickets for Twain’s Queen of Me tour will go on sale starting Nov. 4 at 10 a.m. at Ticketmaster.
See the full list of tour dates and her announcement below:
April 28 – Spokane, WA @ Spokane Arena ^April 29 – Seattle, WA @ Climate Pledge Arena ^May 2 – Vancouver, BC @ Rogers Arena ^May 3 – Vancouver, BC @ Rogers Arena ^May 5 – Edmonton, AB @ Rogers Place ^May 6 – Edmonton, AB @ Rogers Place ^May 9 – Calgary, AB @ Scotiabank Saddledome ^May 10 – Calgary, AB @ Scotiabank Saddledome ^May 12 – Saskatoon, SK @ SaskTel Centre ^May 14 – Winnipeg, MB @ Canada Life Centre ^May 16 – Madison, WI @ Kohl Center #May 17 – St Paul, MN @ Xcel Energy Center #May 19 – Lincoln, NE @ Pinnacle Bank Arena #May 21 – Denver, CO @ Ball Arena #May 24 – Salt Lake City, UT @ USANA Amphitheatre #May 26 – Mountain View, CA @ Shoreline Amphitheatre #May 28 – Los Angeles, CA @ Hollywood Bowl #May 30 – Phoenix, AZ @ Ak-Chin Pavilion #May 31 – Thousand Palms, CA @ Acrisure Arena #June 3 – Tulsa, OK @ BOK Center +June 4 – St. Louis, MO @ Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre STL +June 7 – Nashville, TN @ GEODIS Park + >June 9 – Camden, NJ @ Freedom Mortgage Pavilion +June 12 – Halifax, NS @ Scotiabank Centre ~June 14 – Moncton, NB @ Avenir Centre ~June 17 – Quebec City, QC @ Videotron Centre ~June 18 – Montreal, QC @ Bell Centre ~June 20 – Hamilton, ON @ FirstOntario Centre ^June 21 – London, ON @ Budweiser Gardens ^June 23 – Toronto, ON @ Budweiser Stage ^June 24 – Toronto, ON @ Budweiser Stage ^June 27 – Columbia, MD @ Merriweather Post Pavilion &June 28 – Charlotte, NC @ PNC Music Pavilion &June 30 – Cuyahoga Falls, OH @ Blossom Music Center &July 1 – Tinley Park, IL @ Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre &July 6 – Ottawa, ON @ Ottawa BluesfestJuly 8 – Syracuse, NY @ St Joseph’s Health Amphitheater at Lakeview +July 9 – Mansfield, MA @ Xfinity Center +July 11 – New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden +July 13 – Burgettstown, PA @ The Pavilion at Star Lake +July 15 – Noblesville, IN @ Ruoff Music Center $July 19 – Kansas City, MO @ T-Mobile Center $July 21 – Dallas, TX @ Dos Equis Pavilion $July 22 – Houston, TX @ Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion $Sept. 16 – London, UK @ The O2Sept. 19 – Dublin, IE @ 3ArenaSept. 22 - Glasgow, UK @ OVO HydroSept. 25 - Manchester, UK @ AO ArenaSept. 26 – Birmingham, UK @ Utilita Arena Birmingham
^ = w/ Lindsay Ell# = w/ Hailey Whitters+ = w/ Breland > = w/ Kelsea Ballerini~ = w/ Robyn Ottolini& = w/ Priscilla Block$ = w/ Mickey Guyton
On Oct. 28, 2017, Kane Brown‘s “What Ifs,” featuring Lauren Alaina, topped Billboard‘s Country Airplay chart. Brown co-wrote the song with Matt McGinn and Jordan Schmidt, and Dann Huff produced it.
The single marked Brown’s first of eight Country Airplay leaders and Alaina’s second of three. It was released from Brown’s introductory LP that arrived at the Top Country Albums summit, becoming his first of two No. 1 sets.
