THE NEW ALBUM IS HERE!

Jagged Edges
It feFeaturing the song "Im Not Going Anywhere" from
the upcoming Burt Reynold's movie "Deal" due out in August.

The new album just arrived so mosey on over to Kelly's MySpace; she already has a song or two up there and she would love to know what you think. Don't be shy, leave her a message. She has recorded seventeen, yep 17, songs. Each and every one has her unique fingerprint. She wrote six of the songs by herself; the rest were written with good friends Lorrie Morgan and Mark Oliverius. If you are interested in purchasing an album, click HERE.

To request a review copy of the album click HERE

Kelly Lang - Jagged Edges
Album review courtesy of: CountryStarsOnline.com

Some things are worth waiting for and one of those things just arrived in my mailbox this week. In 2004 when Kelly Lang released her debut album, It's About Time, I tossed her CD into my player and, with just one run through, I agreed fully with the title for a variety of reasons. I became an instant fan of her marvelous voice and it wasn't long before I discovered that, not only was it about time that she recorded a real album, but it was also about time she showcased her prolific songwriting skills and, on this project, she does just that. She wrote six of the seventeen (yep, seventeen) songs by herself and co-wrote on the other eleven. She decided to call her sophomore release Jagged Edges because the tracks on this album are what they refer to in the industry as rough cuts; they haven't been studio tweaked, filtered or refined in any way. The end result, as you will hear, however, is anything but rough and the only place jagged edges show up on this album, is in the title. 

With all due respect to Martina, whose fantastic voice can shoot right through you in the most delightful way and cause the hair to stand up on your arms for days afterward, Lang's incredible voice often causes the same reaction but the difference is you never see it coming. When she sings, it is so easy to lose yourself in the music and, before you know it, her voice has steeped into the deepest parts of your consciousness and weaved its way through a symbiotic chord that you never thought anyone would ever discover, let alone actually touch.

Her lyrics are strong and sometimes so visual that you find yourself flinching. In "If I'd Only Known" she sings "If I'd know you would break my heart / Make it shatter all apart / I would have never let you in / I was fine just where I'd been / If I'd known you would rape my soul / Leave me to bleed out of control / I'd have never let you near / I was fine without you here"

Like every great songwriter, Lang is perfectly capable of taking everything life throws at her, good or bad, and setting it to restorative music. The end results are songs full of empathy that touch your heart, lift your spirits, allow you to cry, and yet, never fail to leave you inspired. Lang hasn't had to go outside of her own life to be able to write about desperation or to seek inspiration. The sensitivity, passion, humor, compassion, and hope reflected in her songs is derived from parents who motivated and inspired her, a broken marriage that forced her to grow in new directions, two amazingly beautiful daughters who have taught her the meaning of unconditional love, and a ten round battle with cancer that has her emerging as an empowered survivor.

Lang is one of the new breed of singer/songwriters who are so creative they can't be labeled or confined to one genre but her allegiance to country music is crystal clear when "Under a Tennessee Moon" flows out of your speakers and fills the room like a magnolia blossom potpourri. On this specific track she is an ace ambassador for Music City and this song is the perfect anthem for the entire state of Tennessee. As she sings "Tennessee river, it runs through my veins / I still love to hear Smokey Mountain rain / Of all of the places that I have been to / I want to grow old Under a Tennessee moon;" you WILL believe her.

The final cut on this musical feast is "You Think You're Su-uh," co-written with good friends Lorrie Morgan and Mark Oliverius. This cut is just plain fun and if you listen closely, you will hear the background vocals are a universal childhood taunt, "na, nanna, na, na." It wouldn't surprise me if Paris Hilton discarded her trademark "hot" for "su-uh" since it has the perfect DNA to become a popular new catch phrase.

Lang sings "if you ain't su-uh / you ain't nu-uh" and you will know one thing for certain after hearing her new album; when it comes to beauty, talent and vocal acuity, Lang has cornered the market on "su-uh." This one is a definite keeper.

