Last Chance for a Thousand Years: Greatest Hits from the 90's T Double

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CD

  • Release Date: 05/19/2009
  • Original Release: 1999
  • Sales Rank: 32,410
  • Label: RHINO FLASHBACK
  • UPC: 081227986216

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
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Track List
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Last Chance for a Thousand Years: Greatest Hits from the 90's

1LISTENTurn It on, Turn It up, Turn Me Loose 3:24
2LISTENYou're the One 4:01
3LISTENIt Only Hurts When I Cry 2:35
4LISTENThe Heart That You Own 3:10
5LISTENSuspicious Minds 3:54
6LISTENThinking About Leaving 3:55
7LISTENA Thousand Miles from Nowhere 4:29
8LISTENAin't That Lonely Yet 3:20
9LISTENFast as You 4:47
10LISTENPocket of a Clown 2:56
11LISTENSorry You Asked? 3:25
12LISTENNothing 3:55
13LISTENI'll Go Back to Her 3:31
14LISTENCrazy Little Thing Called Love 2:22

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

From the first twanging guitar licks of "Turn It On, Turn It Up, Turn Me Loose" to the sprightly remake of Queen's "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" (currently energizing Gap ads on TV), Dwight Yoakam's survey of his '90s hits plays like a great country album, a great rock 'n' roll album and a great honky-tonk album all at once. Which makes a fine case for Yoakam as one of the most important country artists of his generation. There's not a bad or indifferent song here; many are Yoakam originals marked by the economy and emotional directness he learned well during his misspent youth, when he preferred Buck Owens to baseball. The few covers -- notably "Suspicious Minds" (Yoakam has proven himself the King's foremost interpreter) and "Ain't That Lonely Yet," the gut-wrenching saga of love gone wrong -- are delivered with the ferocity of personal testament. Driving it all home are Yoakam's powerful vocals (a nasal whine that carries loads of heartbreak and pride in a single phrase), and Pete Anderson's edgy production flourishes. As a bonus, Yoakam cut three new songs: the Queen hit; an unforgiving Waylon Jennings number, "I'll Go Back to Her"; and a startling new effort co-written with Rodney Crowell, "Thinking About Leaving," which sounds like one of Crowell's finest songs. The '90s have been alright for Dwight. David McGee, Barnes & Noble



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