The same week it crowned Country Airplay, “What Ifs” began a five-week command on Billboard‘s streaming-, airplay- and sales-based Hot Country Songs chart. It dethroned Sam Hunt’s “Body Like a Back Road,” which had logged a then-record 34-week domination.
“All I can say is, 34 weeks, Sam Hunt? Damn. I’m happy to get in there,” Brown told Billboard upon learning of his achievement.
Brown, now 29, and Alaina, 28, are both from Georgia and were childhood friends, having met at Lakeview Middle School in Fort Oglethorpe, Ga., in a choir class.
Brown’s latest single, “Thank God,” with Katelyn Brown, his wife, rises 19-18 on the latest, Oct. 29-dated Country Airplay chart. The duet is from his new album, Different Man, which launched at its No. 2 best on Top Country Albums in September, becoming his sixth top 10 set.
Alaina, who finished as the runner-up to Scotty McCreery on American Idol in 2011, most recently led Country Airplay as featured, with Devin Dawson, on Hardy’s “One Beer,” which the threesome hoisted to No. 1 in December 2020.
This May, Alaina hopped on stage during a Brown concert in Chattanooga, Tenn., near where they grew up. The pair performed “What Ifs.”
Zach Bryan has been lighting up the Billboard charts with his album American Heartbreak and songs including “Something in the Orange,” and criss-crossing the United States on his American Heartbreak tour. Along the way has been building a reputation as an artist who also listens closely to his fans.
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On Oct. 26, Bryan took to Twitter to state that he was planning to lower the price of the merchandise sold at his concerts.
“I just learned how expensive the merch was last night,” he said on Twitter. “A hoodie for 60 to 70 dollars is too much and I’m fixing it now. Thank you guys so much for being such a good and kind and rowdy crowd.”
I just learned how expensive the merch was last night. A hoodie for 60 to 70 dollars is too much and I’m fixing it now. thank you guys so much for being such a good and kind and rowdy crowd— Zach Bryan (@zachlanebryan) October 26, 2022
Fans began chiming, with one saying, “I paid 45 bucks for a t shirt.. I wasn’t not gonna buy one but 45 bucks?? dang man,” to which Bryan responded, “I JUST learned how much they were. It’s fixed and I apologize.”
After another Twitter user noted that they would gladly pay $70 if he allowed his merch to be sold online in addition to at his concerts, Bryan responded, “no no no they’ll be 45 at most, 70 is absolutely heinous as hell and and anyone selling hoodies for that amount have completely desensitized from the world.”
His fans quickly responded with sentiments of gratitude for the singer-songwriter’s swift response, with comments. “I love how humble you are and how you put your fans first. you’ll always have our respect and support,” said one Bryan fan.
After his debut major label full-length album American Heartbreak debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s top country albums chart in June, Bryan quickly followed with the release of the EP Summertime Blues in July. His song “Something in the Orange” reached No. 2 on Billboard’s Hot Country Songs chart, and he’s notched just over a dozen entries on the chart, including “Highway Boys,” “Oklahoma Smoke Show” and “Burn, Burn, Burn.”
At 76, Dolly Parton is seemingly indefatigable, releasing a steady stream of albums, books, movies and television projects, as well as hosting the ACM Awards earlier this year. On Nov. 5, she will be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, alongside Duran Duran, Eminem, Carly Simon and more.
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But according to a new interview Parton did with Pollstar, there is one thing she won’t be doing again: full-fledged touring.
“I do not think I will ever tour again, but I do know I’ll do special shows here and there, now and then. Maybe do a long weekend of shows, or just a few shows at a festival. But I have no intention of going on a full-blown tour anymore,” Parton told the outlet. (Billboard has independently confirmed the news.)
Parton’s most recent tour was her 2016 Pure & Simple Tour, which included 60 shows in the United States and Canada.
“I’ve done that my whole life, and it takes so much time and energy,” she added. “I like to stay a little closer to home with my husband [Carl Dean]. We’re getting older now, and I don’t want to be gone for four or five weeks at a time. Something could happen. I would not feel right about that, if I were gone and somebody needed me. Or I would feel bad if I had to leave a tour if somebody got sick at home and needed me and then I had to walk out on the fans.”
