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Sara Evans is emerging as a country belter whose vocal strength and interpretive savvy rival Trisha Yearwood's. Restless, her fourth album, evokes its title sentiment on a number of songs fueled by jittery fiddle lines, wailing electric guitars, and punishing drum assaults, but there's more to the disc than mere state-of-the-art country pop. "Backseat of a Greyhound Bus," for example, takes off into the stratosphere with its booming chorus, but Evans's tender reading of the lyrics, about a girl who finds her "saving grace" in the least likely setting, lends the track a soulful, sensitive touch. Similarly, on the Irish-influenced title song, a striking arrangement rife with mandolin, tin whistle, and a lone, military-like snare drum, provides a rootsy backdrop for a winsome tale of a wandering lass in search of a direction in life. "Asking me not to love you / is like asking Niagara not to fall," is the wry, smart sentiment in "Niagara Falls" -- it's the power ballad that country has been waiting for, with over-the-top production flourishes, a couple of tense, quiet passages, and Evans's fire-powered vocal. She saves her best, though, for "Otis Redding," which is not an homage to the great soul singer but a tale of lust and longing sung with smoldering intensity by a gal who beckons her lover with "Otis Redding makes me feel good / dancing in the kitchen barefoot." Sounds like a plan, just as Restless sounds like a huge breakthrough for one of country's premier singers. David McGee, Barnes & Noble