South Korean K-Pop girl group TWICE has a Vancouver connection.
The group, which has nine members, just made history for being the first female K-Pop artists to land three albums in the Billboard top 10. This week will also mark their eighth week with multiple albums on the Billboard top 200, which is another record.
The pop stars have over 26 million fans worldwide (and that’s just on Instagram) but back in 2017 when they filmed the music video for the single “Likey” off their first studio album, they used spots all over Vancouver including a now-iconic SkyTrain car.
On SkyTrain car 153, Momo, Sana, Jihyo, Nayeon, Mina, and Tzuyu danced and Dahyun and Chaeyoung rapped and it has become a fun little Easter egg for visitors and locals to find when on Vancouver’s public transit.
One Vancouver musician made a series of TikToks expressing his excitement to be in the same space earlier this week. He says it’s a little game he likes to play on his commute home.
The SkyTrain car is part of the Expo line and admittedly looked a lot newer and shinier in the video. So if you’re hopping on from Granville or Stadium-Chinatown, look out.
Other sites in the video include the painted Alley Oop between Granville and Seymour, the Seawall, and the Hotel Europe in Gastown.
@redjax_dast @redjax_dast I really wanted to say something but i didn’t know who was a once #twice #yvr #skytrain #translink #kpop #jyp #once #sana #nayeon #dahyun #mina #momo #jihyo #chaeyoung #tyuzu #jeongyeon ♬ original sound – Rayray0630
@redjax_dast I made it a game when i ride the skytrain to check the car numbers for 153. I guess i win #twice #yvr #skytrain #translink #kpop #jyp #once #sana #nayeon #dahyun #mina #momo #jihyo #chaeyoung #tyuzu #jeongyeon ♬ LIKEY – TWICE
5 Mag is sent about 50 ambient albums a month and we write about maybe 5 a year. And 5 might be an overstatement.
Get used to it, friend, because the atrocities that unleashed AI has done to the most thrilling experimental music genre is going to be done to every genre you love sooner or later, too.
We never tune it out, though, or put up a warning, or close submissions altogether to stem the overflow. Music like Mourning Light from the acclaimed composer Lisa Bella Donna is why. At a time when the CD format is being relegated to Christmas comps and charitable tchotchkes, Behind The Sky is releasing this “already deeply edited” composition on CD, “as we couldn’t bear to chop it down any more for vinyl.”
Recorded at the second of two shows in collaboration with visual artist Alicia Jean Vanderelli, Mourning Light captures that feeling of every human as a chrysalis emerging from hibernation — what Lisa Bella Donna calls “an intensely cathartic and poignant journey” of their first performances (and probably the audience’s first shows) post-COVID-19 lockdown. She characterizes this as “survival at the last stages of a long journey.” Mourning Light reflects this complex tangle of emotions — the celebration of the survivors and the mourning for the lost — that words or actions can’t adequately express. A friend of mine once told me about living on the street — how every sunrise from under a bridge was the most beautiful thing in the world, a vantage he’s never captured ever since, because it meant he’d survived another night among so many who hadn’t. I think the feeling is something like that.
Technically speaking, the music was performed using a Mellotron (!), tapes and a Moog Synthesizer system (for which Lisa Bella Donna has recorded several demos over the years) mixed live to Tascam DA20 2-channel DAT. To be honest I find this surprising: the music fills up the room and often evokes the fury of a string quartet, if not a full orchestral section of stringed instruments. Aesthetically speaking, it’s gorgeous — by turns a dirge and a celebration, and it manages to feel like something intensely personal, but shared in communion.
There’s been a tremendous surge in ambient releases lately (and not just in our slush pile). It’s music that I would describe as “ambient music for people who never listened to ambient before March 2020.” If you were an electronic music producer sitting in front of a DAW and a keyboard and told you couldn’t make music for clubs for a year, I suppose some version of “ambient” is what would come out. Some of it is actually quite good — there’s an outsider art quality to it that I really appreciate. This, on the other hand, is the sound of 2020 to me. It’s a joy and an emotionally exhausting ordeal at once.
Lisa Bella Donna / Alicia Jean Vanderelli: Mourning Light (Behind The Sky / August 2021 / CD) 1. Lisa Bella Donna: Mourning Light Pt. I & II (40:16) 2. Lisa Bella Donna: Mourning Light Pt. III (30:07) 3. Lisa Bella Donna: Mourning Light Pt. IV (09:36)
Disclosure Statement: This record was submitted as a promo on behalf of the label.
