http://nz.entertainment.yahoo.com//090530/5/clj1.html
Saturday May 30, 12:02 PM
Country singer Lambert cottons to cotton campaign
NASHVILLE (Billboard) - Rising country star Miranda
Lambert, who has sold millions of albums on the success of
in-your-face songs "Kerosene" and "Gunpowder & Lead," has gone
cottony soft.
Lambert, along with R&B star Jazmine Sullivan and
singer/actress Zooey Deschanel, has become the face of Cotton
Inc.'s revival of its "The Touch, The Feel of Cotton" campaign,
originally launched in 1989. The melody, which was popularized
by Richie Havens and Aaron Neville and retired in 2001, has
been resurrected to reach an audience of 18- to 24-year-old
women.
According to Kevin McKiernan, president/CEO of the agency
Creative License, the 25-year-old Lambert's image as a sort-of
bad girl -- in "Kerosene" she burns down a cheating boyfriend's
house and in "Gunpowder & Lead" she waits for an abusive mate
with a loaded gun -- is just fine with Cotton, the research and
promotion company for U.S. cotton growers and importers. "It's
nice that Miranda has some edges," he says. "She is so down to
earth and fashionable and cool."
Separate TV commercials, created by DDB New York, began
airing in April as part of the "Fabric of My Life" campaign,
which includes print and Internet components.
Lambert admits to being a bit anxious about recording such
a well-known song. "I wanted it to be great because Aaron
Neville's work was amazing," she says, "and you're going to be
compared whether you like it or not."
Lambert's version of the song, along with Sullivan's and
Deschanel's, can be heard on the Web site
thefabricofourlives.com, which includes artist bios, album
artwork and links to iTunes. "It's as much of a showcase for
the artist as it is for cotton," says Aatish Patel, director of
music and talent at Creative License. The site also has free
downloads of full-length versions of the cotton song.
The campaign's digital component interested Marion Kraft,
Lambert's manager at Strategic Artist Management. "Miranda's
fans and contemporaries are women 18-34 and they are really
active on the Internet," she says.
Lambert, who has sold 1.7 million copies combined of her
first two albums, according to Nielsen SoundScan, is working on
her third set, tentatively scheduled for a September release.
She's currently touring with Kenny Chesney.
Kraft also likes the fact that Lambert's deal doesn't
restrict what she can and can't wear. "They understand that a
girl from Texas is going to wear a leather belt and leather
cowboy boots from time to time," Kraft says. "They didn't tell
her, 'You have to wear cotton socks from now on.' The deal is
easy for her because she already wears cotton."
According to Patel, "We didn't want anyone to look like
they were shilling for cotton. It was about a more natural,
organic fit with the brand."
Kraft believes that deals with a strong promotional
component are becoming more important. "Ideally you want to
say, 'It's a great song and everybody should love it,' but
these days you need a little more oomph to get to the masses,"
she says. "We all need a little help from brand partners that
have deeper pockets."
(Editing by Sheri Linden at Reuters)
(please visit our entertainment blog via www.reuters.com or on
http://blogs.reuters.com/fanfare/)
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