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Trace Adkins puts a cherry on top of a career-making year with X. He finished as a runner-up on TV's Celebrity Apprentice, flogged a well-received book (A Personal Stand: Observations and Opinions of a Freethinking Roughneck), landed a featured role in the right-wing comedy An American Carol, and scored a No. 1 Country record, “You’re Gonna Miss This,” from his greatest hits collection. Barnes & Noble
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Trace Adkins puts a cherry on top of a career-making year with X. He finished as a runner-up on TV's Celebrity Apprentice, flogged a well-received book (A Personal Stand: Observations and Opinions of a Freethinking Roughneck), landed a featured role in the right-wing comedy An American Carol, and scored a No. 1 Country record, “You’re Gonna Miss This,” from his greatest hits collection.
If you didn't know better, the blasting guitar riff on "Sweet," the opening track on Trace Adkins'X (Ten), might be mistaken for one off a .38 Special track from the late '70s. The track has the single potential of one of Adkins' many hits. The song has an infectious hook in its refrain -- and yes, it rocks. But by the time the set's second number, "Happy to Be Here," commences with a similar big guitar entrance -- albeit on a midtempo ballad -- "Sweet" isn't even a memory. And the same happens for the latter cut when "All I Ask for Anymore" arrives with strings, an acoustic guitar, and a pedal steel whispering in that big gritty baritone of Adkins. It's a ballad drenched in personal truth, and gratitude that is profound. Adkins is actually trying to get across something of a "message" here, albeit one that is humble in scope. The funky B-3 and snare WHOMP that introduces "Let's Do That Again" is a nice curve ball, even if the cut sounds like an outtake from a Josh Turner record. The wide-open slide and pedal steel guitars ride the shuffling rhythm; the singer's delivery has that balance of swagger and warmth that makes it soulful. The acoustic country blues (à la John Hurt style) on "Marry for Money" is deceptive in that it is merely the intro to a modern honky tonk tune that is the lyrical Nash Vegas equivalent of bling rap -- and is every bit as sexist.
The album's best track is easily "Til the Last Shot's Fired," written by Rob Crosby and Doug Johnson. It's an antiwar song from the point of view of the ghosts of soldiers who served in the Confederacy, on Omaha Beach during WWII, in Vietnam, and in Afghanistan. Its Dobro, acoustic guitars, brushed snare, and gorgeous choral arrangement at the end of the track make it stand out from the pack, not just on this set, but from contemporary country in general. It's followed by the stellar "I Can't Outrun You," a broken love song about a different kind of ghost. And like its immediate predecessor, it sounds like Adkins means it. The façade of the good-time shaggy-dog honky tonk boy is ripped away, and what remains is a man with some regrets, some baggage, and some hard-won, hard-lived truth, helping him move through the world. With every '70s rock and funky-lite cliché in the book tossed in the mix, it's debatable. If you need further proof of the dilemma, check the straight-ahead melody, whining steel, and shimmering drums on the honky tonk ballad "Sometimes a Man Takes a Drink," a paean to alcoholism. It's a country song that isn't a bevy of ridiculous lyrics celebrating the "good" life, but a story that points to something more poignant, larger, and embedded in the bone of the singer. It isn't even the singer's fault that half of this -- no doubt the more commercially successful half -- will continue to perpetuate Nash Vegas' identity crisis that walks between '70s radio rock and its own tradition. If one wants to really hear the gifts that Adkins is endowed with as a vocalist, one that can reach people in the marrow of where they live, toss away the hits and listen to the rest. Thom Jurek



Album Credits | ||
| Performance Credits | ||
| Trace Adkins | Primary Artist | |
| Eric Darken | Percussion | |
| Mike Brignardello | Bass | |
| Pat Buchanan | Electric Guitar, Harp, Guitar (Baritone) | |
| John Catchings | Cello | |
| J.T. Corenflos | Electric Guitar, Guitar (Baritone) | |
| Shannon Forrest | Drums | |
| Paul Franklin | Steel Guitar | |
| Kenny Greenberg | Electric Guitar, Guitar (Baritone) | |
| Dann Huff | Electric Guitar | |
| B. James Lowry | Acoustic Guitar | |
| Greg Morrow | Drums | |
| Gordon Mote | Piano, Hammond Organ, Hammond B3 | |
| Aubrey Haynie | Fiddle, Mandolin, Electric Guitar | |
| Pat Bergeson | Acoustic Guitar | |
| Ben Isaacs | Background Vocals | |
| Sonya Isaacs | Background Vocals | |
| Bryan Sutton | Acoustic Guitar, Banjo, Guitar, national steel guitar | |
| Love Sponge String Quartet | Strings | |
| Wes Hightower | Background Vocals | |
| Frank Rogers | Banjo, Electric Guitar | |
| Michael "Mike Dee" Johnson | Dobro, Steel Guitar | |
| Ilya Toshinsky | Banjo | |
| Jim "Moose" Brown | Piano, Keyboards, Hammond Organ, Clavinet, Hammond B3 | |
| Michael Johnson | Dobro, Steel Guitar | |
| Technical Credits | ||
| Neal Cappellino | Engineer | |
| John Hobbs | Arranger, String Conductor | |
| David Huntsinger | Arranger | |
| Hank Williams | Mastering | |
| Brian David Willis | Digital Editing | |
| Chris Latham | Engineer | |
| Richard Barrow | Engineer | |
| Brady Barnett | Digital Editing | |
| Lee Wright | Graphic Design | |
| Frank Rogers | Producer, Audio Production | |
| Joanna Carter | Art Direction | |
| Tyler Moles | Digital Editing | |
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