Last year, Parton told Billboard she was planning to work on a rock album, after news came that she was nominated for induction into the Rock Hall.
In her new Pollstar interview, she says she is working on the rock album, and that she plans to re-record “Stairway to Heaven,” the Led Zeppelin classic that Parton recorded in a bluegrass-inspired arrangement as part of her 2002 album Halos & Horns, part of her bluegrass trilogy of albums.
”But I’m going to redo that really on the money,” she told Pollstar. “I did it kind of bluegrass-style when I did it; but when I do the rock album, I’m going to actually re-record it – and do it more true to the regular record. I’m trying to see if Robert Plant might sing on it. Maybe Jimmy Page might do the pick-up part on it. I’m looking forward to dragging in some of the great classic people, girls and boys, to sing on some of the songs. I’m not far enough along to discuss who and what, but I am going to do an album.”
She also noted that she intends to ask several additional artists, including Ed Sheeran, Miley Cyrus and Heart, as well as country star Chris Stapleton, to be involved with the upcoming rock album.
“Chris Stapleton is one of my favorite people ever,” Parton said. “I have always wanted to do something with him. Even though he’s not considered rock ‘n’ roll, he’s kind of like me: He’s accepted all the way around. I’m thinking that certainly out of the country field, when I do my rock album, I’m going to maybe ask him.”
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Lainey Wilson’s career has been developing at breakneck speed. In three short years, she’s gone from releasing her debut major label EP to being the top nominee at Nov. 9’s CMA Awards.
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In 2019, she released Redneck Hollywood on Broken Bow Records/BBR Music Group, followed by 2021’s full-length, Sayin’ What I’m Thinkin.’ On Friday, Bell Bottom Country — a nod not only to her freewheeling form of music, but also to what has become her signature ‘70s hippie style – comes out.
“This record is still me sayin’ what I’m thinking, but in a different way,” the Baskin, Louisiana, native says in her distinct Southern drawl, while seated at Red Light Management’s Nashville office. “I feel like I’ve grown leaps and bounds in the past few years. I wrote all the songs for my last record in 2016, 2017. I’ve lived a lot of life since then.”
That’s an understatement. Not only did Wilson earn her first No. 1 on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart last year with the hard-earned wisdom of “Things a Man Oughta Know,” but she followed it this year with the two-week No. 1 collaboration “Never Say Never” with Cole Swindell. “Things a Man Oughta Know” earned song of the year at the 2022 ACM Awards, while Wilson also picked up the best new female artist honor.
Wilson’s tireless work ethic was forged from a childhood spent on a farm, filled with crops and horses. She furthers her brand as a hard-working, small town girl-made-good with the heart-on-her-sleeve determination found in the top 25 Country Airplay hit “Heart Like a Truck.”
Heading into November’s CMA Awards, Wilson earned six nominations in her first year as a nominee, including album of the year (Sayin’ What I’m Thinkin’), female vocalist of the year, new artist of the year, song of the year (“Things a Man Oughta Know”), vocal event and video of the year (“Never Say Never”). These nominations put her in elite company with Glen Campbell, Brad Paisley and Kacey Musgraves, all of whom earned six nods during their first CMA Awards. In addition, she’s branched out with a role in the upcoming season of the hit series Yellowstone, which will also feature music from her new album.
Bell Bottom Country continues her forthright style of music — a little hippie, a little edgy, solidly country and all heart. She co-wrote 13 of the album’s 14 tracks.
“I feel like I have truly found myself as a singer, as a songwriter, and I think that that’s what this record is gonna show,” she says. “It’s kind of pulling back the layers to saying what I’m thinking, but just digging a little deeper.”
Wilson talked with Billboard about her new album, being the top-nominated artist leading into the CMA Awards, and landing a role on Yellowstone. She also offered an update on her father’s health, shared some road stories and discussed her future music plans.
