Jasper County
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Who Invented The Wheel
- Pistol
- Trying To Love You
- River Of You
- Baby Don't You Let Go
- Standing Out In A Crowd
- Georgia Rain
- Sweet Love
- Try Me
- Gimme The Good Stuff
- It's Alright
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #56082 in Music
- Released on: 2005-09-13
- Number of discs: 1
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
The woman who owns the most majestic voice in Music City is marking a new milestone with an album that will be regarded as a masterwork of her career. Trisha Yearwood’s Jasper County is a collection that comes from a period of re-evaluation, introspection, reinvigoration and self-reflection. The multi-Platinum, multi Grammy-winning star has never before given as much consideration and concern to a recording project. "I’ve never taken this long to make a record," comments Yearwood. "I’ve never recorded as many songs. I’d never completely started over on an album like I did on this one. Overall, it was a two-year process to make this record." The bluesy, smoldering drama of "Who Invented The Wheel" contrasts with the chugging, zesty pep of "Baby Don’t You Let Go." "River of You" is lovelorn and hypnotic, while "Pistol" is a hillbilly rocker with sass. "Sweet Love" is steamy, sexy and sweaty, yet "Standing Out in a Crowd" is airy, uplifting and inspiring. The throbbing, pulse-quickening "Try Me" features electrifying harmony by Ronnie Dunn. The gorgeous, dark and magnificent ballad "Trying to Love You" includes vocals by its co-composer, Beth Nielsen Chapman. Yearwood tears into "Gimme the Good Stuff" with the ferocious fire of a rocker, then turns rollicking, innocent and fun-loving in "It’s Alright." The powerful emotional undertow of "Georgia Rain" has already made it the break-out single from Jasper County. Its understated male vocal harmony is by Garth Brooks. These are performances of startling freshness and passion. So it comes as something of a shock to realize that this is an artist who has issued 10 previous records and scored 20 top-10 hits. Trisha Yearwood’s larger-than-life voice has helped to define contemporary country music.
Now she is ready to roll up her sleeves and work on her own music again. Following the release of Jasper County, the singer will reemerge as a touring artist later this year. "It’s just like coming home," says Trisha Yearwood. "Everything is in the best perspective of my life, both professionally and personally. I feel wiser. I am just very, very happy. I consciously took a break, but I am not finished. I miss performing, and I do love the applause." "Singing gives me such joy. And it seems to give other people joy. It’s what I believe I am supposed to do."
Amazon.com
Four years after her last album, 2001's Inside Out, Trisha Yearwood returns with a solid effort that reclaims her place on country radio, particularly with the evocative, bittersweet ballad "Georgia Rain," on which her fiancé, Garth Brooks, contributes quiet harmony. Brooks isn't the only notable guest on Jasper County--Ronnie Dunn drops by on "Try Me," and Beth Nielsen Chapman (always one of Yearwood's favorite tunesmiths) harmonizes on "Trying to Love You," one of the album's prettiest heartbreak songs. Yearwood varies her repertoire with such loose and funky numbers as "Pistol" and "Sweet Love" (where she's on the make in a dangerous blue dress) and the hypnotic song of swirling romantic obsession, "River of You." But while never less than thoroughly enjoyable, the album somehow falls shy of her best work. Yearwood remains one of the genre's finest interpretive singers, but this collection lacks a song that showcases the full range and power of her glorious soprano, and also falls short in delivering a ballad that brings her (and us) to her knees. It's great to have the multi-Grammy winner back, but aside from "Georgia Rain," most of Jasper County sounds closer to a bullpen warm-up than a home-run hit. -–Alanna Nash
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Maverick - 4 out of 5 Stars!!
Her larger-than-life voice has helped define contemporary country music and she makes a triumphant return.
Customer Reviews
Trisha Yearwood
Having been a longtime fan of Trisha Yearwood, I was very happy with this album of hers, also after having seen her perform some of her numbers on the Oprah show.
Trisha on top
This is a great album from Trisha Yearwood, definitely my favorite. In comparison to other albums, there's a lot more songs on here that have more "kick" to them, more attitude. Here are the songs:
Who Invented the Wheel - Trish wants to find the inventors/designers of the products that enabled her guy to drive off one day. Kind of amusing in an ironic way.
Pistol - good, quick tune with energy. Beware of a man who is too exciting.
Trying to Love You
River of You - very smooth song
Baby Don't You Let Go - fast and energetic
Standing Out in a Crowd - nice song about not being afraid to be self
Georgia Rain - good reminiscent tune
Sweet Love - good bluesey tune
Try Me - good plea to a lover
Gimme the Good Stuff - assertive
It's Alright
UNDERWHELMING UNFORTUNATELY
I am a big fan of Trisha Yearwood but this CD is just not up to snuff. I love Georgia Rain but even it loses something with repeated listens. I can't quite figure out if it is the writing or her reading/singing of these songs but something is missing. Who Invented the Wheel, Pistol and Standing out in a Crowd are just YUCK, the messages are trite and maybe she knows this and her singing is like "this song sucks" but I will give it a try. I give her three stars more for who she is than the product she released here. Trisha has been very inconsistent with her last few CD's hope she gets a little more passionate and hits more home runs than singles!!!










