Margo Price: Hard Headed Woman
Briefly

Margo Price emerged as a 21st-century artist with a 20th-century style, debuting in 2016 with Midwest Farmer's Daughter, a Bobby Gentry–inspired record blending vintage country-soul and rap-like vividness. The debut sketched her hardscrabble life and established a compelling outlaw persona informed by political conviction and high-profile collaborations. Her sound has shifted across albums, widening on All American Made and venturing experimentally on later releases. Hard Headed Woman returns to classic country, recorded at RCA Studio A, while integrating gospel fragments, a rewritten Kris Kristofferson anti-war ballad recast as a raucous honky-tonk rebuttal, and the artist's defiant, provocative voice.
Margo Price has always been a 21st-century artist with 20th-century style. Her 2016 debut, Midwest Farmer's Daughter, was a Bobby Gentry fever dream that played out a hot writing hand: vintage country-soul lit with rap-lyric vividness. The record also sketched her moving, hardscrabble personal narrative (further unspooled in a 2022 memoir)-the basis for an exceedingly compelling persona Price has built alongside her records. She rocks the "outlaw country" label as hard as anyone in the game (praising psilocybin and posing on a Manhattan corner puffing a fatty in 2022 New York Times feature); wears her politics proudly on her sleeve (NB: her two-word introduction to a cover of Woody Guthrie's "Deportee" at Newport Folk Festival); and, to judge from her countless collaborations, ranks high among your favorite artists' favorite artists. All the while, her music's been shapeshifting, blossoming wider on 2017's All American Made and roaming further afield, with mixed success, on her last two LPs and a truckload of one-offs since.
In some ways, her latest, Hard Headed Woman, is a return to classic country form-recorded in Nashville at RCA Studio A, where Waylon Jennings cut the 1973 outlaw-genre touchstone Honky Tonk Heroes. But Price's record is also an integration and exhalation. The opener is a fragment of secular gospel that announces "I'm a hard headed woman and I don't owe ya shit." That dovetails into a rewrite of Kris Kristofferson's "Don't Let the Bastards Get You Down" that recasts the late outlaw-scholar's scathing anti-war ballad as a rowdy, funny, defensively personal honky-tonk screed. The track takes ostensible aim at "tone deaf sons of bitches" in the music industry: "Dudes lookin' down their noses/Thinkin bullshit smells like roses," she yawps with gusto, "All the cocaine in existence/Can't keep your nose out of my business." Price was friends with the late Kristofferson, and was raised
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