Lana Del Rey has changed the title of her upcoming country album again.

In an interview for W magazine published on Tuesday, the singer-songwriter announced that her tenth studio album is set to be released at the end of January 2026.

After originally being titled Lasso and later renamed The Right Person Will Stay, Lana is now calling the project Stove.

Reflecting on working with music producers Luke Laird and Jack Antonoff on the music in Nashville, Tennessee over the past two years, the Video Games hitmaker explained that she decided to delay the album a little so she could add six songs.

"They were more autobiographical than I thought, and that took more time," she said. "The majority of the album will have a country flair. Eight years ago, when I was looking to make a country record, no one else was thinking about country. Now everyone is going country! I've asked myself, 'Should I retire all my snakeskin boots? Should I put my cowboy hats in storage?'"

Lana, real name Elizabeth Grant, went on to explain that she had debated releasing an album titled Country and Western at one point. The record would include her takes on songs about California, such as Joni Mitchell's iconic 1971 track, and country music like Waylon Jennings's 1977 single, Luckenbach, Texas (Back to the Basics of Love).

"The storytelling is there in both," the 40-year-old noted. "And I'm always drawn to world-creating, especially in country music."

Elsewhere in the chat, Lana shared that she wrote the song Stars Fell on Alabama for her husband, Jeremy Dufrene, whom she wed in September 2024.

The pair first met in 2019, when the Summertime Sadness singer signed up for a boat tour of Des Allemands, Louisiana.

"Jeremy is the most impactful person in my life. He's quiet in public, but around me he talks all the time," she revealed. "It's strange: Jeremy and I have what we call 'parking-lot time.' We spend so much time in parking lots, just reading or talking in the car. Sometimes, in life, you think you're the only one in the world who loves a particular thing, like sitting in an empty Macy's or Home Depot parking lot. You might be really weird to some people, but then you find another soul who feels the same way."