For the autumn 5:4 mixtape, i’ve returned to the same mathematical world that led to the Prime Numbers mix, and upped the ante a bit. This time, i’ve used the Fibonacci series as the basis for the mixtape, but instead of featuring the numbers in the titles of the tracks, i’ve been using the numbers to determine the durations of the tracks. Basically, i’ve created a simple expanding and contracting sequence, starting with a track lasting 8 seconds, increasing – via 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, 233 and 377 – up to 610 seconds, and then contracting again; this sequence runs twice (i chose 8 as the minimum as it turned out i had surprisingly little music in my collection lasting only 1, 3 or 5 seconds).
The result is a mix that stylistically flexes according to the stretching nature of its spiral structure. Of course, though i’ve used tracks with the exact durations as described above, due to silences occurring at the start or end of some of them, in addition to my own crossfades, the timings drift a little throughout the course of the mix. (Hopefully Fibonacci won’t mind too much.) As usual, i’ve avoided music featured in previous mixtapes, and on this occasion i’ve generally favoured older rather than newer favourites.
Here’s the tracklisting in full, together with approximate timings and links to obtain the music.
We are shaking in our boots over here! The CMA Awards are tonight in Nashville – and y’all they are really trying to impress us this year. If you have been staying up to date with us, you’ll know that we have been hard at work predicting who will win each category – someone has to right? Oftentimes the list of performers can be a tell as to the default winners, but this time we think we will receive a few curveballs!
The CMA Awards s are getting their high step on with some A-list country stars hitting the stage and we are even more locked in for some incredible tunes. Carrie Underwood and Jason Aldean are performing “If I Didn’t Love You” for the first time on live television – which good grief that is going to be a *performance*! Prepare to record the show, so you can rewatch whenever you need. Kane Brown and Chris Young are slated to rock the house that night as well and we are desperately hoping they perform their song “Famous Friends” which is nominated for Song of the Year.
Entertainer of the Year nominees Miranda Lambert and Luke Combs are already slated for performances. We hope that Lambert performs songs off of her snubbed album “The Marfa Tapes”, but that is just the pettiness in us. They are both going to put on incredible shows! Male Vocalist of the Year nominee Chris Stapleton and Vocal Group of Year nominee Old Dominion will aslo be performing. We honestly don’t know who we are most excited about.
Mickey Guyton is set to perform with rising stars Brittney Spencer and Madeline Edwards with the collaboration of the year. They will be performing some songs off of Guyton’s debut album, Remember Her Name. Carly Pearce will also be performing with Ashley McBryde, as they belt out their heart-breaking ballad “Never Wanted to Be That Girl.”
The CMAs continue to pull out all the stops with Eric Church performing “Heart on Fire” from his Album of the Year-nominated Heart, and boy, are we pumped for that! Something we are really looking forward to over here at ACountry though is the performance by Brothers Osborne off of their deeply personal and Album of the Year-nominated Skeletons. Plus, reigning and two-time Vocal Duo of the Year winners Dan + Shay are giving us some advice with their performance of ‘I Should Probably Go To Bed.” We also get a performance from 10-time CMA winner Blake Shelton. We wonder if Gwen Stefani will show up for a surprise duet! Our fingers and toes are crossed, y’all.
The CMA Awards airs tonight (November 10) at 8/7c on ABC or you can stream it on Hulu. We plan on live-tweeting through the event, so join in on the conversation here, check in on our happenings on our Facebook page here, and follow us on Instagram to see all the cute photos here.
The School of Music at UNCSA presents the UNCSA Wind Ensemble, in partnership with the Piedmont Wind Symphony, performing a joint concert featuring
the works of internationally acclaimed jazz composer and musician Omar Thomas on Friday,
Nov. 4, at 7:30 p.m. at the Stevens Center. The ensembles will be conducted by music
director and Music faculty member Mark Norman.
Tickets are $20 regular, $15 for students with valid IDs at http://www.uncsa.edu/performances or by calling the box office at 336-721-1945.
