Album Review – Hailey Whitters – “Corn Queen”

Classic Country (#510.1), Country Kitsch (#578) with some Country Pop (#530.2) on the Country DDS.
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Endearing herself to you with simple but prophetic country-isms sung on top of traditional but sensible instrumentation, Hailey Whitters makes for one of the most navigable bridges between the independent and mainstream, and the classic and contemporary. She offers something entertaining and enlightening to just about everyone, and on her new album Corn Queen, for 16 solid tracks.
In many ways, it was Kacey Musgraves who seeded the appetite for this type of kitschy country underpinned with meaningful songwriting in the modern country appetite. But Spacey Kacey virtually abandoned the space, which has allowed Whitters to thrive in it, and offer something few if anyone else is willing or able to fill. Song after song on Corn Queen impresses you with its clever turns, country sound and attitude, or impact on the emotional Richter Scale.
That said, you can’t expect a traditional country record here in totality. Corn Queen comes from major label in Big Loud—the same label as Morgan Wallen. Tracks like “High on a Heartbreak” and “White Limousine” remind you of mainstream radio fare, while three and four co-writers with common names like Jessie Jo Dillon and Ben Hayslip result in a few formulaic turns of phrase. Some of these tracks were definitely slotted for contemporary playlisting, even if it’s fair to characterize the album overall as more traditional.
The opening song “High On The Hog” was written all by Hailey Whitters herself though, and is an excellent little traditional country tune about how despite all of her recognition, Whitters remains in the up and coming class, still fighting for all the attention she can get. Hailey didn’t have a hand in writing the song “Casseroles” at all, but it’s an excellent performance by her, and a stellar arrangement by producer Jake Gear who was tasked with straddling a tough line on this record between two country worlds, and does a commendable job of it.

The majority of Corn Queen is spent taking colloquial sayings native to rural America, and making fun country songs out of them in a way that graces the album with a cohesive theme and enjoyable disposition. From shotgun weddings, to hitchin’ your wagon, to nails in the coffin, Hailey Whitters takes the cornpone and makes it cool. There’s a playful nature about her approach that keeps everything accessible, like the funky sound of the song “Wholesome.” But she’s not afraid to get sentimental and sad either.
Appearances by Charles Wesley Godwin, Molly Tuttle, and The Wilder Blue further ingratiate this mainstream-facing artist with independent audiences, and those tracks are some of the album’s best. “Corn Queen” really is a great way to characterize the Hailey Whitters experience. She’s received recognition and accolades from some of country music’s highest institutions, yet like a corn crop, there’s an everyman commonality to her and her music, and you can still see her perform for $25.
Though Whitters and Corn Queen might not compete with the top crop of critically acclaimed independent releases this growing season, amid the cash cow crop of heifers in the mainstream, it will distinguish itself from the herd, and perhaps lead the pack, helping to put actual country songs and sounds back in the popular genre. That’s what makes an artist like Hailey Whitters and an album like Corn Queen so important.
As she sings in the fourth verse of the song “Anything Like Me”:
Take your country music ringin’ true and loud
Proud to wave that flag, keep your boots on the ground
You’ll die on that hill, that’s how it’s gonna be
That’s everything to you, if you’re anything like me
1 3/4 Guns Up (8/10)
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Purchase/stream Corn Queen
June 13, 2025 @ 7:31 am
Where IS Kacey Musgraves ?I liked her strange but interesting interpretations of Country.
June 13, 2025 @ 9:57 pm
Went pop for a couple albums. Think there’s reason to believe she’s trying to come back to country again, but time will tell
June 13, 2025 @ 7:36 am
I’m really enjoying this record, and like I usually say, I’ll be enjoying it a little more after I condense it and cut 2 or 3 songs. Jake’s production is A+ in my book, and I don’t mind the variety. I like most of the tunes, especially the ones with Charles and The Wilder Blue. The jury is still out on White Limousine, and I can’t for the life of me figure out why anyone would put the title track in the 15th slot because I moved it way up. Casseroles is just a beautiful song as well. This album will be #1 for the morning drive into work for the foreseeable future. Tickets go on sale this morning for her very intimate show here at Joe’s on Weed st. where she’s played before. I’m sure it will be sold out and will be a fun night.
June 13, 2025 @ 7:39 am
I like Hailey Whitters a lot. It wasn’t long ago that she and Lainey Wilson were pretty much on the same level. They co-opened for Jon Pardi in 2022 when he didn’t suck. I much prefer Hailey’s discography to Wilson’s.
June 13, 2025 @ 7:42 am
I am really enjoying this album as I did her last 2. Good album.
