Current:Home > reviewsLainey Wilson’s career felt like a ‘Whirlwind.’ On her new album, she makes sense of life and love -WealthMindset
Lainey Wilson’s career felt like a ‘Whirlwind.’ On her new album, she makes sense of life and love
View
Date:2025-04-15 00:40:19
NEW YORK (AP) — It’s late July. Lainey Wilson is somewhere in Iowa, holding a real road dog — her French bulldog named Hippie — close to her chest. She’s on her tour bus, zipping across the Midwest, just another day in her jet set lifestyle. Next month, she’ll release her fifth studio album, the aptly named “Whirlwind,” a full decade after her debut record. Today, like every day, she’s just trying to enjoy the ride.
“It’s been a journey,” she reflects on her career. “I’ve been in Nashville for 13 years and I tell people I’m like, it feels like I got there yesterday, but I also feel like I’ve been there my whole life.”
Wilson is a fast talker and a slow success story. She grew up on a farm in rural Baskin, Louisiana. As a teenager, she worked as a Hannah Montana impersonator; when she got to Nashville in early adulthood, she lived in a camper trailer and hit countless open mic nights, trying to make it in Music City. It paid off, but it took time, really launching with the release of her 2020 single, “Things a Man Oughta Know,” and her last album, 2022’s “Bell Bottom Country” — a rollicking country-rock record that encompasses Wilson’s unique “country with a flare” attitude.
“I had always heard that Nashville was a 10-year town. And I believe ‘Things a Man Oughta Know’ went No. 1, like, 10 years and a day after being there,” she recalls. “I should have had moments where I should have packed it up and went home. I should have went back to Louisiana. But I never had those feelings. I think there’s something really beautiful about being naive. And, since I was a little girl, I’ve always had stars in my eyes.”
These days, she’s a Grammy winner, the first woman to win entertainer of the year at the CMAs since Taylor Swift in 2011 (she took home the same award from the Academy of Country Music), she’s acted in the hit television show “Yellowstone” and in June, she was inducted into the Grand Ole Opry.
“I was 9 years old when I went to the Opry for the first time. I remember who was playing. It was Little Jimmy Dickens, Bill Anderson, Crystal Gayle, Phil Vassar, and I remember where I was sitting. I remember looking at the circle on stage and being like, ‘Man, I’m going to, I’m going to play there. I’m gonna do this,’” she recalls.
Becoming a member is the stuff dreams are made of, and naturally, it connects back to the album.
“The word that I could use to describe the last couple of years is whirlwind,” she says. “I feel like my life has changed a whole lot. But I still feel like the same old girl trying to keep one foot on the ground.”
“And so, I think it’s just about grasping on to those things that that truly make me, me and the artist where I can tell stories to relate to folks.”
If Wilson’s life looks different now than it did a decade ago, those years of hard work have created an ability to translate the madness of her life and career to that of everyone else’s: Like on “Good Horses,” the sole collaboration on “Whirlwind.” It features Miranda Lambert, and was written on Lambert’s farm, an uplifting track about both chasing dreams and coming home. Or “Hang Tight Honey,” an ode to those who work hard for the ones they love.
Wilson has leveled up on this record, bringing writers out on the road with her as she continued to tour endlessly. That’s evident on the sonic experiment of “Ring Finger,” a funky country-rock number with electro-spoken word.
Or “Country’s Cool Again,” a joyous treatise on the genre and Western wear’s current dominance in the cultural zeitgeist.
“I think country music brings you home,” she says of its popularity. “And everybody wants to feel at home.”
Here on the back of the bus, Wilson is far from home — as she often is. But it is always on the mind, the place that acts as a refuge on “Whirlwind.” And that’s something everyone can relate to.
“I hope it brings a little bit of peace to just everyday chaos, because we all deal with it,” she says of the album. “Everybody looks different, but we all put our britches on the same one leg at a time, you know?”
veryGood! (51)
Related
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Stop taking selfies with 'depressed' bear, Florida sheriff's office tells drivers
- Esta TerBlanche, who played Gillian Andrassy on 'All My Children,' dies at 51
- New York Regulators Found High Levels of TCE in Kindra Bell’s Ithaca Home. They Told Her Not to Worry
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Ice cream trucks are music to our ears. But are they melting away?
- Higher tax rates, smaller child tax credit and other changes await as Trump tax cuts end
- Here's what can happen when you max out your 401(k)
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- The best hybrid SUVs for 2024: Ample space, admirable efficiency
Ranking
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- How to Watch the 2024 Paris Olympics Opening Ceremony and All Your Favorite Sports
- Video tutorial: How to react to iMessages using emojis
- 'Mind-boggling': Woman shoots baby in leg over $100 drug debt, police say
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- 72-year-old man picking berries in Montana kills grizzly bear who attacked him
- Self-professed ‘Wolf of Airbnb’ sentenced to over 4 years in prison for defrauding landlords
- 'West Wing' creator Aaron Sorkin suggests Democrats nominate Mitt Romney
Recommendation
Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
'Painful' wake-up call: What's next for CrowdStrike, Microsoft after update causes outage?
Real Housewives of New Jersey Star Melissa Gorga Shares the 1 Essential She Has in Her Bag at All Times
FACT FOCUS: A look at false claims around Kamala Harris and her campaign for the White House
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
New Orleans civil rights icon Tessie Prevost dead at 69
Truck driver charged in Ohio interstate crash that killed 3 students, 3 others
Real Housewives of New Jersey Star Melissa Gorga Shares the 1 Essential She Has in Her Bag at All Times