This has been a whirlwind year for you: No. 1 hits, six CMA Awards nominations. How are you holding up?
It truly feels like as soon as we can’t have another big blessing, we do. For so long, I could not get a publishing deal to save my life. I couldn’t get a record deal to save my life. The funny thing is, what I’m doing now is what I’ve always done. It’s just about timing.
Being this year’s most-nominated artist, in your first year of nominations — how does that feel?
First of all, just being invited is crazy in itself, much less being nominated, but then being most nominated? It’s hard for me to even fathom people knowing my name — because for so long they didn’t.
Is there a particular category that means the most to you?
Song of the year to me is huge ‘cause “Things a Man Oughta Know” has already done so much for me. We took that home with the ACMs, and it’d be pretty cool to take it home for the CMAs too, ‘cause that would seal the deal of, “Wow, this song was supposed to be written and heard.” The female vocalist [of the year] nomination is a crazy one to me, because I feel like I’m just getting started.
Miranda Lambert, who is also nominated for female vocalist, has been a strong supporter of yours.
Absolutely. I think me and her knew pretty much immediately that we were gonna be friends. She got my phone number from someone and texted me and just said she loved what I was doing. I couldn’t believe it — I don’t think any female who has moved to Nashville to do country music can say that Miranda Lambert did not influence them. She’s like Loretta Lynn 2.0, she’s paved the way. She does things how she wants to and doesn’t care what people say. That’s something she’s really taught me.
What else has she taught you?
We’ve talked about how the Idnternet can be a mean place. People are gonna have their opinions of you, but it’s really none of your business. And her work ethic. I’ve been on the road for a few years now and I’m tired. But she tells me, “You can do it…You gotta figure out how to stay grounded, stay focused, have your therapist on speed dial.” It’s a cool life we get to live, but it’s not normal and it’s got its own challenges.
How have you learned to balance it?
This year, I have slept in my own bed a total of [10] nights. We got a bus a few months ago and that has changed the game because for years we were in a van, in an F-450 flatbed truck with a trailer. So even if it’s just full of stinking boys on the bus, having that place to go to that is constant has been great. I try to meditate; I have fun with my band. We’re out here doing what we love to do and we realize how far we have come.
Professionally, this has been a glowing year for you, but personally, your dad has been through a tough health battle this year, including multiple surgeries and losing an eye. How is he doing?
He’s doing good. He just got to come home, praise Jesus. My mom and dad were my first believers, and I couldn’t wait to call them and tell them about the [CMA Awards] nominations. That was some of his encouragement to start feeling better and to work hard in rehab. I told him, “You’re gonna walk the red carpet with me,” and he is going to. He’s been building up his strength and that’s given him something to look forward to.
Listening to Bell Bottom Country, you proudly display your personality and background on songs like “Grease.” Where did that song come from?
“Now you’re cookin’ with grease” is a saying my momma always used, [which meant] “now we’re getting somewhere.” All these little sayings that my family has said my entire life somehow make their way into my music. I can’t escape it, really.
You have a song on this album, “Those Boots (Deddy’s Song),” dedicated to your dad. What did he think of it?
I remember every morning as a kid, before my daddy went to work, I’d pull his pants leg over the top of his boots for him. I was just a little girl, but I felt like there was purpose in it, like I was helping him out. I wrote it with Trent Tomlinson and Terri Jo Box. It took us four times to write it because we wanted it to be right and true to my story. He’s a man of very few words, but when I first started writing songs, the only way I knew he would like a song is if his toe was tapping. When I played this he started tapping his toes, so I thought, “OK, we got his approval.” And then he said, “That’s pretty dang good.”
Jay Joyce produced this album. How did that partnership come about?