June 13, 2025 @ 9:14 am
…if anyone took the pleasure to go through all of her four albums you’d find out that there isn’t a not strong one. hailey whitters is just a mighty fine artist and funny as hell. 16 songs and not a dud – quite to the contrary actually – makes “corn queen” easily one of the best releases across the board so far this year. just take a line like “…she’s a map dot living the dream…” in that delightfully entertaining title track. the hardest thing with this album is to find flaws in it. 8 is a full point below its fair value.
June 13, 2025 @ 10:02 am
The new Ashland Craft album Dive Bar Beauty Queen may appeal to visitors of this site too.
June 13, 2025 @ 10:27 am
Agreed that “High on a Heartbreak” and “White Limousines” are the weakest tracks. Not bad, just not up to the high standards of the rest. My top three are “Wagon,” “Shotgun Wedding Baby” and “Corn Queen,” with “DanceMor” and “I Don’t Want You” next. Definitely a “listen all the way through” album, a rarity in mainstream country.
I hope this gets Hailey the attention she deserves in both country music “worlds.” Streaming on YouTube is pretty puny so far. Maybe it’s doing better on Spotify, or will take off when Big Loud decides whether it wants to send a single to radio and radio decides that Hailey deserves to be one of the rare tomatoes in its mainly male salad.
Still think it deserves a 9.0, but I’d settle for 8.5.
Who are the musicians on this? Her road band or Big Loud session players?
June 13, 2025 @ 11:13 am
I am thinking “Shotgun Wedding” might make it onto the list of best county unintended pregnancy songs: “Down from Dover,” “Two Weeks Late,” “What’s Your Mama’s Name?”… What I am I missing?
June 13, 2025 @ 1:39 pm
“One Beer” by Hardy? Not up to the quality of your selections, though,
June 13, 2025 @ 4:24 pm
Not entirely country on paper but entirely so in spirit: Jackson Browne – “Ready or Not”
June 14, 2025 @ 3:27 am
Miranda Lambert – “Babies Makin’ Babies”
June 14, 2025 @ 5:50 am
Children of children. Isbell
June 14, 2025 @ 7:00 am
The River and Spare Parts by Bruce Springsteen.
June 14, 2025 @ 9:52 am
And those Wild Boys would never know
We had a baby on the way
The year our friends started school…
But man – We were cool.
Lori McKenna
Songwriters – That’s how you do it, right there.
June 13, 2025 @ 4:19 pm
I like this album. I think I just need a sprinkle of pop in my country but it’s gotta be country at heart and these songs definitely are. I always appreciate the craftsmanship and dedication it takes to produce a true traditional country album – say like Emily Nenni for example. But that style isn’t where I came from so it doesn’t resonate as much with me personally. Now I’m going to buy a ticket to see Hailey. She’s coming to town in October.
June 14, 2025 @ 5:45 pm
Hopefully,Zach.I LOVED me some Kacey Musgraves.
June 14, 2025 @ 5:47 pm
Where Is Jon Pardi today?( Ol’ boy went the way of former Golden Boy Brantley Gilbert,it seems).
June 14, 2025 @ 9:09 pm
Solid album. I understand the negativity “White Limousine” has received in the comments, given that it has a more pop-leaning sound than the rest of the album, but I think it is actually one of the stronger tracks. The spacey production works, and the lyrics don’t really feel clichéd as much as simple. The song is more about the mood than the lyrics, and I think it captures that well. Agree on some other songs, like “High on a Heartbreak,” feeling a bit cliché and meant to appeal to radio/the mainstream. “White Limousine” doesn’t feel the same, though, and underscores the point that a song can have a pop sound while still not really being “radio-friendly.” I would be shocked to hear it played on mainstream radio.
June 16, 2025 @ 6:46 am
“Casseroles” has a strong McKenna feeling and that’s a really good thing
June 16, 2025 @ 7:24 am
“White Limousine” gave me Pageant Material/ Kacey vibes. I love this one!
June 26, 2025 @ 10:54 am
So, is Big Loud going to send anything from this superb, widely praised album to radio? I realize that Morgan Wallen is their meal ticket, but aside from Hardy, the label has failed to push any of its other artists to an appreciable extent — its other female artists especially (Ashley Cooke and Lauren Watkins). I know radio exposure isn’t all that important now, but it seems borderline criminal that Hailey appears headed for one-hit wonder status in mainstream country. To my ears, there’s plenty on Corn Queen that could work on radio with the right backing from the label. What are they waiting for? A Hardy/Whitters or Wallen/Whitters duet?