Horse of a Different Color Big & Rich

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CD

  • Release Date: 05/04/2004
  • Sales Rank: 12,334
  • Label: WARNER BROS / WEA
  • UPC: 093624852025
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Horse of a Different Color

1LISTENRollin' (The Ballad of Big & Rich) 4:50
2LISTENWild West Show 4:20
3LISTENBig Time 3:56
4LISTENKick My Ass 4:58
5LISTENSix Foot Town 3:47
6LISTENHoly Water 4:16
7LISTENSaved 4:51
8LISTENReal World 5:05
9LISTENSave a Horse (Ride a Cowboy) 3:20
10LISTENDrinkin' 'Bout You 2:53
11LISTENLove Train 3:47
12LISTENDeadwood Mountain 5:10
13LISTENLive This Life 5:33

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Like many professional country musicians, the duo of Big & Rich -- Big being Kenny Alphin, while Rich is John Rich, a former singer for Lonestar -- are based in Nashville, but that doesn't mean they follow all the conventions of Music City. In fact, they throw conventions out the window on their 2004 debut album, Horse of a Different Color. They can certainly craft a kicking country song, as the backwoods ballad "Deadwood Mountain" proves, but they don't settle for that, preferring to spike predictable song structures with considerable doses of goofy humor or, better still, to fly beyond genre and concoct gonzo amalgams of country, arena rock, and rap. All of this makes Big & Rich hard to peg, particularly because they come across as a big-boned, country variation of Tenacious D or Ween -- talented musical pranksters who treat everything as a lark, but have the musical skills to back up their boasts. Like the D, they even have a theme song in "Rollin' (The Ballad of Big & Rich)" -- which bizarrely enough sounds a bit like Tenacious D, which isn't nearly as bizarre as how the melody of "Wild West Show" recalls Nirvana's "Frances Farmer Will Have Her Revenge on Seattle" -- and they have no compunctions about being flat-out silly, which is good, since that silliness brought them a big novelty hit in "Save a Horse (Ride a Cowboy)," a song designed for drunken shout-alongs in sports bars. Much of Horse of a Different Color plays to that audience, but the surprise is that the rowdiness is tongue-in-cheek and that Big & Rich are musically clever, filling the record with big hooks and unbridled weirdness. Not that all of this is successful -- it can sound too goofy at points -- but it's wilder and stranger than most contemporary country albums of 2004, and a whole lot more fun, to boot. Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

Horse of a Different Colorby Anonymous

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July 27, 2007: Being a complete metal, rock and electronica lover, I was rather surprised by this album. It's bloody brilliant, hilarious, and profound. "Wild West Show" sold me on Big & Rich. It's amazingly powerful, and has quite an amazing depth to it. Very reminiscent of "Run to the Hills"... Otherwise, "Save a Horse", was frickin' hilarious. ^_~ Despite being country, I was impressed...

Horse of a Different Colorby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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November 19, 2005: I bought this CD for Save A Horse (Ride A Cowboy) which is one of my favorite songs of all time, and Rollin', because that's another awesome song. However, I ended up loving EVERY last track on the CD. I've heard most of the songs on the radio, but the ones I hadn't heard were just as awesome as the ones I had.


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