 | |  | | | Cowboy's Back In Town [Deluxe Edition]
(Audio CD)
by Trace Adkins | | | | | SKU:
CD 144 8802 | | In Stock | | Availability:
Usually ships in 1 business days | | Only 2 left in stock, order soon! | | | | | | Trace Adkins continues to conquer new worlds. He has long been country music's alpha male, a man whose commanding presence and once-in-a-generation baritone have made him a pillar of the contemporary Nashville sound. But such are his other gifts a restless intellect, wide-ranging interests, great ability as a communicator that it was perhaps inevitable that his influence would spread well beyond the bounds of the genre. In the past decade, Trace has made his mark as an actor, both on television and in the movies, an author, a voiceover artist and commercial spokesman, a social commenter, and a reality show participant. His effect on businessman and showman Donald Trump was such that after his initial and highly successful appearance on Celebrity Apprentice, he was invited back as a boardroom advisor. He has turned his entertainment articulated views into a well-received book, A Personal Stand; Observations and Opinions from a Freethinking Roughneck, and has even inspired an action comic book series, Luke McBain, that has proven to be one of the genre's hottest sellers. | | | |
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| | Product Details | | Audio CD Release Date: | August 17, 2010 | | Studio: | Show Dog - Universal Music | | Number Of Discs: | 1 | | Average Customer Rating: | based on 38 reviews |
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| | Track Listing | | 1. | Brown Chicken Brown Cow | | 2. | Hold My Beer | | 3. | Cowboy's Back In Town* | | 4. | This Ain't No Love Song | | 5. | Hell, I Can Do That | | 6. | A Little Bit Of Missin' You* | | 7. | Still Love You* | | 8. | Don't Mind If I Don't* (featuring Trailer Choir) | | 9. | Ala-Freakin-Bama | | 10. | Break Her Fall | | 11. | Whoop A Man's Ass | | 12. | Happy Man | | 13. | Between The Rainbows And The Rain | | 14. | Pictures On Mantles | | 15. | Hillbilly Bone- performed by Blake Shelton (featuring Trace Adkins) | |
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| | Customer Reviews | Average Customer Review: ( 38 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 found the following review helpful:
Trace Adkins- "Cowboy's Back In Town" Sep 19, 2010
By Riley
"Trace Chaser"
Trace's new album is by far one of his best to this date. It is an up-beat album full of his classic humor and twists on words. I've heard it being said the album has a smile of it. It ranges from get in your face songs, such as Whoop A Man's Ass", to the sexy frolic of "Brown Chicken, Brown Cow", and the till death do we part song of "Hold My Beer" (with his own marriage dialog) to the tender side of Trace in "Break Her Fall", "A Little Bit Of Missin You" and "Between the Rainbows and the Rain". Not a bad song on the album and you won't be sorry you bought it or sorry if you don't.
4 of 4 found the following review helpful:
TRACE ENTERS A NEW LEVEL Sep 18, 2010
By James L. Woolridge
"Wooly in PSL, FL."
This is a great CD! If you are a Trace Adkins fan, a country music fan, a Toby Keith fan (you can feel the influence) you will enjoy this CD. There are wonderful love songs and laugh out loud fun songs included. This CD just solidifies Adkins status as a country super star. RECOMMENDED
5 of 6 found the following review helpful:
Raucous, rowdy modern country novelty songs Aug 17, 2010
By DJ Joe Sixpack Trace Adkins "Cowboy's Back In Town" (Universal/Show Dog, 2010) ----------------------------------------------------- A robust, macho set, recorded for Toby Keith's Show Dog record label... The production is big, loud, full of Southern Rock guitars and thumping drums and crushing downbeats... It's also pretty high tech and a little gimmicky in some parts, hinting at the Big & Rich school of country-rock crossover. More than anything, though, this album is marked by Trace Adkins -- an artist I admire -- sounding an awful lot like his host, Toby Keith, both in the macho-novelty repertoire and the snarling, bearlike delivery. Of course, Adkins, who stands about six-foot-seventy, is an imposing, macho figure in his own right, but his individual artistic voice seems lost in this barrage of mega-manliness, particularly his ability to drive home weepers and ballads.
Still, there's some funny stuff here, and this album is sure to be a crowd-pleaser, especially for all them beer-drinkin', girl-chasin', red-blooded manly-men who love cranking their Top Forty country up as loud as they can. There's the album's opener, "Brown Chicken Brown Cow" (about two farmhands who are so busy getting busy that no work is getting done in the barn... ) or the humorous "Hold My Beer," about a good ol' boy who can barely put his brewsky down long enough to kiss the bride. And "Ala-Freakin-Bama," where a cutoff-clad Alabama hottie meets a Skynyrd-friendly Bubba, or "Hell, I Can Do That," where Bubba is watching TV and thinkin', heck that Nascar stuff doesn't look so hard... In short, this is a brash, novelty oriented album that sells Trace short as a balladeer, but has some pretty amusing songs. I mean, who can resist a tune like "Whoop A Man's Ass," where Adkins explains the manly etiquette of smackdowns and ass-kicking? Again, very Toby-esque, but also pretty funny. If you're in the market for some rough-and-tumble, guitar-heavy, modern macho, manly country, then this disc is for you, buddy. Pass me another cold one. (DJ Joe Sixpack, Slipcue Guide To Country Music)
2 of 2 found the following review helpful:
Go away & come back again. Aug 28, 2010
By Ab Uffalo
"akira"
Like Izcait, I too am an unabashed Trace Adkins, having followed him through his blossoming career, tracking his high points & his low ones, & remaining faithful to the belief that like artists such as Toby Keith, George Strait, Alan Jackson, et all, his best years (and albums) are yet to come. He possesses one of the greatest voices in country music, and has the ability to rock the house, charge the heart, & soothe the savage beast, depending on what he is singing. However, unlike Izcait, I am not going to award an album five stars, when it simply does not deliver the quality Trace's previous outings have. I'm no doubt going to be in the minority here, but hey, this album is not a scratch on "Dreamin' Out Loud" (my personal favourite of all his records), or any of his other albums. On this album, Trace excells with his ballads. These are clearly the high points here. Numbers like "Hell I Can Do That", "Still Love You", "Break Her Fall", & "A Little Bit Of Missin' You", are powerhouses, with Trace's great voice delivering them with real passion & sensitivity. Yet Of the more up-tempo tracks, only the title track, "Cowboy's Back In Town" seeems to make the cut. The rest are mediocre at best. Then there's "Ala-Freakin'-Bama". This song stands alone as a true example of what the word abysmal means. Surely not even the most generous minded person would consider this piece of literary garbage suitable for inclusion on any country album. Perhaps it could be added to a compilation albums featuring artists such as Slayer, Megadeath, and the like, where this would probably be right at home. C'mon Trace, you're one of the best country artists in the business; don't waste your great talent on the likes of this. Your fans deserve better. Three stars - and I'm being generous.
4 of 6 found the following review helpful:
Nothing "NEW" here. Aug 18, 2010
By D. Elliott
"STEEL 83"
You hope that an artist can continue to devolepe and grow. And put out better quality material than on the cd before. Trace has not done that with this effort. There are a few songs that may be a bit catchy. But, he falls short making this cd more interesting than the last. The true fans may like it but, I lost interest in it after one listen through.
See all 38 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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