Miranda Lambert – Postcards from Texas – 2LP Sea Blue Vinyl LP

$42.99

In stock

Comes on 2LP sea blue colored vinyl.

Miranda Lambert โ€“ โ€˜Postcards from Texasโ€™ review: feisty, funny and free
The country star shares poignant life lessons told through vignettes of a roadtrip across the Lone Star state on her charming tenth album.ย Many years ago, a young, up-and-coming country singer crooned about how โ€œthey say you canโ€™t go home againโ€, of leaving home, moving on and doing the best you can. โ€˜The House That Built Meโ€™ went on to become Miranda Lambertโ€™s biggest hit at the time โ€“ and still remains one of her most iconic. But now, 20 years into her career and a bonafide superstar, Lambert has left Nashville to go back home, to her native Texas, rediscovering herself in the process.

Think of Lambertโ€™s aptly titled tenth album, โ€˜Postcards from Texasโ€™, as life lessons told through vignettes of a roadtrip across the Lone Star state. (Itโ€™s also where she recorded the album, her first time doing so since her independently released self-titled 2001 record.) In some moments, sheโ€™s happy just sitting with the nostalgia of a memory (the geography-driven โ€˜Looking Back on Luckenbachโ€™ and โ€˜Santa Feโ€™). During others, sheโ€™s vulnerable and regretful of the chaos wrecked by her free-spirited ways (the gorgeous solo-written โ€˜Runโ€™ and self-aware โ€˜Way Too Good At Breaking My Heartโ€™).

At the heart of this homecoming of the prodigal daughter is the lush โ€˜No Manโ€™s Landโ€™. Here, she warns a man about how she is free, and they can love her if they must, but trust her to remain true to herself: โ€œSo love her like a Mustang / Like a wild thing / Better let her run free.โ€ That is very much the essence of the record, of someone whoโ€™s comfortable in her skin as a wildflower, acknowledging all the baggage that comes with it, but also finding a second wind with partners (be it co-producer Jon Randall or husband Brendan McLoughlin).

Never one to drown out her music with too much earnestness, though, โ€˜Postcards from Texasโ€™ can be as cheeky as it is sincere. Whether itโ€™s Lambert gleefully daring a cheating lover to continue stepping out (โ€œWhatโ€™s mine is mine, and whatโ€™s yours is mine / So go on, baby, have a real good time,โ€ she sings on โ€˜Alimonyโ€™, with a brilliant play on the word โ€œAlamoโ€) or a far-flung tale of a chance meeting with a pot-smoking, gun-toting stranger on the run from the โ€œcoppersโ€ (โ€˜Armadilloโ€™), they are right at home with the sassiest of her hits.

Lambert is feisty, funny and free on โ€˜Postcards from Texasโ€™, which feels like the singer no longer has anything to prove to anyone. It might fall back on genre tropes every so often โ€“ of course, thereโ€™s always that one song about setting shit on fire (โ€˜Wranglersโ€™) or drinking a little too much (โ€˜Bitch On The Sauceโ€™) โ€“ and can be a little too ballad-heavy, but the country superstarโ€™s tenth album is as charming as it is witty and stirring. After a long time away, Lambertโ€™s finally back home, wholeheartedly herself and basking in that self-assuredness (www.nme.com).

Weight 1 lbs
Dimensions 14 × 14 × 3 in
Condition

New

Vinyl Color

Sea Blue

Media

Vinyl