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Brooks & Dunn
Red Dirt Road
label: Arista
released: 07.15.03
our score: 4.0 out of 5.0
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The
Poet and the Player, Neo-Country White-Guy Style
by: matt cibula |
Brooks
& Dunn have been big Nashville hitmakers for more than a decade
now, from their debut where they wrote most of the songs (including
Dunn's amusing trifle "Boot Scootin' Boogie") through
a long period where they were pretty much vehicles for outside
writers and producers. But on this record, they write just about
everything themselves—and I do mean everything. There are
tracks here that incorporate 50's rockabilly, 60's soul-gospel,
70's dirtbag-rock boogie, 80's new wave, and 90's arena rock along
with a heaping helping of traditional country dobros, violins,
slide guitars, and all those signifiers.
Yes,
I used the word "signifiers" while talking about Brooks
and Dunn here. No, I'm not kidding. This record begs
to be taken seriously and analyzed—hell, they even have
a pretentious (and kinda homoerotic) little story in the liner
notes about two cowboys named Howdy and Slim (obviously Brooks
and Dunn themselves) and how they have to walk their own paths.
(It's worked—at least one prominent New York City critic
is saying this is the Record of the Year by a mile.) And we hear
them doing that on the first track, "You Can't Take the Honky
Tonk Out of the Girl." We get the guitar riff from the Rolling
Stones' "Start Me Up" before we hear anything else,
a Clarence Clemons sax break at the 1:42 mark (Bruce Springsteen
has always been a huge influence on them), and a strange twin-guitar
break that sounds like Guns N Roses in there somewhere too, all
in a song about how country women always remain country even when
they move to LA or New York City. It's like they're tossing everything
in the stew, and cooking it up well—and it sounds great.
Dunn's
songs, in particular, are just some kind of wonderful. "Caroline"
is untouchable, a swamp boogie with messed-up glorious harmonies
on the chorus and lyrics about roaming down the devil's path;
"That's What She Gets for Loving Me" alternates between
being great Neil Young and great Waylon Jennings; "She Was
Born to Run" lifts guitar riffs from all those early VH1
acts and makes them work; and "Good Cowboy" is the most
convincing ZZ Top homage I've ever heard as well as the sexiest
country song you'll ever hear a guy sing: "Ridin' the range
I think of you / I dig your chili you know it's true." (Okay,
so he didn't write this one, but whatever.)
And
Brooks' songs are better than anyone had a right to expect, from
the title song that reminds people to remember their roots ("I
went out in the world, and I came back in") to the early-90s
Springsteen sound of "Memory Town." But he is also a
walking ball of clichés as a lyric writer (yes, even for
Nashville) and he pulls out the I'm-an-American card as a reflex
even when it makes no sense, especially on the overstuffed "Great
Day to Be Me," in which he prays for the soldiers and holds
his hat over his heart while still saying that he was never captain
of the football team—which is it, dude, are you the mainstream
culture or the rebel? His songs just try too hard to please, and
it's jarring, especially when compared with Brooks' smooth effortless
innovation.
Ultimately,
this record reminds me of OutKast's Stankonia album.
It's futuristic and backward-looking, weird and traditional at
the same time, but split too much between the two personae of
the groups: Dunn is the Andre 3000 of the equation, a freaky poet
of vision, and Brooks is the Big Boi, the populist whose self-aggrandizement
and easy way with cliché just sticks out like a sore thumb.
But I expect big things from Big Boi's solo disc, and I think
that Brooks will raise his game, and it's conceivable that Red
Dirt Road could end up being the springboard record before
Brooks and Dunn come out with their "real" classic in
a couple of years. In the meantime, this is really good…but
not as perfect as some New York critics are saying it is.
13-Aug-2003
8:40 AM

If you
liked Red Dirt Road...
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Tracklist:
1. You
Can't Take the Honky Tonk Out of the Girl
2. Caroline
3. When We Were Kings
4. That's What She Gets for Loving Me
5. Red Dirt Road
6. Feels Good Don't It
7. I Used to Know This Song By Heart
8. Believer
9. Memory Town
10. She Was Born to Run
11. Till My Dyin' Day
12. My Baby's Everything I Love
13. Good Day to Be Me
14. Good Cowboy
15. Holy War (Hidden Track)
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