FileCat premium

Alan Jackson - Freight Train (2010) [Country]; FLAC (tracks+.cue)

Country, Bluegrass
User avatar
Mike1985
Uploader
Posts: 70795
Joined: 24 Jan 2016, 16:51

Alan Jackson - Freight Train (2010) [Country]; FLAC (tracks+.cue)

Unread postby Mike1985 » 04 Mar 2017, 06:23


Artist: Alan Jackson
Album: Freight Train
Genre: Country
Label: Arista Records
Released: 2010
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue)
Tracklist:
  1. Hard Hat And A Hammer
  2. Every Now And Then
  3. After 17
  4. It's Just That Way
  5. Freight Train
  6. Taillights Blue
  7. I Could Get Used To This Lovin' Thing
  8. Till The End (with Lee Ann Womack)
  9. That's Where I Belong
  10. Big Green Eyes
  11. True Love Is A Golden Ring
  12. The Best Keeps Getting Better

DOWNLOAD FROM FILECAT.NET >>>

    Personnel:
  • Eddie Bayers - Drums
  • Jimmy Carter - Bass
  • Stuart Duncan - Fiddle, Mandolin
  • Paul Franklin - Steel Guitar
  • Greenwood Hart - Acoustic Guitar
  • Andy Leftwich - Fiddle
  • Brent Mason - Acoustic and Electric Guitar
  • Gary Prim - Hammond B3, Piano, Wurlitzer
  • Hargus "Pig" Robbins - Piano, Wurlitzer
  • Rhonda Vincent - Background Vocals
  • Ryles Vincent - Background Vocals
  • Bruce Watkins - Acoustic Guitar, Banjo
  • John Wesley - Vocals Background
  • Glenn Worf - Bass

Freight Train, Alan Jackson’s 16th album, has none of the momentum of a locomotive but all of the reassuring sturdiness of a hulking piece of steel: this is music built for distance, not speed. Appropriately, not much on Freight Train moves all that fast -- there is a bit of a skipping gait to the title track -- and nothing hits that hard; it all rolls along comfortably, never pushing at the edges of Jackson’s comfort zone. More than ever, the singer sounds like part of the old guard, willfully ignoring anything modern or rocking, preferring to sing swaying ballads and pay tribute to Vern Gosdin via a cover of “Till the End.” As relaxed as this is, Jackson isn’t necessarily coasting -- he wrote the lion's share of the 12 songs here, choosing his four covers wisely -- but his touch is so relaxed it sometimes it feels as if he is. Certainly, there’s a fair share of charm to Jackson’s cozy confidence, but Freight Train doesn’t offer a sustained romantic mood along the lines of 2006’s understated gem Like Red on a Rose. Instead, it’s the sound of a major star gently easing away from the spotlight, deciding that he’s so comfortable in his old clothes that there’s no reason to try something new.

Return to “Country, Bluegrass (lossless - FLAC, APE, etc.)”