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All rights reserved.| Track Listing 1. Little Bitty 2. Everything I Love 3. Who's Cheatin' Who 4. There Goes 5. I'll Go on Loving You 6. Right on the Money 7. Gone Crazy 8. Little Man 9. Pop a Top 10. Blues Man, The 11. It Must Be Love 12. Www.Memory 13. When Somebody Loves You 14. Where I Come From 15. Where Were You (When the World Stopped Turning) 16. Drive (For Daddy Gene) 17. It's Five O'Clock Somewhere - (with Jimmy Buffett) 18. Remember When
Album Notes Initial pressings of GREATEST HITS VOLUME 2 included a bonus CD. Personnel: Alan Jackson (vocals, guitar); Jimmy Buffett (vocals); Bruce Watkins, Greenwood Hart (acoustic guitar); Brent Mason (electric guitar); Paul Franklin, Lloyd Green (steel guitar); Stuart Duncan (mandolin, fiddle); Hargus "Pig" Robbins (piano); Glenn Worf (electric bass); Eddie Bayers (drums); Eric Darken (percussion); John Wesley Ryles (background vocals). Recorded at Emerald Entertainment's Tracking Room, The Sound Station, East Iris, Nashville, Tennessee; Shrimpboat Sound, Key West, Florida; McClear Digital, Toronto, Canada. "It's Five O'Clock Somewhere" won the 2004 Grammy Award for Best Country Song. The song was also nominated for Best Country Collaboration With Vocals. Anyone who earns a second volume of GREATEST HITS has obviously learned a thing or two about staying power and consistency of artistic vision. Such is the case with Alan Jackson, who appeared in the 1990s as mainstream country's alternative to the dominance of King Garth. His sound was still eminently accessible, but the faux-Springsteen drama of Kiss fan Garth's rock manque was eschewed for a more roots-oriented (though hardly traditionalist) sound. Things kick off nicely with the Cajun-flavored smash "Little Bitty," then giving way to the introspective, fiddle-laced country ballad "Everything I Love." Along the way, there's the pleasantly chugging, upbeat "It Must Be Love," the much-publicized post-9/11 song "Where Were You (When the World Stopped Turning)," thankfully absent of Toby Keith's contemporaneous jingoistic rancor, and the Jimmy Buffett-assisted party anthem "It's Five O' Clock Somewhere." Add a couple of unreleased tracks and a bonus disc of more obscure material, and you've got as good an introduction to Jackson's work as his first GREATEST HITS COLLECTION. | Find errors in the product description? Submit a catalog update request now. | ||||||||||||||
Review created: 09/12/06 by: MARIEROY -- a member of Epinions Pros: An album that displays Alan Jackson at his best. Cons: None I am now an Alan Jackson fan. First of all I have to say that I m not one to go crazy over an artist. A song perhaps. Yet I hate buying the whole CD for just one or two songs, but that s what I ended up doing this time. A friend of mine loves one of Cher s songs and curses the day he bought the CD for that one song. How many times has he told me that he bought her album because he enjoyed that one song Believe and then he ll go on to say that he doesn t like any of the other songs on the album (which I find difficult to believe considering that I love all of Cher s songs.) The first time I heard one of Alan Jackson s song was at a single s function. Whenever they play Remember When at these functions the dance floor will always fill up with couples. I am talking about a single s dance specifically aimed toward baby boomers--ages 40 plus, although mostly 50 s plus show up at these things. The words of this song pretty much express what happens within a relationship after so many years have passed, and those still together as they look back also begin to look forward to sharing the rest of their years together. Well, let me tell you, how many times I have found myself blinking in order to hold back tears thinking about how often my late husband had expressed his excitement and anticipation for his upcoming retirement years. And how during that fateful summer of 2002 at a school s out party he shared with others what we had planned to do once he was out of teaching, which would have been the following summer. And how we both looked forward to a time when the kids were grown, on their own, raising families and we would do our own thing. Well, it never happened. That party was held on June 10 of 2002. He died that following Fourth of July weekend. Many here on Epinions know the story so I will leave it at that and refrain from getting overly depressing here. Remember When is a wonderful song even for those who find each other later in life, and are together for a time. And this is just one of many songs that Alan Jackson sings that can uplift the heart and feed the soul while you listen through the entire CD from start to finish. I bought this one for that one song in particular, yet I am glad because I now enjoy every one of his songs on this album. Yesterday I used my repeat button on the car s CD player and played another one of his more memorable songs titled Where Were You When The World Stopped Turning? This is such an appropriate song for a day like yesterday, which as we all know was September 11 and the fifth anniversary of that horrendous event. And while playing it I realized at the time that I was taking the same exact route that I had taken on that fateful day when the towers came down. And the day was as clear and as beautiful, an awesome September day, the sky so blue with few clouds around. The same type of day where by mid afternoon all of us had found ourselves wrapped in unimaginable terror--a terror that will remain with us for years to come. I had just started attending a class at a local community college. I remember sitting inside that class waiting for our instructor to arrive. When he did and I saw him coming through the door and saw the look on his face I knew the country was in big trouble. A former ATF agent who has seen the worse that can be inflicted on society, I don t think even he could have prepared himself for what was happening that day. Yesterday I played the song over and over, and reflected upon the past five years, and I would have to say the pain has soften somewhat but for most of us it will never completely disappear. My father fought in WWII. Pearl Harbor was his September 11. And he as his generation have done will always remember where we were, what we were doing when the world stopped turning because of those events. Songs on this CD: 1. Little Bitty 2. Everything I Love 3. Who s Cheatin Who 4. There Goes 5. I ll Go ON Loving You 6. Right on the Money 7. Gone Crazy 8. Little Men 9. Pop A Top 10. The Blues Man 11. It Must Be Love 12. Www.memory 13. When Somebody Loves You 14. Where Were You When The World Stopped Turning 15. Drive For Daddy Gene 16. It s Five O Clock Somewhere 17. Remember When Alan Jackson: Greatest Hit Volume II is a plus to anyone s CD library especially for those who enjoy this type of country western music, and who also find themselves reflecting on the past. This CD is definitely right on the money! Review ID: 10000000001864357 Epinions.com ratings are not included in the item's average rating. Links in this review may have been removed. |
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