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Few artists have changed country music like Lainey Wilson.
The bell bottom-wearing, slow-talking singer-songwriter from small-town Louisiana has taken the genre by storm since dropping her breakout third studio album, Sayinâ What Iâm Thinkinâ, in 2021, and sheâs reshaped the country music industry along the way. With Wilsonâs highly anticipated fifth studio album, Whirlwind, due August 23, sheâs bound to shake things up once again.
If youâve engaged with just about any form of media in recent years, chances are youâre already familiar with Wilson, who also starred on the fifth season of the wildly popular Paramount Network show Yellowstone. Sheâs racked up a roomâs worth of trophies, including a Grammy, six ACM Awards and seven CMA Awards, including the coveted Entertainer of the Year award in 2023, which made her the first woman to win the honor since Taylor Swiftâs win in 2009.
And somehow, in a genre that infamously allows mostly men to dominate charts and radio air time, Wilson has found mainstream country success commensurate with her critical acclaim. Sheâs notched four number ones on country radio when many women canât even get their music played. Sheâs lent assists to big names like HARDY (2022âs âWait in the Truckâ) and Jelly Roll (2023âs âSave Meâ), and for a while seemed to be countryâs favorite feature â since 2021, sheâs also collaborated with Dolly Parton, Lauren Alaina, Ernest, and Cole Swindell.
So, what is it about Wilson that resonates with so many people?
Her breakout single, 2020âs âThings A Man Oughta Know,â is a great place to start. Wilsonâs voice is undeniable â like Parton or Loretta Lynn, Wilson has an inimitable sound and style â and a ballad like âThings A Man Oughta Knowâ gives her ample room to shine. Her voice is nimble and elastic, rich and dynamic. She knows when to stretch a note for emotional effect, like when she sings, âHow to keep it hidden when a heart gets broke,â bending the final syllable to reinforce its ache. Lyrically, the track epitomizes the grittier side of Wilsonâs persona, as she shows herself to be as adept at love as she is âchang[ing] a tire on the side of a road.â
That tune first appeared on Wilsonâs 2020 EP, Redneck Hollywood, and would be reprised on Sayinâ What Iâm Thinkinâ. It would prove to be no fluke, too, as the LP released to near-universal acclaim. While much of commercial country music was steeped in pop and hip-hop influences, Wilsonâs music was traditional but forward-thinking, sounding like AM radio classics, but from a fresh perspective.
It seemed as though Sayinâ What Iâm Thinkinâ made Wilson an overnight success, but like most artists who come to Nashville seeking a big break, she had paid serious dues. After graduating high school, Wilson moved to Nashville from Louisiana in 2011, living in a camper van while she found her footing in town.
Sheâd honed her musical chops as a kid, first discovering a love for music as a young child. As she grew older, Wilsonâs dream of pursuing a career in music grew, too, and by the time she was a teenager she had regular gigs as a Miley Cyrus impersonator, showing up at weekend birthday parties to perform for kids.
That would be good practice for building a career in Nashville, as grinding it out at local writersâ rounds, bars, showcases, and open mic nights is, for most artists, a Music City rite of passage. Nashvilleâs â10-year townâ reputation, which posits that an artist must keep at it for a decade to break through, proved true for Wilson, who had spotty success between 2011 and 2021 before finally clearing the hurdle.
Wilson would follow Sayinâ What Iâm Thinkinâ just a year later, eschewing a more traditional two to three years between records in favor of maintaining her momentum. Bell Bottom Country did just that and then some, catapulting Wilson from up-and-coming country star to household name.
The album, with its retro, Stevie Nicks-coded cover photo, also further developed the Lainey Wilson brand, which is more hippie than hillbilly. (Or rather, itâs both â the second track is called âHillbilly Hippie,â after all.) Her bell bottoms quickly became part of her iconography, like Dolly Partonâs colorful makeup or Brad Paisleyâs traditional cowboy hat. The imagery matches the mood of the music, as even Wilsonâs more somber songs still have a sense of looseness, of freedom.
