NEW YORK (AP) - Miranda Lambert’s 10th studio album begins with a plucky honky-tonk stomper, full of folksy imagery and a jaunty vibraslap sound:
Music Review: Miranda Lambert’s ‘Postcards from Texas’ is joyful road trip across her home state
NEW YORK (AP) - Miranda Lambert’s 10th studio album begins with a plucky honky-tonk stomper, full of folksy imagery and a jaunty vibraslap sound:
"Well I met an armadillo / Out in Amarillo / And he asked me for a light," Lambert’s voice swings, "I said a where ya goin' / He said 'I don't really know' / And I said, 'Brother I've been there twice.'"
It might be an outlier, for listeners expecting a collection more in line with the album’s lead single, the classic rock-channeling "Wranglers," but it’s also the perfect tone-setter. Across the 14-track release, Lambert aims to deliver sometimes-traditional country with a lot of heart.
Throughout, "Postcards From Texas" is a sonic road trip across Lambert’s home state - from the steel guitar-led ballad "Looking Back on Luckenbach” to the funny, trash-talking divorce anthem "Alimony," with its not-so-thinly veiled lyrical geography.