Lori McKenna has become a must-hear songwriter

SHARE Lori McKenna has become a must-hear songwriter
lori_mckenna_e1532476894139.jpg

Lori McKenna | Becky Fluke Photo

Lori McKenna “The Tree” (CN Records via Thirty Tigers)

It’s rare to read about Lori McKenna without hearing that she got married at 19 and had the first of her five children at 20. And since her latest album, “The Tree,” is a canon of songs about family, it would be easy to pigeonhole her as a mom singing sweetly about a world she knows well.

This cover image shows “The Tree,” a release by Lori McKenna. | CN Records via Thirty Tigers via AP

This cover image shows “The Tree,” a release by Lori McKenna. | CN Records via Thirty Tigers via AP

That would all be true, but it shouldn’t diminish her impact. McKenna also happens to be a brilliant songwriter.

On “The Tree,” she matches melody and mood to simple imagery that lets listeners see the picture she’s creating. A mother who can’t sit still, for example, is a hummingbird in a living room. A father’s billfold in church conveys greater significance than the simple image suggests.

The new album follows closely on “The Bird and the Rifle,” McKenna’s 2016 gem that netted three Grammy nominations and widespread acclaim. The praise was well-deserved, but this might be a better album.

Working with producer Dave Cobb, a master at getting the most out of well-crafted songs, McKenna builds on her reputation as a songwriter that other songwriters notice. Her singing is straight-ahead honest, her eyes fixed on the word-portrait she’s painting.

In the album’s first single, “People Get Old,” a heart-rending masterpiece about aging and the passing of time, the heat is in the lyrics.

“Every line on your face tells a story somebody knows,” she sings.

In McKenna’s hands, the story aches with beauty.

SCOTT STROUD, Associated Press

The Latest
The shells are turned into GastroPops, a treat used to lure predators so researchers can study their behavior. The students will travel to Miami later this month to test the treats in the field.
Louis Morgan bagged a big tom turkey on public land in northern Illinois to earn Turkey of the Week.
As a state that has already lost 90% of its wetlands, Illinois must protect what remains of these critical environments that may hold the key to bioremediation.
Why do lawmakers want to risk increasing the cost of prescription medications, a small business owner asks.
He calls his dad a cheapskate but won’t contribute toward a bigger gratuity.