CD
| 1 | Why Ain't I Running 4:32 |
| 2 | Beer Run (B-Double E-Double Are You In?) / George Jones 2:30 |
| 3 | Wrapped Up in You 4:43 |
| 4 | The Storm 4:36 |
| 5 | Thicker Than Blood 2:53 |
| 6 | Big Money 4:01 |
| 7 | Squeeze Me In / Trisha Yearwood 3:32 |
| 8 | Mr. Midnight 4:03 |
| 9 | Pushing Up Daisies 4:19 |
| 10 | Rodeo or Mexico 4:22 |
| 11 | Don't Cross the River 4:08 |
| 12 | When You Come Back to Me Again Theme from "Frequency" 4:44 |
With his rockin' alter ego, Chris Gaines, now on a well-deserved sabbatical, Garth Brooks returns to his country persona on Scarecrow, a mainstream effort long on the well-crafted songs and winning vocals common to Garth's familiar blockbusters. The bluesy harmonica wailing through "Wrapped Up in You" gets into a salty dialogue with the fiddle, adding a rave-up quality to a lighthearted love song. In his latest foray into topicality, Brooks offers "The Storm," a roiling, melodramatic account of a woman who hears "the warnings from her family roaring like a hurricane," as she tries to pick up the pieces in the wake of her man's unceremonious departure. The country swing of "Big Money" lightens the mood, and Garth responds with a folksy, jovial vocal advising kindness towards rich relatives " 'cause they just might put you in their will." In the same upbeat vein is the honky-tonk barn-burner "Squeeze Me In," a fiery duet with Trisha Yearwood. Turnabout being fair play, the freewheeling "Beer Run," a duet featured on George Jones's potent The Rock: Stone Cold Country 2001, turns up here as well. Scarecrow bows out on an optimistic note with the buoyant "When You Come Back to Me Again," which tells of the inevitable reuniting of parted but ever-faithful lovers. Despite his self-imposed retirement, Garth sounds like he's gotta lotta game left. Perhaps he's taking a cue from Michael Jordan... David McGee, Barnes & Noble