The UNCSA Wind Ensemble and the Piedmont Wind Symphony will perform several of Thomas’
pieces including “A Mother of a Revolution,” “The Low-Down Brown Get-Down,” “Come
Sunday” and “Shenandoah.” Thomas will be introducing his pieces and speaking throughout
the concert.
Omar Thomas
The concert will also feature Jeff Scott’s “Baile si quiere!” featuring the UNCSA
Faculty Winds; John Mackey’s “Songs from the End of the World,” featuring soprano
Lindsay Kesselman and the Piedmont Wind Symphony; and Chen Yi’s “Energetically” from “Dragon
Rhyme” with the UNCSA Wind Ensemble. Conducting graduate student Tim Heath will serve
as guest conductor.
Mark Norman, the School of Music’s director of instrumental ensembles who also serves
as the music director of the Piedmont Wind Symphony, says bringing in renowned talent
like Thomas is crucial for students.
Mark Norman
“It’s a complete honor that we are hosting perhaps one of the most sought-after and
influential composers of this generation, certainly his generation,” said Norman.
“It’s a thrill for us to have him on campus working with our students, working with
our community, and our professional musicians within the community. We’re very excited
and the students are excited.”
During his residency at UNCSA, Thomas will also rehearse his pieces with students
and serve as a guest lecturer for the composition seminar and performance hour.
Thomas’ work to be performed during the concert highlights the era of blaxploitation
films during the early ’70s. This genre of filmmaking placed Black actors in lead
roles, was aimed at African American audiences and was controversial for stereotyping
characters. “Despite the backlash studios received, the films possessed an exciting,
raw, soulful quality, and from these films were born some of the most iconic characters
and soundtracks ever created,” Thomas said. “The Low-Down Brown Get-Down” pulls from
various sounds and styles of African American folk music including funk, R&B, soul,
early hip-hop and the blues, he added.
“I’m thrilled to work with Mark Norman and UNC School of the Arts,” said Thomas. “With
the excellent musicianship of UNCSA’s students and the gracious leadership of Mark,
I think we will create a memorable and funky performance.”
UNCSA Faculty Winds
The UNCSA Faculty Winds includes Music faculty members Tadeu Coelho, flute; Jaren
Atherholt, oboe; Ronald Rudkin, clarinet; Maria Serkin, horn; Stephanie Patterson,
bassoon; and Chris Reichmeier, bongos.
About Omar Thomas
A Brooklyn native of Guyanese descent, Omar Thomas has been commissioned to create
both jazz and classical style work with his music performed in concert halls around
the globe. His work has been performed by such diverse groups as the Eastman New Jazz
Ensemble, the San Francisco and Boston Gay Men’s Choruses, The United States Marine
Band, the Colorado Symphony Orchestra, the Houston Symphony Orchestra, and the Showa
Wind Symphony, in addition to several of the country’s top collegiate music ensembles.
In 2019, Thomas was awarded the National Bandmasters Association/Revelli Award for
his wind composition “Come Sunday,” becoming the first Black composer awarded the
honor in the contest’s 42-year history. He is now a Yamaha master educator whose first
album “I AM” debuted at No. 1 on iTunes Jazz Charts and peaked at No. 13 on the Billboard
Traditional Jazz Albums Chart.
About Lindsay Kesselman
Lindsay Kesselman, Soprano Soloist
Lindsay Kesselman is a two-time Grammy-nominated soprano who passionately advocates
for contemporary music. She has been featured in “Energy in All Directions” by Kenneth
Frazelle with Sandbox Percussion at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center, the role
of Anna in Kurt Weill’s “The Seven Deadly Sins” with the Charlotte Symphony, “Astronautica:
Voices of Women in Space” with Voices of Ascension and more. Kesselman has been the
resident soprano of the Pittsburgh New Music Ensemble for 10 seasons and Haven, Kesselman’s
trio with Kimberly Cole Luevano and Midori Koga, which actively commissions and tours
throughout North America. Kesselman holds degrees in voice performance and music education
from Rice University and Michigan State University.
About the UNCSA Wind Ensemble
The University of North Carolina School of the Arts Wind Ensemble combines selected
talented high school, undergraduate and graduate students to perform a variety of
classic literature and modern wind band repertoire. All sections rotate to individual
part assignments that are personalized for each student by the applied faculty and
director.
