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Artist: Eric Church Album: Mr. Misunderstood Bitrate: 237kbps avg Quality: EAC Secure Mode / LAME 3.98.4 / -V0 / 44.100Khz Label: EMI Nashville Genre: Country Size: 69.32 megs PlayTime: 0h 38min 39sec total Rip Date: 2015-11-15 Store Date: 2015-11-10 Track List: -------- 01. Mr. Misunderstood 5:19 02. Mistress Named Music 5:22 03. Chattanooga Lucy 3:23 04. Mixed Drinks About Feelings 2:59 05. Knives Of New Orleans 4:02 06. Round Here Buzz 3:34 07. Kill A Word 3:19 08. Holdin' My Own 3:56 09. Record Year 2:59 10. Three Year Old 3:46 Release Notes: -------- Eric Church has always been excellent at balancing whiskey-charged toughness with open-hearted musical subtlety: His first great hit was 2011's "Springsteen," a masterwork of literary detail and melodic texture, and 2014's The Outsiders nailed a 21st-century country-rock sweet spot. So it's no big shock to hear him big-upping Wilco's Jeff Tweedy (and even nicking one of his tunes) on this album, where he cleverly juggles genres and often leans on his somber singer-songwriter side. Recorded in about a month and surprise-released to fans, it's full of casual stunners: "Mixed Drinks About Feelings" is a closing-time piano duet with Susan Tedeschi; "Chattanooga Lucy" sees Church working a soul falsetto over a stomping dance groove; and the backing track for "Kill A Word" is like a twang-born kissing cousin of early-Eighties Fleetwood Mac. Church's well-observed writing and warm, generous wit ground the album, particularly on two examples of the small-town vignettes he does so well: The title track, which builds from acoustic reverie to barnburner as he empathizes with a misfit who has long-shot rock & roll dreams û tipping its hat to Wilco's 1996 opus Being There along the way û and the prettily elegiac "Round Here Buzz," which enters the term "lit up like that one stoplight" into the canon of go-nowhere drunk-dude one-liners. The most moving moment, "Record Year," is Church at his ecumenical best. It's a sweet, sad ode to post-breakup boozing next to a turntable that has Waylon, Willie and Stevie Wonder's Songs in the Key of Life in its stack of vinyl Band-Aids. Tweedy should be happy to be included in such fine company. This NFO File was rendered by NFOmation.net
Artist: Eric Church Album: Mr. Misunderstood Bitrate: 237kbps avg Quality: EAC Secure Mode / LAME 3.98.4 / -V0 / 44.100Khz Label: EMI Nashville Genre: Country Size: 69.32 megs PlayTime: 0h 38min 39sec total Rip Date: 2015-11-15 Store Date: 2015-11-10 Track List: -------- 01. Mr. Misunderstood 5:19 02. Mistress Named Music 5:22 03. Chattanooga Lucy 3:23 04. Mixed Drinks About Feelings 2:59 05. Knives Of New Orleans 4:02 06. Round Here Buzz 3:34 07. Kill A Word 3:19 08. Holdin' My Own 3:56 09. Record Year 2:59 10. Three Year Old 3:46 Release Notes: -------- Eric Church has always been excellent at balancing whiskey-charged toughness with open-hearted musical subtlety: His first great hit was 2011's "Springsteen," a masterwork of literary detail and melodic texture, and 2014's The Outsiders nailed a 21st-century country-rock sweet spot. So it's no big shock to hear him big-upping Wilco's Jeff Tweedy (and even nicking one of his tunes) on this album, where he cleverly juggles genres and often leans on his somber singer-songwriter side. Recorded in about a month and surprise-released to fans, it's full of casual stunners: "Mixed Drinks About Feelings" is a closing-time piano duet with Susan Tedeschi; "Chattanooga Lucy" sees Church working a soul falsetto over a stomping dance groove; and the backing track for "Kill A Word" is like a twang-born kissing cousin of early-Eighties Fleetwood Mac. Church's well-observed writing and warm, generous wit ground the album, particularly on two examples of the small-town vignettes he does so well: The title track, which builds from acoustic reverie to barnburner as he empathizes with a misfit who has long-shot rock & roll dreams tipping its hat to Wilco's 1996 opus Being There along the way and the prettily elegiac "Round Here Buzz," which enters the term "lit up like that one stoplight" into the canon of go-nowhere drunk-dude one-liners. The most moving moment, "Record Year," is Church at his ecumenical best. It's a sweet, sad ode to post-breakup boozing next to a turntable that has Waylon, Willie and Stevie Wonder's Songs in the Key of Life in its stack of vinyl Band-Aids. Tweedy should be happy to be included in such fine company. This NFO File was rendered by NFOmation.net