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Where Have You Gone

Where Have You Gone in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $18.99
Get it at Barnes and Noble
Where Have You Gone

Where Have You Gone in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $18.99
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Size: CD

Get it at Barnes and Noble
Where Have You Gone
is the kind of album a veteran artist releases after taking an extended break, a record so stuffed to the brim with new material it can seem like a bit of a flex of strength.
Alan Jackson
doesn't really do grand gestures, though. He specializes in subtlety and ease, qualities he hardly abandons on
, a double album that arrives nearly a full six years after his slow-burning
Angels and Alcohol
. What distinguishes
is its sheer heft.
Jackson
doesn't branch out into new territory; rather, he touches upon every one of his signatures: sentimental ballads with an undercurrent of faith, drinking tunes, snappy country-rockers, songs about family, bittersweet memories, and a tip of the hat to his idols. He wrote the lion's share of the 21 songs on
-- a notable exception is an affecting cover of the late
Merle Haggard
's "That's the Way Love Goes," available on the deluxe edition of the album -- and it's striking how sturdy they are, both individually and as a collective. Perhaps they feel cozy, yet their familiarity winds up as an attribute:
knows himself so well as a singer and songwriter that he doesn't shy from his strengths, he writes songs to showcase his smooth, supple voice and love of old-fashioned country. The simplicity of his goals means
might seem a bit modest even at its oversized length, but that's also its charm.
isn't flashy, he's reliable, a quality that turns out to be a virtue as he glides into his fourth decade as a recording artist. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Where Have You Gone
is the kind of album a veteran artist releases after taking an extended break, a record so stuffed to the brim with new material it can seem like a bit of a flex of strength.
Alan Jackson
doesn't really do grand gestures, though. He specializes in subtlety and ease, qualities he hardly abandons on
, a double album that arrives nearly a full six years after his slow-burning
Angels and Alcohol
. What distinguishes
is its sheer heft.
Jackson
doesn't branch out into new territory; rather, he touches upon every one of his signatures: sentimental ballads with an undercurrent of faith, drinking tunes, snappy country-rockers, songs about family, bittersweet memories, and a tip of the hat to his idols. He wrote the lion's share of the 21 songs on
-- a notable exception is an affecting cover of the late
Merle Haggard
's "That's the Way Love Goes," available on the deluxe edition of the album -- and it's striking how sturdy they are, both individually and as a collective. Perhaps they feel cozy, yet their familiarity winds up as an attribute:
knows himself so well as a singer and songwriter that he doesn't shy from his strengths, he writes songs to showcase his smooth, supple voice and love of old-fashioned country. The simplicity of his goals means
might seem a bit modest even at its oversized length, but that's also its charm.
isn't flashy, he's reliable, a quality that turns out to be a virtue as he glides into his fourth decade as a recording artist. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
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