Throughout its history, the wind ensemble has enabled students to work with world-class
soloists and composers and has participated in numerous new music commissioning projects
leading to world and regional premieres. Many former members now perform with professional
orchestras, military bands and chamber ensembles around the world.
About the Piedmont Wind Symphony
Founded in 1989, the Piedmont Wind Symphony (PWS) consists of the finest professional
musicians in the Piedmont-Triad area of North Carolina. Known for their energetic
and innovative programming, PWS consistently brings headlining performers such as
Ben Folds, Al Jarreau, The Capitol Bones, Demondrae Thurman and Arturo Sandoval to
its audiences. Thousands of concertgoers enjoy PWS performances and its Piedmont Pops
concerts each year. Serving as a leading ambassador for N.C. bands, PWS frequently
works with today’s composers and music educators in producing recordings and providing
inspiration to band participants of all ages.
Contact Media Relations
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Escape to the country with the rural poetry in Elin Grace’s latest quirky jazz-infused piano pop single, Breathe. With the same ephemeral grace of The Anchoress paired with her own celestially graceful beguile, the lullaby-esque single that artfully and unexpectedly entices you into meditation after a confessional outpour of emotion is a flawless triumph.
The mid-Wales-based singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist, who has mastered the piano, saxophone, cello, and ukulele, has been lauded by the likes of Adam Walton from BBC Radio Wales and has seen her music commissioned for London Fashion Week. Clearly, Elin Grace has a promising future ahead. She’s one of a kind, yet drinking in the tranquil sophistication of her melodies is, ironically, as easy as breathing.
Jeangu Macrooy represents host country The Netherlands with ‘Birth Of A New Age’ The Netherlands was supposed to host the Eurovision Song Contest in 2020 after winning in 2019, but because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the whole thing got cancelled. Host city Rotterdam gets another chance in 2021 and so does Jeangu Macrooy, who was supposed to represent the host country last year with his ballad ‘Grow’. This year, he will do so with the upbeat anthem ‘Birth Of A New Age’.
Like with last year’s ‘Grow’, Jeangu Macrooy worked on ‘Birth Of A New Age’ with producer Perquisite. They took quite an opposite approach to last year’s slow burning entry. This year’s song is just as soulful, but swings a lot more. The track is upbeat from the first notes on and goes from there with a gospel like choir and very obvious references to the rhythms of his Surinamese roots. The chorus, in which Macrooy declares that you can’t break him, is sung in Sranan Tongo, a language in Suriname. He explained that the song is all about resilience, self respect and living an authentic life. The lyrics are full of supportive chants to remind the listener that they should stand up for themselves and let no one take away their faith or voice.
‘Birth Of A New Age’ is a lot more instantly catchy than last year’s effort. The repetition of the line ‘your rhythm is rebellion’ grabs the attention right in the first verse and the infectious chants of the chorus take over from there. Where ‘Grow’ had more of a slow build up, ‘Birth Of A New Age’ shows all its cards quite early on and repeats after that. It might all be too repetitive for some, but there is a certain hopefulness in both the lyrics and the melodies and the uplifting vibe is certainly contagious, also thanks to Macrooy’s radiant personality and performance.
I don’t expect the Netherlands to be a contender for another win as I don’t think the song will be universally appealing enough to bring in big numbers from all around Europe, but Macrooy serves an entry the Dutch can certainly be proud of once more. His voice and stage presence will definitely lighten up the living rooms around Europe with a swinging message of hope.
MORE EUROVISION 2021 REVIEWS: BELGIUM – CYPRUS – CZECH REPUBLIC – FRANCE – ISRAEL – LITHUANIA
Jeangu Macrooy vertegenwoordigt Nederland met het hoopvolle ‘Birth Of A New Age’ Nederland zou vorig jaar het Eurovisie Songfestival organiseren na de winst in 2019, maar daar stak de coronapandemie een stokje voor. De organiserende stad Rotterdam krijgt dit jaar echter nog een kans en hetzelfde geldt voor Jeangu Macrooy, die Nederland vorig jaar zou vertegenwoordigen met zijn ballad ‘Grow’. Dit jaar pakt hij het anders aan en zingt hij in mei namens ons land het nummer ‘Birth Of A New Age’.
