When The Sun Goes DownKenny Chesney
Release Date: 02/03/2004
Original Release:
2004
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 508298_CD
UPC # 828765660921
Label: BNA
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Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Kenny Chesney
Artist: Uncle Kracker; Melonie Cannon; John Jorgenson Engineer: Tony Castle; Billy Sherrill Producer: Kenny Chesney; Buddy Cannon Distributor: BMG (distributor) Notes: Personnel includes: Kenny Chesney (vocals); B. James Lowry (acoustic, nylon, & bottle neck guitar); John Willis (acoustic, electric & nylon string guitar); Pat Buchanan, J.T. Corenflos, Clayton Mitchell, Dann Huff, John Jorgenson (electric guitar); Tim Hensley (banjo); Rob Hajacos (fiddle); Pat Buchanan (harmonica); Randy McCormick (piano, keyboards, synthesizer); John Hobbs (piano, Hammond B-3 organ); Gary Prim (piano); Melanie Cannon (background vocals); Uncle Cracker. This is a Limited edition which contains 3 live bonus tracks. Personnel includes: Kenny Chesney (vocals); B. James Lowry (acoustic, nylon, & bottle neck guitar); John Willis (acoustic, electric & nylon string guitar); Pat Buchanan, J.T. Corenflos, Clayton Mitchell, Dann Huff, John Jorgenson (electric guitar); Tim Hensley (banjo); Rob Hajacos (fiddle); Pat Buchanan (harmonica); Randy McCormick (piano, keyboards, synthesizer); John Hobbs (piano, Hammond B-3 organ); Gary Prim (piano); Melanie Cannon (background vocals); Uncle Cracker. Personnel: John Willis (acoustic guitar, electric guitar, nylon-string guitar); B. James Lowry (acoustic guitar, bottleneck guitar, nylon-string guitar); Pat Buchanan (electric guitar, harmonica); Dann Huff, Clayton Mitchell, John Jorgenson, J.T. Corenflos (electric guitar); Dan Dugmore, Sonny Garrish, Scotty Sanders (steel guitar); Tim Hensley (banjo, background vocals); Rob Hajacos (fiddle); Gary Prim (piano, Wurlitzer organ, synthesizer); Randy McCormick (piano, keyboards, synthesizer); John Hobbs (piano); Steve Nathan (Wurlitzer organ); Paul Leim (drums, tambourine, percussion); Eddie Bayers, Chad Cromwell (drums); Mat Britain, Tom Roady (steel drum, percussion); Sean Paddock (percussion); Neil Thrasher, Uncle Kracker, Wes Hightower, Melonie Cannon, Wyatt Beard (background vocals). Audio Mixer: Kevin Beamish. Recording information: Emerald Sound Studios; Starstruck Studios; Westwood Studios. Editor: Tony Castle. Photographer: Melanie Dunea. Unlike many of his peers, who work overtime to perpetuate hard-living country singer myths, Kenny Chesney never tries to be anything other than what he is. On "Keg in the Closet," for example, he reminisces in great detail about his fraternity days in the late 1980s, something no self-conscious outlaw wannabe would ever attempt. On the similarly nostalgic "I Go Back," he's not afraid to reference John Mellencamp's "Jack & Diane" and Billy Joel's "Only the Good Die Young" (overtly) and Don McLean's "American Pie" (via a Chevy/levee rhyme), songs that probably influenced him as much as anything coming out of Nashville. The truth-in-advertising mode continues on "Being Drunk's a Lot Like Loving You," one of WHEN THE SUN GOES DOWN's best songs. Here the usual drinking-song metaphorical process is switched around, so that Chesney's using drunkenness to symbolize immersion in a relationship instead of reeling off clever lines about getting drunk. With Kenny Chesney, the pop side of the pop/country amalgam never seems abashed, and the fusion of the two seems easy and organic. Unlike many of his peers, who work overtime to perpetuate hard-living country singer myths, Kenny Chesney never tries to be anything other than what he is. On "Keg in the Closet," for example, he reminisces in great detail about his fraternity days in the late 1980s, something no self-conscious outlaw wannabe would ever attempt. On the similarly nostalgic "I Go Back," he's not afraid to reference John Mellencamp's "Jack & Diane" and Billy Joel's "Only the Good Die Young" (overtly) and Don McLean's "American Pie" (via a Chevy/levee rhyme), songs that probably influenced him as much as anything coming out of Nashville. The truth-in-advertising mode continues on "Being Drunk's a Lot Like Loving You," one of WHEN THE SUN GOES DOWN's best songs. Here the usual drinking-song metaphorical process is switched around, so that Chesney's using drunkenness to symbolize immersion in a relationship instead of reeling off clever lines about getting drunk. With Kenny Chesney, the pop side of the pop/country amalgam never seems abashed, and the fusion of the two seems easy and organic.
Rolling Stone (3/4/04, p.64) - 3 stars out of 5 - "[This album] finds him singing as the no-sweat superstar he's become."
Rolling Stone (3/4/04, p.64) - 3 stars out of 5 - "[This album] finds him singing as the no-sweat superstar he's become."
Hailing from Luttrell, TN, country heart-throb Kenny Chesney first made his mark in 1994 with his debut album, but it wasn't until a couple of years later that he started scoring major hits and making himself a household name. His straightforward, emotionally honest way with a romantic ballad is his trademark, distancing him from the gimmicky country-pop hat acts so plentiful in contemporary Nashville. In 1997, no less estimable a country personage than George Jones joined him on record, and he's garnered the respect of both young and old country audiences.
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Similar Artist:
Adkins, Trace Allan, Gary Berry, John (Country) Byrd, Tracy Chesnutt, Mark Foster, Radney Griggs, Andy Harling, Keith Jackson, Alan Keith, Toby Kershaw, Sammy Lawrence, Tracy McBride, Martina McGraw, Tim McMillan, Terry Montgomery Gentry Paisley, Brad Rascal Flatts Stockton, Shane Stone, Doug Supernaw, Doug Urban, Keith White, Lari
Influences:
Anderson, John Black, Clint Buffett, Jimmy Gill, Vince Haggard, Merle Holly, Buddy Jennings, Waylon Jones, George Nelson, Willie Springsteen, Bruce Strait, George Stuart, Marty Travis, Randy Twitty, Conway Wariner, Steve Williams, Don
Similar Genres:
Contemporary Country |