Editor's Note: "I'm Not Going Anywhere," track seven, will be featured in the new Burt Reynolds movie, "Deal," due to be released in August.


Click here to watch Kelly's video "Goodbye Darlin'"


Kelly Lang: It's About Time
Album Review by George Peden

As the headline act for a new Nashville label, Destiny Row, Kelly Lang has hit the charts quickly. Her single "Down On My Knees," from the album It’s About Time, claimed a recent top spot on the Power Source charts.

It’s not hard to hear how Lang has bagged a winning album.  With 12 generous songs – no song runs less than three and a half minutes – she has taken the ambitious route of writing or co-writing nine tunes.  And to her credit, the singer, who once was a semi-regular on Ralph Emery’s Nashville Now, and who had a CMT clip at 15, shows a distinct writing flair.

"Goodbye Darlin'," the current radio single, is a respectful remembrance to Conway Twitty.  Twitty, the legend with 55 #1 chart visits (more than either the Beatles or Elvis), passed away in 1993.  It was the year he released his last album, Final Touches.  Honest and haunting, Lang explores her feelings for the remembered singer with the distinctive perm.  The depth of feeling is understandable.  Lang’s father was road manager for 25 years to Harold Lloyd Jenkins, who took his stage name from townships in a road map (Conway, Arkansas, and Twitty, Texas).

Lang’s smoky and moody vocals are ideal for the range of subject and circumstances caught here.  "Something ‘Bout Ya," uses a catchy guitar lick to spread her message of unexplained attraction, while "You Complete Me" carries a similar theme of life’s better with two in tow.

Standout cuts include the sultry tale of "Down In Destin," where a bikini and Coppertone spells possibilities against the lyrical hurt of a left-behind romance.  The autobiographical "Single Mother" captures a frenzied life of clock-beating and timetables – a life well known for this singer with two daughters.  The slow burning, "When We Loved Here," has Lang sharing an inkwell with T.G.Sheppard on a travelogue of passion and locale, while "Down On My Knees" is a mandolin, fiddle, and Dobro fusion of spirituality, acceptance, and plain goodtime Sunday night revivalism.

Kelly Lang, with her tight and precise studio band and neat session singers, offers diversity, talent, and potential, and, at the same time, echoes this reviewer’s sentiment with her debut title – it’s about time.

It's About Time, a new album by the multi-talented Kelly Lang, displays a depth of passion that is most often associated with only legendary singers. Her voice reflects country music in one of its most beautiful, simple, yet eloquent, forms.

An accomplished artist -- in music and painting -- her more than capable songwriting ability is aptly demonstrated in this album. She wrote or co-wrote nine of the twelve songs on the album. Although all of the songs are good, my favorite ones are "You Complete Me" and the moving "Looking Down."

"You Complete Me" is a simple ode to love and although the impact is subtle, it still has the kick of an emotional mule. Anyone who has ever been in love will recognize the feelings as Lang serenades the romantic in all of us.

"Looking Down," although equally beautiful, is really tough to listen to if you, or someone close to you, is a parent who has lost a spouse. In the song a child draws a picture, sticks it on the fridge and says, "Mama come and see there you are holding my hand and there's our puppy playing in the sand. And that's our house and my swing in the tree and if you look real close you can see Daddy -- looking down from the big blue sky, he's looking down, watching over you and I. Mama don't you cry." As sad as those words sound, the message of this song is uplifting and provides a profound lesson about faith, simply illustrated by a child's crayons. Brilliantly written, and masterfully sung, by Lang.

It's About Time, isn't just the name of her album, it is also what music fans will be saying from coast to coast, and around the world, after they hear it. Twelve songs for boot-scootin' and boo-hooin'. Life set to music - accurately encapsulating the ups and downs of it. Lang has more than enough vocal acuity and beauty to completely captivate an audience -- in fact, her eyes alone are probably enough to do that -- the rest is just a bonus. Encore! 
                                                                                                                                           Album review courtesy of
CountryStarsOnline.com

Kelly is featured on CMT

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