Ook dit jaar werkte Macrooy samen met producer Perquisite aan zijn Songfestivalinzending. De twee kozen dit keer echter voor een totaal andere aanpak dan de langzaam op gang komende ballad van vorig jaar. Het soulvolle is nog steeds aanwezig, maar dit keer met een swingender ritme. Het nummer begint energiek en Jeangu krijgt direct bijval van een gospelkoortje. Macrooy omschreef het nummer als een ode aan zijn Surinaamse roots en dat is in het ritme van het nummer duidelijk te horen. Het refrein, waarin hij zingt dat niemand hem kan breken, wordt tevens in Sranan Tongo, een taal van Suriname, vertolkt. Volgens Macrooy gaat het nummer over veerkracht, zelfrespect en het leven van een authentiek leven. Het nummer is haast een strijdlied te noemen met teksten die de luisteraar steun toe roepen en ze aanmoedigen niemand hen hun stem of geloof af te laten nemen.
‘Birth Of A New Age’ is op het eerste gehoor een stuk pakkender dan zijn voorganger. Het herhalen van de zin ‘your rhythm is rebellion’ in het eerste couplet valt gelijk op en de pakkende leus van het refrein neemt het al snel over. Waar ‘Grow’ een langzame opbouw had, barst ‘Birth Of A New Age’ meteen los en leunt daarna op een herhaling van zetten. Het zal voor sommigen wat te repetitief zijn, maar de hoop die zowel uit de tekst als de melodieën straalt is aanstekelijk, ook dankzij Macrooy’s warme persoonlijkheid en overtuigende optreden.
Het zou me verbazen als Nederland dit jaar weer mee gaat doen voor de winst, gezien ik niet verwacht dat dit nummer heel Europa zal aanspreken en zo vrachten met punten binnen zal halen, maar Macrooy levert wederom een nummer af waar Nederland trots op mag zijn. Zijn stem en uitstraling op het podium zullen zeker wat huiskamers in Europa oplichten met een swingende, hoopvolle boodschap.
It’s the fuzz of a TV tuned to the wrong channel; aural static, flat and monotonous, with no peaks or falls to puncture the sound. Welcome to the white noise machine – where algorithmically-created tracks designed to sound like nothingness have become streaming platforms’ biggest moneymaker. Downloaded by the near-billion – “Clean White Noise – Loopable with no fade” has been played 847m times, worth around $2.5m in royalties – chart success is now more likely for computer programmers than pop stars.
The tracks are “not super complicated to create,” admits Nick Schwab, CEO of Sleep Jar, which supplies ambient sounds to over 6m people each month. “They’re very easy, if you have the right software.” Primarily sought out by those trying to block out background sound while sleeping, or looking to focus during the day, the market is ballooning: the most popular ‘artists’ can reach hundreds of thousands or even millions of views daily, easily earning revenue over $1m each year.
Sleep Jar works primarily through Amazon’s Alexa, connected to Amazon’s smart home devices, offering noises white (“like TV static”), the growingly popular brown (“more bassy”) and pink (“kind of inbetween”). Schwab “accidentally created this business” after being lumped with a noisy neighbour six years ago, and began using a startup development kit to customise his Echo Dot smart device to play ambient sound. He published the results of his experiment online in 2016, and Sleep Jar became a hit; just the thing, seemingly, for our loud, distracted times.
The service now offers over 102 tracks, from multi-frequency static to crackling fireplaces, fans and babbling brooks. “We spend a lot of time mastering our sounds,” Schwab says. Making downloadable ambient noise is a two-part formula: the first objective is “making sure that the looping is seamless, or as seamless as we can make it” – that is to say that the point at which the track repeats appears imperceptible. The second is “making sure that our volume levels are consistent across all the sounds we offer; it’s super important.” And that’s pretty much that; there are no star producers that industry insiders are fighting over themselves to work with (“I wouldn’t say there’s one composer of white noise who really stands out”), or impromptu jam sessions seeking to hash out ambient magic.
Perhaps a lack of star power goes with the territory – standing out is the opposite of white noise’s modus operandi. Musical development is also not part of the plan: the goal here is for the ambient tracks of today “to remain a constant,” Schwab says, rather than trying to push genre boundaries. They vary so little, in fact, that one’s hearing is the only thing setting them apart; lower frequency sounds become more appealing as we age, as the higher register becomes out of reach. If we all had the same hearing ability, there could effectively be one white noise track for all, Schwab says, so indistinct are each from the other.
