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Lady A: The Messy Battle Over a Country Band's Rebrand

Episode 6519 Published 1 week, 4 days ago
Description

A haunted antebellum mansion, a 2006 Nashville photo shoot, and an offhand joke about a ghost gave one of country music's biggest trios its name — and planted a time bomb. Lady Antebellum's 2020 rebrand to Lady A was meant to correct a painful historical blind spot, but it ignited one of the messiest naming battles in country music history.

The band's well-intentioned change collided with Anita White, the Seattle blues and gospel singer who had already performed as Lady A for decades — turning an apology into a corporate trademark lawsuit. It is a case study in how fixing a past mistake without checking who occupies the space can create a whole new harm.

• The name came from an antebellum mansion shoot and a quip about a haunted ghost inside

• "Lady" was added arbitrarily simply because the trio had a female lead singer

• During their peak-era hiatus, Charles Kelley cut solo track "The Driver" with Dierks Bentley

• The rebrand pitted corporate legal muscle against an independent artist already using the name

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