Kenny Chesney - Life On A Rock (2013) [Hi-Res]

  • 16 Jul, 09:08
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Artist:
Title: Life On A Rock
Year Of Release: 2013
Label: Blue Chair Records, LLC / Columbia Nashville
Genre: Country
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [44.1kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 42:32 min
Total Size: 468 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Pirate Flag (3:45)
02. When I See This Bar (6:03)
03. Spread The Love (feat. The Wailers with Elan) (4:17)
04. Lindy (3:50)
05. Coconut Tree (with Willie Nelson) (3:25)
06. It's That Time Of Day (4:54)
07. Life On A Rock (2:54)
08. Marley (4:48)
09. Must Be Something I Missed (3:11)
10. Happy On The Hey Now (A Song For Kristi) (5:27)

Life on a Rock follows its 2012 predecessor Welcome to the Fishbowl quickly -- very quickly, appearing a mere ten months later. Why did Chesney rush out this record? It could be a tacit acknowledgment that Chesney wasn't entirely engaged on Welcome to the Fishbowl, an album that was thoroughly professional not only in its production but in its construction: Chesney barely wrote a thing on the record, choosing to slide into the role of superstar singer, acting like a rock star and living under a spotlight. It was fine but slight, somewhat lost in its own gleaming reflection, leaving little lasting impression. Life on a Rock is similarly light but it's not overly polished. It's breezy, music made for an afternoon at the beach -- a return to the sun-and-sand anthems that Chesney has had as a sideline for about a decade now. At times, he accentuates his good times in the sun just a bit too heavily, inviting the Wailers in so they can give "Spread the Love" a genuine reggae bounce and also writing an ode to "Marley" somewhat in the vein of Eric Church's "Springsteen," but this is the mildest form of overreaching; he's trying just a little bit too hard to chill out. Apart from that, Life on a Rock flows sweetly and easily, the tunes gently drifting between strummed ballads and shimmering low-key pop, with the opening song (and first single) "Pirate Flag" being the only song here with a hard pulse. Chesney never sounds like he's trying too hard but, the thing of it is, he wrote all but three of the songs here, so this represents a considerable uptick in effort from its predecessor. That effort pays off: this feels fuller, richer than any Chesney album in recent memory, but it's also unhurried and light, an ideal soundtrack for a long, lazy summer. -- Stephen Thomas Erlewine


  • mufty77
  •  17:31
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Many thanks for HD tracks.
  • whiskers
  •  22:38
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Many thanks