Track Listing 1. That's the Way I Remember It 2. Lost in You 3. Snow in July 4. Driftin' Away 5. Way of the Girl 6. Unsigned Letter 7. It Don't Matter to the Sun 8. Right Now 9. Main Street 10. White Flag 11. Digging For Gold 12. Maybe 13. My Love Tells Me So
| Details | | Producer: | Don Was | | Distributor: | EMI Music Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Personnel includes: Garth Brooks (vocals, acoustic guitar); Gordon Kennedy (vocals, acoustic & electric guitars, bass); Wayne Kirkpatrick (acoustic guitar, Clavinet, keyboards, programming, background vocals); Tommy Sims (acoustic guitar, keyboards, programming, background vocals); Reggie Young (electric guitar); Mike Lawler (Clavinet, keyboards); Phil Madeira, Rami Jaffee (Hammond B-3 organ); Matt Rollings, Greg Phillinganes, Blair Masters (keyboards); Jimmie Lee Sloas, Hutch Hutchison (bass); Chris McHugh (drums, percussion, programming); Kenny Aronoff, Dan Needham, Eddie Bayers (drums); Lenny Castro, Terry McMillan (percussion); Crystal Taliefero, Lee Leavitt, Mark Heimermann, Chris Harris (background vocals). Engineers include: JB Baird, Glenn Spinner, Steve Bishir. All tracks have been digitally mastered using HDCD technology. For IN THE LIFE OF CHRIS GAINES, Garth Brooks has created the character Chris Gaines, a pop/rock superstar. This "greatest hits" album, made to accompany a movie called "The Lamb," features tracks from every stage of Gaines's "career." According to the story, Gaines first tasted fame as part of a band called Crush, who made a big splash in 1986 with the song "My Love Tells Me So." After the death of Crush's singer, Gaines went solo, and the track selection here is meant to show how his voice matured over the course of four albums. These solid, melodic, and well-crafted tracks incorporate influences from the Beatles, Bob Seger, Stevie Wonder, Aerosmith, Billy Joel, and Bob Dylan. However, Brooks' voice is nearly always instantly recognizable--to wit, the man may be behind the curtain, but his cowboy hat is showing. The CD also includes two "new" tracks. While the dreamy "Lost in You" sounds suspiciously like Babyface (co-producer of "The Lamb" film), the compelling "Right Now" combines chanted lyrics with the chorus of the Youngbloods' classic "Get Together." Even if you can't get past the fact that Gaines doesn't actually exist, this still absolutely hangs together as a pop/rock album.
Editorial Reviews ...Wack-eee...Yet, an astonishingly good record....He rarely sounds like himself because everything is deliberately pitched in keys too high for 'Garth Brooks'... Mojo (12/01/1999)
3 stars out of 5 - ...this is the pre-soundtrack album of Gaines' bogus 'greatest hits'. Producer Don Was does his usual reliable job....[It's] Prince without the sex. Strange. Q (01/01/2000)
3 stars out of 5 - ...this is the pre-soundtrack album of Gaines' bogus 'greatest hits'. Producer Don Was does his usual reliable job....[It's] Prince without the sex. Strange. Q (01/01/2000)
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