Shock'n Y'All Toby Keith

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CD - Enhanced

  • Release Date: 11/04/2003
  • Sales Rank: 12,179
  • Label: DREAMWORKS
  • UPC: 600445043527
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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Shock'n Y'All

1LISTENI Love This Bar 5:35
2LISTENWhiskey Girl 3:59
3LISTENAmerican Soldier 4:23
4LISTENIf I Was Jesus 3:44
5LISTENTime for Me to Ride 5:22
6LISTENSweet 3:06
7LISTENDon't Leave, I Think I Love You 3:46
8LISTENNights I Can't Remember, Friends I'll Never Forget 4:00
9LISTENBaddest Boots 4:23
10LISTENThe Critic 4:02
11LISTENThe Taliban Song 3:58
12LISTENWeed With Willie 4:03

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Yahoos will be disappointed in Toby Keith for not waving the red, white, and blue more aggressively on the follow-up to his controversial 9/11 response, Unleashed. But the beefy Okie has done the right thing by low-keying the politics and returning to examinations of the grinding, workaday world. His closest foray into Angry Americanism is both muted and respectful: "American Soldier" recounts the G.I.'s regimented life and daily sacrifices. In contrast to the figurative bombs exploding all over his previous album, however, this song commences austerely, with gentle, finger-picked acoustic guitar, then rises to a controlled roar as it celebrates courage and commitment to a cause. The sarcastic "Taliban Song" gives him a chance to roll out some vintage jingoism, but it's hardly as incendiary as other Keith broadsides. Otherwise the news is about topics closer to home. The sludgy, Stones-ish country blues of "I Love This Bar" celebrates the debauched types who make the nightlife special. Keith offers up a couple of tasty morsels of southern rock 'n' soul, Memphis style, in the driving breakup song "Time for Me to Ride" and a grinding ode to a Georgia peach, "Sweet," both of which benefit from razor-edged guitar work and pumping horn sections. The catchy, island-flavored "Nights I Can't Remember, Friends I'll Never Forget" appropriates Jimmy Buffett's easygoing attitude in paying unapologetic tribute to college days spent partying hearty (at the expense of an education), thereby maintaining the album's sub-theme of conscience-free pursuit of unbridled hedonistic pleasures. Punchy, muscular, and fueled by heartland machismo, Shock'n Y'All ought to keep Toby Keith's gravy train rolling, even absent any controversial super-patriotism or gung-ho militarism. David McGee, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

Toby's best yetby Anonymous

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January 06, 2004: Awsome lyrics and an IN-YOUR-FACE attitudemake it a big hit with people of all ages.

Toby's bestby Anonymous

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December 25, 2003: Shock'n Y'all is Toby's best effort to date. Great rocking songs, lots of classic Toby humor, and a powerful tribute to America's military. While there are no true ballads, the album is so good you don't miss them. Who ever said every country album had to have ballads, anyway?


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