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Somewhere Down in Texas

Somewhere Down in Texas
  • List Price: $13.98
  • Buy New: $5.86
  • as of 2/11/2012 18:05 EST details
  • You Save: $8.12 (58%)
In Stock
New (35) Used (39) from $0.38
  • Seller:beaches_entertainment
  • Sales Rank:16,528
  • Media:Audio CD
  • Discs:1
  • Shipping Weight (lbs):0.2
  • Dimensions (in):5.5 x 4.8 x 0.4
  • Release Date:June 28, 2005
  • MPN:602498810705
  • UPC:602498810705
  • EAN:0602498810705
  • ASIN:B0009GX23W
Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks
  • If The Whole World Was A Honky Tonk
  • Somewhere Down In Texas
  • The Seashores Of Old Mexico
  • You'll Be There
  • High Tone Woman
  • Good News, Bad News
  • Oh, What A Perfect Day
  • Texas
  • Ready For The End Of The World
  • She Let Herself Go
  • By The Light Of A Burning Brige


Editorial Reviews:
Synopsis
(B000444602)
Amazon.com
Country's most reluctant superstar can always lend gravity to even the weakest of songs, so masterful is his phrasing and restrained, expressive delivery, and so artful his picking and the production that surrounds his Everyman baritone. On Somewhere Down in Texas, many of George Strait's songs are semiautobiographical and ring with authenticity. The title track portrays a man who's weary of the road and yearns to stay home with his family; "Texas" salutes the state that made him what he is; and "You'll Be There," the heartfelt single that talks of meeting a loved one in the afterlife, likely hits a nerve with the singer, who lost a child some years ago. Strait also does well with the terrible twins of country dance-hall fare, misery and grief--particularly on the honky-tonk weeper "Ready for the End of the World" and the killer ballad "Good News, Bad News," a duet with Lee Ann Womack, who cowrote the tune with Dean Dillon and Dale Dodson. Womack sings rings around her fellow Texan, giving her reading of this exquisite song of heartbreak an emotional resonance that sticks in the mind long after it's over. But Strait conveys a stoic acceptance of a tragically missed chance at love, and it plays just right for a cowboy antihero. Somewhere Down in Texas could have benefited from the addition of an irresistible rhythm tune or another example of the western swing that Strait embraced so fervently early in his career. But every time ol' George refers to his heroes by name--Haggard, Nelson, and Jones--you know time will show him to be, if not precisely in their league, certainly a close second. --Alanna Nash

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