A friend of mine lived down the street from Jay’s studio and kept putting a bug in Jay’s ear. I think eventually Jay was like, “Who the hell is this girl you keep talking about?” I went and hung out in the studio two or three times before I even played music for him. I think it was the third time we hung out, I walked through the studio doors and he threw me his guitar and told me to play something. I played him “Working Overtime” and half of “Rolling Stone.” I remember leaving there thinking it was kind of like going on a date and not knowing if there is going to be another date. So I sent him a text later that day saying I wanted to work with him. You know — first move. And he texted back, and just said, literally, “Let’s do it.” I call him the mad scientist; he just throws everything in a pot and mixes it up and it comes out totally a thing of his own.
Bell Bottom Country is a great title. Where did the love of bell bottoms start?
I love everything throwback. I feel like things that are throwback come with a good story. If you walk in my house, you’ll see my daddy’s old rodeo chaps hanging up on the wall or my mom’s China cabinet. I’m a bit of an old soul. I’ve been wearing bell bottoms every day for at least six and a half years. Now they are kind of starting to come back, which I love.
Bell bottoms are such an essential part of your brand. Where are your favorite places to find them?
A lot of people will send them. Free People, of course, they’ve always got good bell bottoms. I do sometimes find clothes in vintage shops — mostly tops. I’m pretty curvy and I think a lot of the folks in the ‘70s were not, because I can’t fit ‘em up over my dang thighs.
This year, you had a No. 1 hit with the Cole Swindell collaboration, and have a current hit with HARDY on “Wait in the Truck.” You chose not to have collaborations on this project.
There’s definitely songs that I was like, “I could hear a feature on this.” But I think you gotta be careful with how many features you do. Who knows, maybe eventually after the record is out there for a little bit, kind of coming back and maybe putting a feature on one or two would be cool. I want people to know that I’m here to take care of business and share my story, but collaborations are important. Cole took a chance on me. That’s what HARDY’s doing, too, and I appreciate them for it.
You end the album with the 4 Non Blondes hit from 1993 “What’s Up (What’s Goin’ On),” written by Linda Perry. Why was that important to include?
I’ve always been a fan of that song, and Linda Perry is just cool — a cool producer, cool songwriter. I got to sit down and talk with her a bit last fall. She’s one of the most intimidating people I’ve ever met. She means business and I appreciate that about her. I’ve played that song for years now in my shows. As soon as people hear it, their hands go up and it feels like everybody in the building is on the same page. So we just put our little country spin on it.
You also have a role on Yellowstone as Abby. What drew you to the role?
I made myself a promise that if any door opened that was gonna give me an opportunity to share more of my music with the world, then I was gonna say yes without even thinking about it. I met [show creator] Taylor [Sheridan] at a horse wrangling competition in Vegas and we exchanged numbers. I sent him music and they used two of my songs in the show. During the pandemic, I went to the Yellowstone Ranch and played an acoustic show for the cast and crew. Taylor called me in February and said, ‘I want to create a character for you. I want you to dress how you dress, sing your songs and be you.’”
Besides the character you portray, who is your favorite Yellowstone character?
Probably Beth. And on the show and outside the show, [actor Kelly Reilly] has become a dear friend. She’s one of the nicest people I’ve ever met. I thought she was gonna put me in a headlock before I met her.
Will any of the songs from this album be in the upcoming season?
Yes, “Watermelon Moonshine,” and several others.
You are heading on tour with Luke Combs next year. The two of you have known each other for years.
I met him in 2014. I was living in my camper, so he’s one of the few people who has seen me and known me as “camper trailer Lainey.” He cut a song of mine that we wrote together called “Sheriff You Want To.” For the longest time, it was paying my light bill, so every now and then I would send Luke a picture of my check and say, ‘Thanks for paying my light bill.” He’s just stayed true to himself—he sings how he sings and he looks how he looks–and I will say it’s given me the courage to do the same.
Did he reach out to you after the CMA nominations?
I can’t even remember, but I know that he reached out to me about going on the road with him and just said it was a long time coming. I’m just so glad that he remembers, coming over to my camper and drinking my cold drinks and using my AC [laughs]. I knew that we were gonna go on the road together at some point. I think the timing is perfect. I know he’s excited and proud for me, too.
