Connie Smith.Photo: Alysse Gafkjen

No one would think any less of Connie Smith if she chose to rest on her laurels. And she has some mighty laurels to rest on, starting with that plaque with her name on it in theCountry Music Hall of Fame.
So what drives the 80-year-old country legend to still record?
“It’s what I love … I love music,” Smith tells PEOPLE. “I can sing around the table. I can sing at the kitchen sink. It don’t make a difference. It’s just in me, and I think that’s my destiny.”
And make no mistake, Smith can still sing, as she proves conclusively on her new album,The Cry of the Heart, out on Friday. Time has added burnish to her sound, but the familiar timbre, phrasing — and, most of all, emotion — still resonate from one of country’s most powerful voices.
Lots of Smith’s fellow icons have held that voice in the highest esteem.George JonesandMerle Haggardboth considered her their favorite female artist. And Dolly Parton famously said, “There’s really only three real female singers:Barbra Streisand,Linda Ronstadt, and Connie Smith. The rest of us are only pretending.”
Yet Smith downplays the lavish praise. “Well, I’d like to earn it,” she says, “so I’m trying.”
What took her so long?
As she’s done in other phases of her 57-year career, Smith says, she chose to put her home life first: She’s the proud mother of five and grandmother of eight, and her first great-grandchild was born last October. She and Stuart also had to carve out their studio time amid his packed work schedule and many side projects.
Connie Smith.Alysse Gafkjen

“He just has such a big heart, and he can read people, and he read me,” says Smith. “He knows the kind of song I like, and sometimes he’s even sung them like he thinks I’d sing them, and he’s usually right. He’s just amazing.”
The songs that Smith likes the most — it’s obvious from all 11 of the album’s tracks — brim with the straight-up fiddle-and-steel twang that the genre was built on. Smith says she named the albumThe Cry of the Heart, because to her, that’s the sound of country.
“It’s my heart going out to the people that I sing to,” she says, “so if this song fits them, then they know someone identifies with them. And it makes them feel better when someone identifies with their pain or their joy.”
Alysse Gafkjen

More often for Smith, it’s the pain. No wonder she’s earned the nickname “the Queen of Broken Hearts”: Eight of the album’s tracks pulse with heartache, even when it arrives on an uptempo beat. Highlights include Frazier’s “I Just Don’t Believe Me Anymore”; the Billy Walker classic, “A Million and One”; and the Smith-Stuart co-write, “Spare Me No Truth Tonight.”
Smith has also populated her new music with a Hall of Fame who’s who, besides her and Stuart. Among the songwriters are Mel Tillis and Haggard, and perhaps most movingly, Smith brought into the studio 83-year-old Hall of Fame pianist Hargus “Pig” Robbins, who has played on many of her albums, including her first, released in 1965.
“Oh, I hope I can have him for the rest of the albums that I record,” she says. “He’s been on every one I could get him on, when he wasn’t on somebody else’s session. When he plays, it just lays down such a foundation that it’s easier for me to sing.”
Also elevating Smith’s voice is the sweet sound of pedal steel in the hands of Gary Carter, who’s recorded or toured withRandy Travis,Faith Hill,Kenny ChesneyandAlan Jackson,among many others.
“I’ve always called the steel guitar my dancing partner,” says Smith. “If I’d have been an instrument, I’d have been a steel guitar. I love it because there’s that cry in it.”
Stuart’s touch, of course, can be felt and heard throughout the album. Besides producing it, he played multiple instruments, sang harmonies and co-wrote two of the songs. “He is a genius, and he’s so good at everything he does, and he can do everything,” Smith says. “He’s got it all, and he’s great to work with because his heart is so big.”
Smith vows she won’t wait another 10 years for her next album. In fact, she says, she already has seven songs for it. A serious bout with COVID-19 that hospitalized her in January has slowed her in recent months, she allows, but she’s recently been back performing at the Grand Ole Opry, and she’s determined to play full shows again.

And, she says, she’s also determined to continue to grow as an artist: “I love to sing, and I’ve never reached what I think I’d like to be. If I could just take some lessons fromAdeleorTrisha Yearwoodor someone that has a world-class voice, you know, that would be great.”
Those are just two of the names that come to her mind when she thinks of — as Dolly Parton put it — “real female singers.” Smith also places Parton, Streisand and Ronstadt on her list, as well.
But her all-time favorite? Sorry, Dolly.
“I have to sayLoretta Lynn,” Smith reveals. “I could follow her around like a puppy.”
source: people.com