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Music > Reviews > Miranda Lambert ![]() Miranda LambertRevolution(Sony/Columbia Nashville) US release date: 29 September 2009 UK release date: 29 September 2009 By Tom UsetedMiranda Lambert absolutely deserved the Academy of Country Music’s Album of the Year award for 2007’s Crazy Ex-Girlfriend. It was a perfect album: there wasn’t a dud among the 11 songs, which ranged from the very traditional to the very modern, and Lambert showed an impressive emotional range. She could convincingly convey the anger of a newly empowered woman (“Gunpowder & Lead”) as well as she could the quiet strength of one recently independent (“Easy From Now On”). There was nothing showy about her, either, and if her occasionally vengeful side called to mind the likes of Carrie Underwood’s “Before He Cheats” or the Dixie Chicks’ “Goodbye Earl”, the maturity of her ballads and her choice of top-notch outside material indicated that Lambert was an artist to pay attention to. Revolution, Lambert’s follow-up to her critical breakthrough, arrives an almost absurd five months after its lead single. “Dead Flowers” isn’t as immediately striking as “Gunpowder & Lead”—modern country cliche or not, it was still an effective opening salvo—or “Famous in a Small Town”, which it doesn’t rival as a composition or in terms of the power of Lambert’s performance. And while second single “White Liar” doesn’t seem any more likely to be a smash, both songs do have compelling instrumental codas, which draw well-deserved attention to the musicianship. “White Liar” kicks off the album with a quiet, mysterious steel guitar, which is soon joined by an acoustic guitar in a blend that sounds like precious little of today’s mainstream country music. Apparently even a weak Miranda Lambert single still has much to recommend it. The new album is far from perfect. But Revolution does find the young singer refining her skills and trying out some new stuff along the way. In taking the opportunity to stretch a bit, she winds up giving us 15 somewhat uneven songs. It’s interesting that the ho-hum songs are the kind that she’s generally very good with, ballads like “The House That Built Me” and “Love Song” and the twangy anger of “Sin For a Sin”. Losing those three would tighten things up considerably, because the album really starts to drag about two thirds of the way in. I wonder, though, if Revolution needs that kind of filler in some ways to make room for an unexpectedly weird track like “Maintain the Pain”, which would really stick out on a shorter album. Lambert is a fantastic country singer, but her best songs aren’t always very rootsy, and “Maintain the Pain” is a good example of the way she uses traditional instrumentation in unusual ways. The song manages to mash together electric-guitar arpeggios, stomping drums, driving banjo, and what sounds like an electric violin, but might not be because there’s no credit for an electric violin in the liner notes. Even better, the whole thing lasts less than two and a half minutes, and it’s sandwiched between the equally quirky and equally brief “Me and Your Cigarettes” and “Airstream Song”. It’s an intriguing sequence, the tracks are barely more than sketches, and she should totally do this sort of thing more often. Elsewhere it’s Lambert at her usual best, busting out her seldom-corny sense of humor on “Only Prettier” and “Heart Like Mine” (“I heard Jesus, He drank wine / And I bet we’d get along just fine”), closing with a killer ballad in “Virginia Bluebell”, and incorporating a few fine covers into the mix. As it was on Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, Lambert’s taste is impeccable, and her takes on Fred Eaglesmith (“Time to Get a Gun”) and John Prine (an appropriately chaotic and clattering “That’s the Way That the World Goes ‘Round”) almost equal “Dry Town” and “Easy From Now On” from the earlier album. Coming off of one of the best country records of the decade, Revolution is bound to disappoint at least somewhat. Its only real flaw, though, is that it’s a little too long. Most of the songs achieve her general high standard, and the ones that don’t are far from awful. Miranda Lambert is 25 years old. I can’t think of another mainstream country singer with her overall talent. I hope she has a lot more of these songs left in her. 28 September 2009
Related ArticlesThe Best Country Music of 2007By Roger Holland14.Dec.07 Whatever your taste in music, be it Country or Western, 2007 has been something of a disappointment when compared with recent years. You have to look a little harder to find the diamonds in the Van Lear coal-mine that was the year that was, but they're there.
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Comments
Tom,
I’m glad you liked the album. I actually just went and saw her perform the whole thing at the Ryman last Thursday. It did feel a bit long, and I did perk up once the album was over and she played stuff from the first two (oh, and an unplugged cover of “Crazy” ... amazing), but there was definitely enough interesting stuff for me to go out and pick this up tomorrow.
Comment by Jeff from Nashville, TN — September 28, 2009 @ 4:19 am
OMG couldn’t disagree more. Miranda Lambert has taken a huge step back and will pay dearly for it. There isn’t a song besides Dead Flowers that could possible make any noise on the charts. The only noise this CD will make is the noise from the absolutely horrible production of this CD.
What in the world was she thinking in trying to reinvent Jewel? The cover and back of the CD even look like Jewel!
Aside from Dead Flowers which indeed has already worn out its welcome, it took me until song 13 Sin Of Sin to find a Miranda Lambert song on the CD. I had to “next” through every song that started with a slow acoustic guitar all the way to song 13. What a waste!
Then when I saw some promise with Sin Of Sin, I lost it with song 14 “thats the way the world goes round” as it’s one of worst recorded songs I’ve heard in a long time. The sound is total mud and noise.
In a nutshell, don’t buy this garbage CD. I hope Miranda and her record company realize they have made a huge mistake and release a another in 6-8 months as George Strait seems to do.
This was just a major disappointment Miranda!!!!!
Comment by Steve — October 3, 2009 @ 5:11 am
Great review - Miranda’s new record sounds great. She’s an awesome performer and I love that she’s not afraid to speak her mind. Check out this video for “Dead Flowers” if you haven’t heard it yet! http://bit.ly/REI1O
Comment by MattKlomp — October 11, 2009 @ 3:58 pm
It isn’t easy to make follow-ups, once you have done such a fantastic debut album. Kerosene is the best country album of this decade. As for Revolution, I understand what she’s trying to do, but I can’t help it: I really like the songs that sound like her older stuff. Once she gets trashy and wild, she loses me. I want to like the newer, tougher sound, but it’s in the ballads that she really comes across. It is a bit hard to make an album that is so diverse as Revolution, since it gives the impression of someone who is uncertain of their musical expression.
Comment by Parnell from Sweden — October 19, 2009 @ 6:07 am
In all honesty, best I can give it is 3.5. I thought CeGF was an incredible breakthrough album, akin to Melissa Etheridge’s Brave & Crazy from the early 90s in its total breakaway from anything else similar, and absolutely GREAT singing and musicianship. This one, -meh- not so much. Her singing is probably the best its been yet on this record (her singing is greatly underrated), but there are 2 things missing: 1) some of her best stuff was the twangy old-style country (think Dry Town) and there is NONE of that here. She does it so well, I feel robbed! 2) Also setting her apart was her hard-rocking kick-ass side (CEG,Gunpowder, Kerosene etc etc etc) and it is missing here with the exception of 1 song. Many good songs on this record, few great ones except for maybe House that built Me and suprisingly Airstream Song which is WAAAYYYY too short. My God girl, let go and you and the guys just shut up and play some. I’ll keep maybe 5-6 of the 15 songs on my IPOD. CEG I couldn’t leave out a one. Nuff said.
Comment by danmwalker — November 3, 2009 @ 1:46 pm