What are some of your other favorite road stories?
I’ve had so many like embarrassing moments where like I’ll get out there and my platform [shoe] will break, and then I’ll have to take the shoes off and play the show barefoot. One show I was playing in, I think South Louisiana, a dang wasp landed on the microphone right there at my nose. I might have said a cuss word in the microphone, and nobody else saw the wasp, they just thought I was cussing.
What other kinds of albums do you dream of putting out?
I grew up going to bluegrass festivals with my grandparents, so I’d love to do a bluegrass album at some point, maybe a gospel-bluegrass record. It’d be cool to have Alison Krauss on there, Billy Strings and Molly Tuttle, who played acoustic guitar on this album with “Wildflowers and Wild Horses.” I’d love to do a redneck Christmas record. I haven’t written any Christmas songs, but I’ve got a list of ideas.
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When writer-producer Shooter Jennings, known for his work on such albums as Brandi Carlile’s By The Way, I Forgive You and Tanya Tucker’s While I’m Livin’, first reached out to Julie Roberts about collaborating in 2014, Roberts (who broke through with 2004’s “Break Down Here”) was at a musical crossroads. Her 2013 album Good Wine and Bad Decisions had yielded no hits, and she was struggling to find where she fit in.
“I was at a place musically where I didn’t know where I belonged anymore,” Roberts tells Billboard. “I didn’t feel like I belonged here in Nashville at that moment. I didn’t know if anyone got me anymore. But [Jennings] sent me an email out of the blue and said, ‘I don’t think you’ve made your career record yet.’ I feel like he reached out at the right time.”
Though it took nearly a decade to come to fruition, that email led to Roberts’ first album of new music since Good Wine — the aptly titled Ain’t in No Hurry, out Friday (Oct. 28) through ONErpm Nashville.
Roberts first met Jennings at a music festival in the mid-2000s, when they were both signed to Universal Music Group Nashville imprints (Roberts on Mercury Nashville and Jennings on Universal South), and her 2004 self-titled debut album was on its way to earning Gold status from the RIAA. Jennings was impressed by her bluesy, soulful voice and transparent songs.
By the time Jennings reached out in 2014, Roberts had long exited her Mercury Nashville label and released three albums independently or via Sun Records. She was cash-strapped to make a new record. “He said, ‘Just get out here to Los Angeles and we’ll figure out the rest,’” she recalls.
Roberts, who was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS) in 2006, already had MS-related speaking engagements lined up on the West Coast, so she used the time to begin working with Jennings at Los Angeles’ Station House studio. Over the course of six years, they worked together anytime Roberts made it out to California, eventually tracking nine of the album’s songs.
Unlike the pre-planned sessions typical in Nashville, she and Jennings entered the studio in a more freewheeling manner, no prior directives, writing and creating as they went along.
Roberts co-wrote four tracks on the new album, and earlier this year, she finished the set over a three-month timespan in Nashville with writer-producer Erin Enderlin (known for penning Alan Jackson’s “Monday Morning Church” and Reba McEntire’s “The Bar’s Getting Lower”). Enderlin also contributed three tracks to the album.
While piecing together the album, Roberts, 43, was also undergoing what would become a three-year journey with IVF, resulting in the birth of her son, Jackson, in August 2021. “I truly feel like everything has happened at the right time — and it did take that time because I had this other dream that needed to be fulfilled,” Roberts says of becoming a mother.
The album’s title track, written by Enderlin, Brent Cobb and Ben Chapman, encapsulates the less-hurried, but no less creative, approach she takes, particularly on lines such as “All the times that I took fast, I wish I’d taken slow/ Oh, I ain’t in no hurry ’cause once it goes, it really goes.”
She teams with Randy Houser on “A Little Crazy’s Kind of Nice,” and with burly-voiced Jamey Johnson on “Music City Is Killing Me” — a slightly-tweaked version of Ray LaMontagne’s “New York City Is Killing Me,” a song Roberts told Jennings she had been listening to repeatedly. When Jennings suggested she record it, Robert countered with the idea to reflect Nashville instead of the Big Apple. LaMontagne gave his blessing to use the song, and the Roberts-Johnson pairing made for commanding listening.