A great orchestra conductor doesn’t just keep the violins from going one way and the trombones and tuba another, nor act as a human metronome who looks good in a tux. They stir musicians to great heights and unlock the sonic imagination of an enraptured audience.
In short, they rule. And on that note, Cate Blanchett soars in writer/director Todd Field’s drama “Tár” (★★★½ out of four; rated R; in select theaters now, nationwide Friday). Powered by Blanchett’s baton-wielding tour de force, the film is a modern tale about a cultural giant who uses her power in not-so-great fashion, so there’s shades of #MeToo at play. However, “Tár” has more of a timeless quality, playing out in the style of a Greek tragedy with the epic downfall of a woman behaving badly.
‘Who better to play a genius?’: How Cate Blanchett got the role of a lifetime in ‘Tár’
In the film’s classical music world, Lydia Tár (Blanchett) is like Ye and Taylor Swift combined: An EGOT winner who’s led a bunch of top orchestras around the world, and is the renowned conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic, ready for her master stroke. She’s preparing to do a live recording of Gustav Mahler’s heavyweight fifth symphony while also releasing her memoir (with the oh-so-pretentious title “Tár on Tár”). From the opening moments, Field so impressively weaves Lydia’s storied career into real life that you need to stop yourself from Googling her. (While it does seem like a believe-it-or-not biopic, she is fictional.)
Her rise has been triumphant, but you know what they say about the way down. While Lydia’s close to her greatest heights, a former student ends her life and a legal team wants to chat with the celebrity conductor about allegations of sexual misconduct. She’s married to her concertmaster Sharon (Nina Hoss), although their relationship chafes when Lydia takes a special interest in Olga (Sophie Kauer), the orchestra’s new wunderkind cellist. And Lydia also needs to figure out who’ll be her new assistant conductor, the dream job for loyal personal aide Francesca (Noémie Merlant).
Ranked: All the best movies we saw at Toronto Film Festival (including ‘Banshees of Inisherin’)
Lydia Tár (Cate Blanchett, right) rehearses with her new cellist, Olga (Sophie Kauer), in “Tár.”
It’s a lot. Cracks are seen early in the enigmatic Lydia’s cool façade – the threatening way she deals with kid bullies at her adopted daughter’s school, for example, and how the self-described “U-Haul Lesbian” lays into a socially conscious student who disrespects Bach for being a misogynist. (She also causes a stir by suggesting men apply for her conducting fellowship for young women.) The pressure continues to mount, and Lydia’s personal and professional missteps threaten to tear down everything she’s meticulously built.
Even if you take out the timely “cancel culture” bent, “Tár” works as a really intriguing exploration of the mostly uncharted world of classical music, as “Black Swan” did for ballet and “Whiplash” for jazz. While the Amazon series “Mozart in the Jungle” offered a comedic take on backstage orchestral maneuvering, this film takes a much more introspective look at its politics and ultra-competitive nature. It’s the one aspect begging to be mined more in Field’s busy narrative, which already pushes limits with a taxing 158-minute runtime.
One big positive: The movie sounds fabulous, even if Lydia’s life is as discordant as a Charles Ives effort. Oscar-winning composer Hildur Guðnadóttir’s (“Joker”) score doubles as themes of a composition Lydia’s toiled at for years, not to mention some Mahler and Edward Elgar works to please the classically minded set.
Blanchett, of course, is the real maestro here. Surrounded by a number of ambitious women in a world that’s historically patriarchal, Lydia is an astounding study of ego and hubris gone wrong in a period where devices track every questionable move.
A shoo-in for a best actress Oscar nomination (and an early favorite to win the darn thing), Blanchett plays piano, drives like a maniac and, yes, conducts an orchestra like a seasoned pro, though her biggest feat is molding a magnetic character out of an unknowable figure.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: ‘Tár’ review: Cate Blanchett wows as A-list conductor in musical drama
One morning in early September, Lainey Wilson awoke to the news that she’d received her first CMA Awards nomination. But not just one; she had six in total, including Female Vocalist of the Year. After she blinked the sleep out of her eyes and realized she wasn’t still dreaming, she called her parents at home in Louisiana.