Perhaps a product of her decade-plus in the game, that ease is evident on Bell Bottom Country hit âWatermelon Moonshine,â a spiritual descendent of Deana Carterâs âStrawberry Wineâ that is sure to be a country classic. Steeped in nostalgia and illustrated with vivid imagery (âkudzu vines,â âold farm ruts,â âa blanket âneath the sunsetâ), the song is a tender ode to young love, balancing youthful abandon with the melancholy of hindsight. Itâs also a showcase for Wilsonâs melodies, which are sticky but not cloying, and just poppy enough to catch the ear without distracting from the story.
Bell Bottom Country also birthed âHeart Like a Truck,â a massive hit for Wilson thanks, partially, to its use in a Dodge Ram commercial. The song is, blessedly, proof that a âtruck songâ can still be creative, as Wilson likens her aching heart to a truck thatâs âbeen drug through the mud.â Itâs also one of Wilsonâs most powerful vocal performances, letting her play with dynamics before letting go and wailing toward the end of the song.
Wilson uses Bell Bottom Country to show off her broader musical ambitions, too. âGreaseâ is syncopated and funky, reminiscent of more recent work from The Cadillac Three or Brothers Osborne. âThis Oneâs Gonna Cost Meâ flirts with arena rock, made epic with production from Jay Joyce, famous for his work with Eric Church. And Wilson surprises with a vibrant cover of âWhatâs Up (Whatâs Going On),â the iconic 4 Non Blondes hit.
Such sonic detours hint at what might come with Whirlwind, whose title no doubt references the wild last few years of Wilsonâs life. Lead single âHang Tight Honeyâ is tight and catchy but sonically complex, with girl-group vocals and a rockabilly beat accompanying Wilsonâs soulful, swaggering delivery. â4x4xUâ recalls the mid-tempo drama of the best Lee Ann Womack songs, though with a funkier groove. And on âCountryâs Cool Again,â Wilson reminds that her country roots run deep, with a deliciously twangy chorus that more than earns the songâs Garth Brooks and Brooks & Dunn references.
Despite these country bona fides, Wilson has still faced accusations of inauthenticity, particularly around her thick Louisiana accent. In a January interview with Glamour, she says, âI think sometimes, especially when people were first getting introduced to me, they heard my accent and immediately thought, âThere’s no way this girl could be that country.â The truth is, you can say anything you want to about me, but when you start talking about my accent, Iâm ready to fight somebody because then I start feeling youâre talking about my family.â
Debates about authenticity in country music are a dime a dozen, though they tend to be directed at women artists more often than their male counterparts. You donât hear skeptics of, say, Morgan Wallenâs accent or Tennessee roots, or of Jelly Rollâs history with incarceration. But a quick search of âLainey Wilson fakeâ turns up video after video dissecting her accent, most of which barely â if at all â engage with her actual music.
For her part, Wilson seems largely unfazed by doubters and detractors. In that same Glamour piece, she later shares, âWhen you grow up somewhere like I did with the kind of people that I did, you canât help but to be country. You canât escape it no matter if you move eight hours away like I did. Country music was the soundtrack of our lives. We lived it out.â
While Wilsonâs musical talents will always be her biggest draw, her larger-than-life personality is a close second. Sheâs a famously electric live performer, vamping across the stage and bantering with fans with such ease it seems second nature. That she does this without missing a note is what elevates her artistry â that CMA Award isnât called âEntertainerâ of the Year for no reason.
Itâs hard to imagine a future in which Lainey Wilson isnât the stuff of country music legend. Sheâs got the chops, the drive, and no shortage of charisma, and itâs easy to picture her as a Parton-like figure several decades from now, ushering in and supporting a new generation of country artists whose reverence for and innovation of the genre will help keep it alive.
Until then, at least countryâs cool again.
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Photo Credit: Eric Ryan Anderson