Tim McGraw's "Southern Voice" coming this fall
Tuesday, June 30, 2009 – "Southern Voice," Tim McGraw's first studio album in two and a half years, will be out this fall, he announced Tuesday. It's A Business Doing Pleasure With You goes to radio today as the first single.
No exact release date was given. Recorded in Nashville with his longtime producer, Byron Gallimore (Faith Hill, Sugarland, Phil Vassar), "Southern Voice" is the follow-up to "Let It Go," which debuted at number 1 on The Billboard 200 in April of 2007. McGraw will support his new album with an extensive tour in 2010.
The single, written by Nickelback's Chad Kroeger and singer-songwriter Brett James (who has penned numerous hits, including Jesus, Take the Wheel for Carrie Underwood), is an uptempo, tongue-in-cheek tale about the price of love.
More news for Tim McGraw
CD reviews for Tim McGraw
Southern Voice
Tim McGraw knows what works for him on a bunch of songs tending to look at the human soul and the choices one makes in life.
The sadness of Good Girls comes through loud and clear in a tail of friendship gone deadly wrong. McGraw gets ultra-introspective on If I Died Today. On the one hand, it's morbid, of course, but on the other, McGraw challenges the listener to consider how they live their lives and want to be remembered.
Forever Seventeen looks at an aging woman still trying to find »»»
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Let It Go
Tim McGraw's massive hit, "Live Like You Were Dying," is both a blessing and a curse. Although it is a tear-jerker nearly impossible to dislike, every ballad he records from now on will be compared to it - and likely pale in that comparison. Nothing here comes anywhere close to the emotional tug of "Live like You Were Dying." In fact, there aren't many "big moment" ballads at all.
But what it lacks in large showstoppers, it more than makes up for with small pleasures. »»»
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Greatest Hits Vol. 2
Tim McGraw may have taken a few stabs at co-writing with his second volume of greatest hits, but he is still mainly known for being a singer of songs. Thus, this album showcases McGraw's taste in musical material more than anything else.
Covering the years between 2001 and 2004, these 16 songs reveal how McGraw has picked a few clear-cut winners along the way. He most certainly knows his way around a tear-jerker, exemplified by "Live Like You Were Dying" and to a lesser degree "Grown Men Don't Cry. »»»
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Editorial: American Idol's Carrie Underwood can sing –
If anyone saw the Super Bowl – what a great great game that was – they would have heard American Idol winner and country superstar Carrie Underwood sing the National Anthem. Underwood did with her voice what Kelly Clarkson did last week with her written words – give it to Scott Borchetta, the head of Big Machine Records,, who tried defending Taylor Swift by knocking American Idol performers. »»»
Concert Review: McBride, Adkins shine sometimes –
As Martina McBride pointed out, the pairing of the country singer with Trace Adkins on their current jaunt was surprising. After all, she's of diva-quality voice, petite, non-controversial unless you call singing songs that empower women controversial. Adkins, on the other hand, has not been afraid to speak his mind with a kick butt attitude.... »»»
Concert Review: Eilen Jewell wears her musical hats well –
Eilen Jewell wears a lot of musical hats. The Idaho native, who now lives in Boston, fronts the Eilen (ee-lin) Jewell Band, a pretty much traditional country band. She's a member the Sacred Shakers, an octet doing gospel country with a country beat. And she has yet another project, Butcher Holler, covering Loretta Lynn songs.... »»»
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Blue Highway's banjo player Jason Burleson acknowledges that their 1995 debut album "It's A Long, Long Road" turned out to be prophetic. It has been quite a journey for the Tennessee-based band that has become one of the "gold standards" of bluegrass, with 8 more "signpost" albums along the way, the latest being their newly-released 15th Anniversary collection on Rounder, "Some Day."... »»»

Elvis Aron Presley, had he not collapsed face first into a shag carpet in his Graceland bathroom on Aug. 16, 1977, would have been 75-years-old Friday. Yet, somehow, his birthday seems all the more important because he is not actually here while others feast at his table. Graceland - a greater cultural icon and more milkable cash cow than even the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame - is being remodeled for future generations to come, gawk and breathe in a few scant molecules of the King's essence. Do the new overseers really care about Elvis?... »»»

Here it is the top 30 for 2009. This isn't authoritative in case you thought otherwise. It's just one man's opinion about his favorite CDs of the year, which seemed a cut above everything else. It was incredibly hard figuring out a number one CD for the year between the Avett Brothers, Brad Paisley and George Strait. All three were great albums from different perspectives of country and roots music, and at any one time over the past few days, each was my favorite. Come back in a few days, and who knows? Maybe the order will change.... »»»
Haywire
There are two versions of Josh Turner's fourth CD - standard and deluxe. The deluxe has the same 11 tracks as the standard, plus (among other goodies) live versions of previously released songs Long Black Train and Your Man . But don't spend more money than you have to; if it's redundancy you're looking for, there's plenty to be had on the standard version. »»»
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