Current:Home > FinanceKelsea Ballerini announces new album, ‘Patterns.’ It isn’t what you’d expect: ‘I’m team no rules’ -OceanicInvest
Kelsea Ballerini announces new album, ‘Patterns.’ It isn’t what you’d expect: ‘I’m team no rules’
View
Date:2025-04-16 02:24:04
NEW YORK (AP) — Kelsea Ballerini is beaming. It’s not a nervous smile, though she admits to feeling scared. She’s been hard at work at her fifth full-length album, “Patterns,” and on Oct. 25 the world is finally going to hear it — hear her, in a collection of songs she describes as an “accurate snapshot” of her life. And lately, people have been curious. The story they’re going to get, she assures, is not the one they’re anticipating.
“I think that people probably expect this really happy-go-lucky, love, mushy, gushy record from me. That’s not the case,” she tells The Associated Press. “And I’m really proud of that. It would have been easy to, I think, just collect the really beautiful parts of my life that I’ve dusted off and found the last couple of years. But that’s not the fullness of my experience.”
She’s referring, in some ways, to 2023’s super-successful “Rolling Up the Welcome Mat,” an EP and short film that told the story of the dissolution of a marriage, a not too-thinly-veiled reference to her own life, where, in 2022, Ballerini found herself divorced from Australian country singer Morgan Evans. These days, she’s partnered with “Outer Banks” star Chase Stokes, a relationship the public has fallen in love with. But her love life is not the sole heart of “Patterns.”
“There’s a lot of narrative of learning how to go from fighting with something or with someone, to fighting for something or for someone. And there’s a lot of that journey for the whole record,” she says.
Unlike “Rolling Up the Welcome Mat,” which she describes as a reflective release, “Patterns” is active and in the moment. “The heartbeat” of the album is about “analyzing yourself and the people that you love the most in order to grow.”
That comes across in the previously released track “Cowboys Cry Too,” featuring Noah Kahan — the only collaboration on the album and an empathic look at toxic masculinity from a female perspective — and the new single “Sorry Mom,” out Friday. It is a swaying, guitar-pop confessional with intergenerational appeal, and it will no doubt strike a chord.
“It’s an intimate song,” she says. “The first line is, ‘Sorry, mom, I smelled like cigarettes.’ You know, it’s the things that your mom doesn’t really want to hear. But then you get to the chorus and the meat of it and the heart of it, and it’s a letter of thanks to my mom for raising me the way she did.”
“Sorry Mom” is one of many love songs on the album: Like “Cowboys,” which was written for the men in her life, or a lush song of self-preservation and celebration called “First Rodeo,” that’s romantic in theme. These are the kind of songs that can be realized in a safe writing and recording environment.
Ballerini performs during CMA Fest in Nashville, Tenn., on June 7, 2024. (Photo by Amy Harris/Invision/AP, File)
To make “Patterns,” Ballerini enlisted an all-woman team. She co-produced and co-wrote the album with Alysa Vanderheym, and also worked with songwriters Jessie Jo Dillon, Little Big Town’s Karen Fairchild and Hillary Lindsey. “I’ve never felt so safe making an album before, top to bottom. There was more pressure on this record just because of all the ears and eyeballs that ‘Welcome Mat’ got,” Ballerini says. “And so, I wanted to safely make this one where I didn’t feel the pressure from the inside.”
They went on writing retreats together, and the process “produced something that felt streamlined without feeling too monotonous, and something that naturally has a lot of warmth and empathy and heart,” she says. “Because that’s what we do as women.”
That level of comfortability allowed for exciting experimentation as well. Ballerini is a country musician, through-and-through, but she has is unafraid to take genre-bending risks, particularly on this album. “To me, what makes me undoubtedly country is my storytelling and my songwriting. And that will never waver or change. But, per usual, I didn’t overthink whether there was a banjo or a beat drop. And there are both on this record, as there have been on my other ones,” she says. “I think lyrically and content wise, I really just was team no rules. Nothing’s off limits.”
There are lighter songs here, and darker ones, self-discovery and insecurity, as well as different geographies. New York and South Carolina are characters, Ballerini exploring her “hair down human me and the more dressed up, nervous, outward facing me,” she says.
“It’s my job to make a record that has something for everyone. But that comes from making a record that’s true to me, and that’s what I did,” she concludes. “And so, I just hope people feel something,” while listening. “Whatever it is.”
veryGood! (96787)
Related
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Taylor Swift and Ed Sheeran Wax Figures Revealed and Fans Weren't Ready For It
- Mayor of Columbus, Ohio, says ransomware attackers stole corrupted, unusable data
- Feeling itchy? Tiny mites may bite humans more after cicada emergence
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- Why AP called Minnesota’s 5th District primary for Rep. Ilhan Omar over Don Samuels
- Zoë Kravitz Reveals Her and Channing Tatum's Love Language
- Three people are dead, one injured after teen flees from Kansas City traffic stop in stolen vehicle
- 'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
- Kylie Jenner and Timothee Chalamet Prove Sky's the Limit on Their Jet Date
Ranking
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- How Amal and George Clooney Are Protecting Their 2 Kids From the Spotlight
- US Army soldier pleads guilty to selling sensitive military information
- How Wharton and Other Top Business Schools Are Training MBAs for the Climate Economy
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Ted Danson, Woody Harrelson recall ditching 'Cheers' set to do mushrooms
- Utah dad drowns at state park trying to save son who jumped into water to rescue woman
- Retired Olympic Gymnast Nastia Liukin Was Team USA’s Biggest Fan at the 2024 Paris Games
Recommendation
Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
Mountain lion kills pet dog in Los Angeles suburb: Gigi was an 'amazing little girl'
The beats go on: Trump keeps dancing as artists get outraged over his use of their songs
3 dead, 6 hurt including teen, kids in crash involving stolen car in Kansas City
Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
Pro-Trump lawyer removed from Dominion case after leaking documents to cast doubt on 2020 election
Vince Vaughn, ‘Ted Lasso’ co-creator Bill Lawrence bring good fun to Carl Hiaasen’s ‘Bad Monkey’
Jurors to hear opening statements in trial of ex-politician accused of killing Las Vegas reporter