“It was true blessing for Jamey to add his voice on this, it’s just perfect when his vocal comes in. It just gives me chills,” Roberts says.
Meanwhile, “All By My Damn Self” is a stout tribute to strong-willed women who “wear a lot of hats and…fill a lot of shoes.” The opening lyrics, “I owe, I owe/ It’s off to work I go,” are a nod to an often-used phrase from Roberts’ mother.
On “Devil’s Pool,” Roberts and Jennings took a song idea that originated with Jennings’ father, Country Music Hall of Famer Waylon Jennings.
“Shooter said he had found this chorus on a recorder that his dad had written: ‘Don’t be a fool/ Don’t go swim in the devil’s pool/ She’ll pull you down.’ He played it for me and asked me to write the verses. Okay, no pressure,” Roberts recalls, with a laugh. “What I love about country music from Waylon’s day, and just traditional country music, is there are so many story songs. To me, it just sounds like a Waylon song. The fact that Shooter trusted me and that he liked it. I was nervous, but I’m happy with what it became. I hope Waylon would be, too.”
The album turned into a family affair, with Jennings bringing in the album’s closer, “I Think You Know,” written by his mother, Jessi Colter.
“Shooter kept saying, ‘You and my mama are so much alike,’” Roberts says. “Funny thing, sometimes if I get nervous, I start sweating, so I have these peppermint oils. I put some on the back of my neck while I was in the studio and he just started laughing so much. I was like, ‘Why are you laughing?’ and he said, ‘Because my mom has those oils, too.’”
She also covers K.T. Oslin’s 1987 Billboard Country Songs chart-topper “Do Ya’,” which Roberts has included in her live shows.
“People remember it and it’s fun. But there’s also a new audience who gets to hear it now,” she says.
As for what’s ahead, Roberts says she has hopes to record a gospel album, noting that she and Jennings recorded a gospel track, which was not included on this new album. But she’s in no hurry to rush out another project. Instead, she’s relishing the meshing of blessings in both her personal and professional lives, including her continued remission from MS, her family and her new project.
“I played the Opry this week, and my son got to be there with me,” Roberts says. “It’s moments like this that I’m just soaking in.”
Ashley Judd revealed on Wednesday (Oct. 26) that she suffered a freak injury this summer and fractured her leg in the wake of her mother Naomi Judd‘s death.
According to the actress, who shared the story (per The Hollywood Reporter) during a Zoom conversation with UCLA professor Dr. Jonathan Flint for the university’s Open Mind lecture series, the fracture was “just this freak accident” that thankfully “healed in two months, lickety-split.”
“It was what it was,” she said. “Clumsiness is associated with grief, and there were other people in our family, after Mom died, who fell down stairs and had accidents, and that’s just what mine happened to look like. It really allowed me to grieve. It really allowed me to stop what I was working on at that moment and to grieve.”
Over the course of the hourlong discussion, Judd reflected on her mother’s April passing by suicide, saying, “There’s a lot going on in my life right now. We’re approaching the [six] month anniversary of my mom’s passing and my sister’s on tour. I’m seeing two of the concerts this weekend, which brings up a lot of deep poignancy, both joy and sorrow.”
The Divergent star also made reference to the “legal piece of what’s going on with my family” during the chat, hinting at the possible legal battle with Wynonna Judd over Naomi’s will and estate — though the younger half of The Judds shot down any speculation of tension between the siblings just a few days ago. “We love each other and we show up for each other. We don’t agree on much but we support one another,” Wynonna said on TODAY while promoting her ongoing tour.
Though The Judds: The Final Tour was originally scheduled to wrap this Saturday (Oct. 29), Wynonna announced earlier this week that she was extending the tour with 15 more shows through 2023 to continue honoring Naomi’s legacy.