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Broken Record with Rick Rubin, Malcolm Gladwell, Bruce Headlam and Justin Richmond

Lainey Wilson

Broken Record with Rick Rubin, Malcolm Gladwell, Bruce Headlam and Justin Richmond

Pushkin Industries

Music, Society & Culture

4.54.2K Ratings

🗓️ 8 October 2024

⏱️ 62 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

At just 8 years-old, Lainey Wilson announced to her family that she was destined to become a country music star. There were no other musicians in her family to speak of—for five generations her people had been farmers in a tiny Northern Louisiana town with the population of 180.

After graduating high school, Lainey drove North to Nashville in a camper trailer that she lived in alone for three years. Success did not come easy. In those first three years, Lainey wrote over 300 songs, and it wasn’t until year eight that she finally signed a record deal. All of her hard work finally paid off in 2021, when her debut single “Things A Man Oughta Know” raced up the country music charts. Several radio hits followed, and last year Lainey swept the award season, winning a ton of trophies including the Grammy for "Best Country Album" and “Entertainer Of The Year” at the Country Music Awards.

In August, Lainey scored her first crossover hit with the release of her latest album, “Whirlwind,” which debuted at number three on Billboard, and became the highest-selling album of her career.

On today’s episode, Leah Rose talks to Lainey Wilson about how grit and determination became one of the central pillars of her success. Lainey also opens up about being physically objectified online, and the reality of playing alongside some of her musical heroes like The Rolling Stones and Dolly Parton. Check out the full video of this interview and other recent episodes at youtube.com/brokenrecordpodcast.

You can hear a playlist of some of our favorite Lainey Wilson songs HERE.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Pushkin

0:11.0

At just eight years old Lainey announced to her family that she was destined to become a country music star.

0:17.0

There were no other musicians in her family to speak of. For five generations, her people had been farmers in a tiny northern Louisiana town with a

0:24.1

population of only 180. But after graduating high school Laini stayed true to her

0:29.6

promise and drove north to Nashville in a camper trailer that she lived in alone for three years.

0:35.6

Success didn't come easy. In those first three years, Laini wrote over 300 songs, and it wasn't

0:41.1

until her eighth year that she finally signed a record deal.

0:45.2

All that hard work paid off in 2021 when her debut single, Things a Man Out of No, raced up the country

0:51.5

music charts.

0:53.4

Several radio hits followed, and last year, Lanny swept the award season, winning a ton of trophies,

0:59.1

including the Grammy for Best Country

1:03.2

album, an Entertainer of the Year at the Country Music Awards.

1:04.4

In August, Laini scored her first crossover hit

1:06.6

with the release of her latest album, Warwind,

1:08.8

which debuted at Number 3 on the Billboard 200 chart

1:11.6

and became her highest selling album yet.

1:14.8

On today's episode, Leah Rose talks to Laini Wilson about how her grit and determination developed

1:19.6

into central pillars of her career. Laini also opens up about being physically objectified online

1:26.0

and the reality of playing alongside some of her musical heroes like the Rolling Stones and Dolly Pardon. This is Broken Record.

1:36.0

Liner notes for the digital age.

1:38.0

I'm Justin Richmond.

1:40.0

Here's Lea Rose's conversation with Lainey Wilson.

...

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