“They believed in me before anybody did,” Wilson says. “It’s really surreal — it feels like the hard work is finally starting to pay off.” On our Zoom call, she’s wearing an orange-and-white tie-dyed t-shirt, a baseball cap from Dierks Bentley’s Seven Peaks Festival, and a couple of braided chains, including one with a dangling stone.
Wilson is taking this call from Charleston, South Carolina, where she’s opening for superstar Luke Combs. Once upon a time, long before either of them was famous, they’d get together and make music. “We’d write songs in my camper. I’m just glad that he’s remembering that he used my AC and he drank my cold drinks,” she says, grinning.
In the past two years, the 30-year-old native of tiny Baskin, Louisiana, has been seeing the returns on her more than 10 years of toil in Nashville. Her stately ballad “Things a Man Oughta Know” went Number One on country radio in September 2021 and she had another hit with Cole Swindell, “Never Say Never,” a few months later. Her major-label debut, Sayin’ What I’m Thinkin’, was a year-end 2021 favorite for many outlets (including Rolling Stone), thanks to it its engaging mix of personality, groove, and wit. Her music also showed up on Paramount’s popular drama Yellowstone, on which she’ll appear as a cast member in next season. And she secured high-profile tour spots with Jason Aldean and Morgan Wallen, managing to steer clear of the controversies that swirled around those artists.
While promoting Sayin’ What I’m Thinkin’, Wilson often used the term “bell bottom country” to describe her sound, a clever way of saying it was a stylish throwback that could stand out in the present. She carries the term forward as the title for her new album with Broken Bow. Out Friday, Bell Bottom Country plays up the things she was already doing well and adds a few new flavors into the mix. This time, “bell bottom country” is more than a sound; it’s a whole ethos.
“It’s about finding whatever it is that makes you you, and different and special,” she says. “It could be where you’re from, how you were raised, the way that you talk, the way that you dress, the way that you look, your story, whatever. And it’s about leaning into that as much as you possibly can.”
Bell Bottom Country does that with seemingly every facet of Wilson’s personality. She comes off tough and brash in “Hold My Halo,” restless in “Road Runner,” sweetly nostalgic in “Watermelon Moonshine,” and flush with desire in “Grease,” displaying considerable emotional range. She describes the album as “pulling back the layers a little deeper,” as in the ballad “Weak-End” and its clear-eyed look at the wreckage of heartbreak. “Wish that Friday wasn’t just another way to say lonely,” she sings.
“When I wrote these songs, I was going through a hard time,” Wilson says. “I was in a very dark place. But at the end of the day, time heals all wounds.”
Wilson’s speech patterns and thick Southern accent have a familiar, unvarnished quality that can obscure how skilled she is at staying on message without ever coming across as inauthentic. The way she presents herself publicly is not unlike the mix of homespun wit, musical talent, and business savvy of Dolly Parton, whom Wilson praised in her song “WWDD” (an acronym for “What would Dolly do?”).
Jay Joyce, who produced both Sayin’ What I’m Thinkin’ and Bell Bottom Country, saw something similar when he first met Wilson prior to working together. “It’s like the reason everybody likes Dolly Parton,” he says. “Even the indie-rock kids like Dolly because it’s real, it’s honest.”
Like Parton, and for that matter Loretta Lynn, Wilson’s biography is fodder for her songwriting. She paints herself as a glorious mess of extremes in “Hillbilly Hippie,” getting “all Willie’d up” — she makes a toking gesture during our video call — and embodying “all peace and love up until I ain’t.”
“People think I’m a nice person and I’m friendly, but when shit hits the fan and somebody needs a butt whoopin’, I’m in there too,” she says, putting her fists up to mimic a boxing stance. “I’m one extreme to the next. I really think that’s hereditary.”
Wilson’s family is important in her story. She recounts a memory from childhood about her father, a farmer by trade, in “Those Boots (Deddy’s Song)” — the spelling is how Wilson refers to him. The family lived together in a house with a prefab trailer grafted onto the side to make room for Wilson and her sister, and in the mornings she’d help her father get ready for work by pulling his jeans down over his boots. “When I think of mine and my deddy’s relationship, I think of that,” she says. “I think of him giving me a job and me feeling proud about it.”
The song took on extra poignancy when Wilson’s father had to be hospitalized for a serious illness in August. He’s on the mend now, but it was a scary, uncertain time for her family. “[‘Those Boots’] has a more powerful meaning to me now,” Wilson says. “Sometimes you forget how much you love somebody until you think you’re going to lose them.”
