Robbie Fulks - Georgia Hard (2005)

  • 13 Sep, 18:40
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Artist:
Title: Georgia Hard
Year Of Release: 2005
Label: Yep Roc Records
Genre: Country
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:57:24
Total Size: 353 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. Where There's a Road
02. It's Always Raining Somewhere
03. Leave It to a Loser
04. Georgia Hard
05. I'm Gonna Take You Home (And Make You Like Me)
06. Coldwater, Tennessee
07. All You Can Cheat
08. Countrier Than Thou
09. If They Could Only See Me Now
10. I Never Did Like Planes
11. Each Night I Try
12. Doin' Right (For All the Wrong Reasons)
13. You Don't Want What I Have
14. Right on Redd
15. Goodbye, Cruel Girl

Robbie Fulks seems to have developed something of a love/hate relationship with country music. It's not so much that Fulks doesn't like the stuff anymore (quite the opposite), but his albums Let's Kill Saturday Night and Couples in Trouble have made it clear his interests has been moving into other areas, but while Couples in Trouble was the strongest and most ambitious album of his career to date, it didn't sell very well, and its wide palette of rock and pop sounds puzzled many fans who were hoping for more tunes like, say, "She Took a Lot of Pills (And Died)." Fulks has headed back into country territory with Georgia Hard, his first album for Yep Roc (and his first set not recorded on his own dime since his ill-fated affiliation with Geffen), which is informed by his love of countrypolitan songwriting in the manner of Bill Anderson, Shel Silverstein and Roger Miller. While this album certainly plays to Fulks' strengths, it also suggests that he's chafing a bit at its self-imposed boundaries; there are songs here that have "country hit" written all over them, especially "Where There's a Road," "I Never Did Like Planes," "If They Could Only See Me Now," and the excellent title cut. However, there are a few that edge uncomfortably towards parody in their pursuit of the twang, such as "All You Can Cheat" and "Goodbye, Cruel Girl," while "I'm Gonna Take You Home (And Make You Like Me)" and "Countrier Than Thou" are so snarky they shoot the album's balance square in the foot (the latter seems specifically designed to alienate whatever fans he has who weren't annoyed by "Roots Rock Weirdos"). Georgia Hard leaves no doubt that Robbie Fulks is as good a country songwriter as anyone working today, but bits of it clearly suggest he'd rather be doing other things, and it's a shame he hasn't been able to balance the broader vision of Couples in Trouble with the richer and more human outlook depicted in this disc's high points.

  • whiskers
  •  12:44
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