Track Listing 1. Few Questions, A 2. Everybody Needs Love 3. Sweet Sun Angel 4. Jesus Was a Country Boy 5. I Can't Sleep 6. Coming Back Again 7. Heaven Leave the Light On 8. I'm in the Mood For You 9. When She's Good She's Good 10. This Is What Matters 11. Countrified 12. I Don't Want to Know 13. I Can't Forget Her
| Details | | Contributing Artists: | Aubrey Haynie | | Producer: | Clay Walker, Jimmy Ritchey | | Distributor: | BMG Special Products | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Personnel: Clay Walker (vocals, guitar); Jimmy Ritchey (acoustic & electric guitars, nylon & gut string acoustic guitars, banjo); B. James Lowry, Biff Watson (acoustic guitar); David Grisson, Brent Mason (electric guitar); Paul Franklin (steel guitar); Jonathan Yudkin (banjo, violin, fiddle, viola, cello, harp); Aubrey Haynie (mandolin, fiddle); Kirl "Jelly Roll" Johnson (chromatic harp); Tim Akers (keyboards); Samuel B. Levine (tenor saxophone); Jim Horn (baritone saxophone); Steve Patrick (trumpet); Chris Dunn (trombone); Leland Sklar (bass); Shannon Forrest (drums); Eric Darken (percussion); Lisa Cochran, Melodie Crittenden, Wes Hightower (background vocals). Recorded at Ocean Way Nashville, The Money Pit, Black Bird Studio, and Loud Studios, Nashville, Tennessee. Clay Walker emerged in the post-Garth era of country music, and while he's not unmarked by that sensibility, he's also got a little of the Randy Travis-style balladeer in him. In fact, instead of opening with an up-tempo, hook-heavy song, A FEW QUESTIONS starts with its soul-searching title track, which finds Walker inquiring of God for the reasons why people suffer--not the sort of thing you'd expect from a guy whose sole writing credit on the album is "Jesus Was a Country Boy." Walker rocks out a bit on the roadhouse chugger "I'm in the Mood for You" and with the blues-rock swagger of "Coming Back Again," showing that he's just as adept at moving and shaking as he is at broken-hearted crooning. At the time of this album's release, Walker had already been a consistent hit-maker for 10 years, with little to prove, but that didn't slow the Clay Walker success train down a single bit.
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