For an album released in mainstream country music, where vocals and run-time are valued most, Bell Bottom Country has its share of instrumental exploration. Abetting the deep groove of “Grease,” there’s a funky guitar solo that sounds like something from a lost Prince album. In “Hold My Halo,” there’s a moment where the instruments drop out, leaving Wilson to sing to a rubbery bass lick.
“If you listen to older Jerry Reed, cool-ass country, there were lots of musical, interesting things,” Joyce explains. “I don’t mean 10-minute solos or anything, but there’s plenty of room to develop a musical hook. If the players are having fun, you’re on the right track.”
That approach gives Bell Bottom Country the feel of a band performing together, not just a functional backdrop to showcase a singer. Even so, Wilson does reveal new sides of her voice. Her deep twang curls its way around lyrics in a conversational manner, but she growls with ferocity on a rollicking cover of 4 Non Blondes’ “What’s Up.” (“I look up to Linda Perry. I think she’s just a badass,” Wilson says.)
Then there’s the extended high note at the end of her single “Heart Like a Truck,” an impressive display of power and range that conveys the kind of resilience she describes in the song. Joyce calls it an “accident,” while Wilson admits she may have shot herself in the foot with the performance.
“I don’t know why I did that to myself, ‘cause now I gotta do it every single night,” she says. “I could run to the bathroom and back — it’s so long.”
Wilson’s distinctive voice was exactly what Cole Swindell had in mind when he brought her in as his partner on the brooding 2021 duet “Never Say Never.” “There’s nobody else in the world I could’ve heard sing that first line — ‘I told my momma’ — other than her. She truly made this song everything I dreamed it could be,” Swindell says. It ended up being her second Number One and landed two of her recent CMA nominations.
Likewise, Hardy, the country-rock firebrand, sought out the sense of realness that Wilson projects for “Wait in the Truck,” a song that deals with domestic violence in gritty fashion. Wilson believably portrays the abused, conflicted woman in the narrative, spared from her troubles by another act of violence. “She’s unapologetically herself. She’s very authentic,” Hardy says. “I care so much about that song and I wanted the fans to believe every word of what the woman in the song had to say, and she has the most believable voice.”
Wilson’s ability to inhabit these characters — watch her convincing performance in the video for “Wait in the Truck” — is one of the reasons she’s been cast in the fifth season of Yellowstone. She’d become friends with the show’s creator Taylor Sheridan over the last couple of years and he wrote a part with her in mind: Wilson’s character is a musician.
“I pretty much get to be myself on the show,” Wilson says. “I get to sing my songs, wear my crazy clothes, pretty much be me…with a little extra.” The aspect of series-TV performance made sense to her as well. “[It’s the] same thing with getting on stage and doing a performance — the pressure’s on, you better get it right.”
Wilson doesn’t need any help in that department, but her rising fame over the last year has presented her with a lot of new opinions, some of them unkind, from the outside. She listens to what she calls “frequency music,” an assortment of buzzy sounds, to relax and meditates with a grounding mat. Her new friend Miranda Lambert, against whom she’ll compete for Female Vocalist of the Year at Nov. 9’s CMA Awards, gave her advice on tuning out the noise.
“She’s like, ‘You need to worry about what ya mama and ya daddy think aboutcha, and your best friends, and if you lay down at night knowing you’re with that, then you good,’” she says. “You better keep your blinders on and not worry about what everybody else is thinking. They don’t know the real you. They don’t know your heart. I’m sharing a huge part of me, which is my music and songwriting, but they don’t know me when I’m sitting on my couch at home.”
Somewhere in there lies a quiet acknowledgement of Wilson’s two sides: the public, switched-on Lainey and a private one. They’re nearly identical, except one has retained parts of her life for safekeeping. Right now, Wilson is in command of that story and knows how to present the most interesting bits as compelling art. As long as she can hold on to that precious sense of self, she can keep at it.
“If I’m not living a slightly normal life over here, I don’t feel like I’m going to be able to write things that are relatable,” Wilson says. “I’m not posting on Instagram every single time I’m meditating in my closet or I’m talking to the Lord or I’m doing things that help me stay grounded and stay centered. But it’s absolutely important. Because life is crazy.”