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Country music superstar Toby Keith dons the producer's mantle for the first time on Big Dog Daddy, insuring that the album is the most potent distillation of his honky-tonk vision yet. Featuring a stack of original songs and co-writes by Keith, it harkens back to rockabilly -- check out that Killer-esque piano solo on the title track -- and classic country. Notably for one of country music's most reliable firebrands, Keith tones down his political rhetoric, crooning on "Love Me If You Can," "if all our debatin' turns to angry words and hate / Sometimes we should just agree to disagree." Words to live by, Big Dog. Mark Schwartz, Barnes & Noble
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June 14, 2007: And I appreciate his liner notes: “Don’t apologize for being patriotic, Support The Troops.” This CD is one of the best the Big Dog’s ever recorded! I’ve been listening to it every day, over and over, since its release and the more I listen the more meaning every song has to me personally. “High Maintenance Woman” is a highly energized number with catchy phrases like “Just ring up my number baby give me a try You know I got all the tools and I can satisfy.” But high maintenance is what a lot of us women are from the makeup, hairdos, nails, fashion clothes and all. Maintenance man maybe just don’t make enough dough to keep a high maintenance woman! “Love Me If You Can” is special – sung from the heart, take it or leave it this is me. Why can’t we all just get along and face the fact, “Sometimes we should all just agree to disagree.” What a way to end an argument. The Big Dog’s voice is at it’s best! “Get My Drink On” is a familiar scene where the guy’s rejected by the girl, goes to the bar, spends all his money on booze, and stays until closing time. “Wouldn’t Wanna Be Ya” is cute. There’s always somebody who you’re happy to see, but wouldn’t want to be in their shoes. Love it! Who can sit still for “Big Dog Daddy?!” It makes me want to get up and move every time it’s playing. Everybody’s ready to have fun and “they ain’t looking’ for trouble, but they know how to fight.” Great line! So get up and dance for the Big Dog Daddy, for the fun of it! One of my favorites is “I Know She Hung The Moon.” The man knows everybody’s admiring his woman, he’s feeling confident in his own skin because she’s by his side, knowing he’s there to catch her should she fall. My favorite line here is “But buddy if you were in my shoes you’d see she’s just as pretty on the inside too.” Such powerful words that just make me melt. “Pump Jack” is another one of my favorites. It gets the heart to pumping and the feet to jumping!! It’s a lively song calling old pump jacks “iron dinosaurs.” I love it! The beat’s fast, the words are well written and Toby sings it like nobody could. “Burning Moonlight” – There’s no time to waste here because the midnight hour’s about to strike so get it on before Cinderella’s coach turns back to a pumpkin and she’s gone! “Walk It Off” holds such great advice for anyone who’s been jilted. Move on and quit feeling sorry for yourself…as Toby says, “So take your cold umbrella out into the rain.” What a great line! Maybe the rain falling on your face will bring you back to reality. “White Rose” is my absolute favorite on this CD. Some Warriors discussed it being an age related song. Well, I can relate since I remember the old gas pumps, cheap gas that was pumped for you, the oil was always checked, the tires checked, your windshield was washed and they gave you S&H Green Stamps too. These are all pleasant memories which Toby stirs up here because my father owned an old service station in the 60s. Not only do the words hit home,...
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June 14, 2007: From start to finish, this CD is one of Toby’s best. It has the perfect mix of rockin’ southern country, smooth ballads, and everything in between. It is classic Toby Keith at his finest. Although there are two songs that are not written by Toby, the songs fit him as if he had written them himself. The next release “Love Me If You Can” is one of these songs, and as any true Toby fan knows, each word speaks to his personality and beliefs to the core. I cannot pick just one favorite cut from this CD because I like them all! If you don’t get this CD, you don’t know what you are missing! TKIFC - romanns
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Country music superstar Toby Keith dons the producer's mantle for the first time on Big Dog Daddy, insuring that the album is the most potent distillation of his honky-tonk vision yet. Featuring a stack of original songs and co-writes by Keith, it harkens back to rockabilly -- check out that Killer-esque piano solo on the title track -- and classic country. Notably for one of country music's most reliable firebrands, Keith tones down his political rhetoric, crooning on "Love Me If You Can," "if all our debatin' turns to angry words and hate / Sometimes we should just agree to disagree." Words to live by, Big Dog. Mark Schwartz
After becoming a bona fide superstar in the wake of "Courtesy of the Red White and Blue," Toby Keith refused to play it safe, blowing up his persona to mythic heights on 2003's Shock'n Y'All, stretching his musical legs on Honkytonk University, and calling off all bets with the Lari White-produced White Trash with Money, where he got soulful and soft in equal measures. After that trilogy of exploration, Keith snaps back to the basics on Big Dog Daddy, his first self-produced album and his first album of nothing but pure, hardcore country since his star rose in the early years of the new millennium. This isn't a retreat as much as it's a reaffirmation of his strengths as a singer, songwriter, performer, and interpreter. Indeed, two of the highlights here are covers of Craig Wiseman's sighing "Love Me If You Can" and Fred Eaglesmith's "White Rose," a warm, bittersweet slice of nostalgia that highlights how Keith really tells a story when he sings. But if these, along with a handful of Keith originals, highlight his often overlooked sensitive side -- love songs rarely come as sweet as "I Know She Hung the Moon," heartbreak songs are rarely as aching as "Walk It Off" -- this album swings and swaggers as much as the title boasts. There's the galloping "Get My Drink On," the old-time rock & roll title track (Chuck Berry turned into country-rock via Bob Seger), and the irresistible Bobby Pinson collaboration "Pump Jack," and Keith finds the middle ground between these extremes with the remarkable "Wouldn't Want to Be Ya," which turns a cliché inside out, rendering it remarkably affecting. And that's the real secret to Keith's success: underneath all the bragging he's a songwriter and a damn good one at that, which this lean, sinewy, stripped-to-the-basics record makes clear. Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Loading...Album Credits | ||
| Performance Credits | ||
| Toby Keith | Primary Artist, Background Vocals | |
| Eric Darken | Percussion | |
| Chad Cromwell | Drums | |
| Shannon Forrest | Drums | |
| Paul Franklin | Dobro, Pedal Steel Guitar | |
| Kenny Greenberg | Electric Guitar | |
| Rob Ickes | Dobro | |
| Mac McAnally | Acoustic Guitar | |
| Brent Mason | Electric Guitar | |
| Jerry McPherson | Electric Guitar | |
| Steve Nathan | Piano, Keyboards | |
| Dave Pomeroy | Bass | |
| Randy Scruggs | Acoustic Guitar | |
| Glenn Worf | Bass | |
| Jonathan Yudkin | Strings | |
| Aubrey Haynie | Fiddle, Mandolin | |
| Clayton Ivy | Piano, Keyboards | |
| Becky Robertson | Background Vocals | |
| Perry Coleman | Background Vocals | |
| Tom Bukovac | Electric Guitar | |
| Technical Credits | ||
| Toby Keith | Producer | |
| Mills Logan | Engineer | |
| Ken Love | Mastering | |
| Jed Hackett | Digital Editing | |
| Tom Bukovac | Producer | |
| Darren Welch | Art Direction | |
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