It's a girls' night out for Lambert
COUNTRY STANDARD TIME
HomeNewsInterviewsCD ReleasesCD ReviewsConcertsArtistsArchive
 

It's a girls' night out for Lambert

Friday, May 1, 2015 – Miranda Lambert will host a girls night out this fall with the resurrection of her Roadside Bars and Pink Guitars Tour.

Lambert will be joined again by RaeLynn, who has a Gold-certified single "God Made Girls," Ashley Monroe whose duet with Blake Shelton, "Lonely Tonight," was a recent number one hit, Clare Dunn and Courtney Cole.

Lambert mounted a similar tour earlier in her career.

Lambert saw Dunn perform at StageCoach last week at the Stagecoach Festival. "I hadn't seen her before, but I'm a fan now," Lambert said. "You don't see that many women who get up there and really slay a guitar and play some real rock 'n' roll country." Dunn is signed to Universal Music Group.

Cole, a New Orleans native, has a debut song out, "Drunk." Her acoustic, four-song EP "#NoFilter," is currently exclusively at Spotify.

Monroe's forthcoming second Warner set was produced by Vince Gill and Justin Neibank. She also is one-third of Pistol Annies with Lambert and Angaleena Presley.

"I really support female artists in any genre, especially country music right now," Lambert said. "I've taken girls on tour for a long time and I want to continue to do that because I feel like I can give them a platform."

Cities on the tour include Missoula, Mont., Billings, Mont., Rapid City, S.D., Mankato, Minn., Augusta, Ga., Fayetteville, N.C., Roanoke, Va., Huntsville, Ala., Tupelo, Miss., Jonesboro, Ark., Lacrosse, Wisc., Ft. Wayne, Ind. and Moline, Ill.


More news for Miranda Lambert


CD reviews for Miranda Lambert

CD review - Platinum Cynics might think that Miranda Lambert is presumptuous in entitling her fifth disc "Platinum" and, in effect, assuming she'll get her plaque for selling 1 million units. But Lambert says that isn't the case, but more a matter of style, looks and feel. Lambert also wrote and discovered a lot of excellent songs that fit her quite well in an album in which she exposes her inner self as she matures. That may never more apparent than in the country rocker Lambert wrote ...
CD review - Revolution Every once in a while an album comes along that restores your faith in mainstream country music. Miranda Lambert's "Revolution" is just such a recording. It's not revolutionary, as the title might suggest. Instead, this CD is chock full of topnotch songs that are both memorable and sincere and never sound slick or overproduced. (Come to think of it, such old school values as these may in fact be revolutionary around Nashville). Lambert vocalizes a bit like a little girl at ...
CD review - Crazy Ex-Girlfriend Even though it sounds like a cliche from the big book of country songwriting, the truth is that, when the timing's right, a loser can end up being the biggest winner of all. Today's object lesson comes from Miranda Lambert and her sophomore album, the follow-up to her 2005 near-platinum debut, "Kerosene." Imagine for a moment if the then-19-year-old had actually taken the crown in 2003's Nashville Star and then been forced into the studio within weeks to be primped and ...


©Country Standard Time • Jeffrey B. Remz, editor & publisher • countrystandardtime@gmail.com
AboutCopyrightNewsletterOur sister publication Standard Time
Subscribe to Country Music News Country News   Subscribe to Country Music CD Reviews CD Reviews   Follow us on Twitter  Instagram  Facebook  YouTube