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Trisha Yearwood Album: “Songbook”
 Description :
Personnel: Trisha Yearwood, Garth Brooks (vocals); Larry Byrom, Mark Casstevens (acoustic guitar); Steve Gibson, Chris Leuzinger (electric guitar); Paul Franklin (lap steel guitar); Bruce Bouton (steel guitar); The Nashville String Machine (strings); Jim Horn (saxophone); Steve Nathan, Matt Rollings, Bobby Wood (keyboards); Mike Chapman, Michael Rhodes (bass); Paul Leim, Milton Sledge (drums); Judson Spence, Carie McDowell, Harry Stinson, Raul Malo, Lari White, Chuck Cannon, Garth Fundis, Don Henley, Kim Richey (background vocals).
<p>Producers: Tony Brown, Trisha Yearwood, Garth Fundis, Harry Stinson.
<p>Engineers: Jeff Balding, Mark Miller.
<p>Includes liner notes by James Hunter.
<p>All tracks have been digitally remastered using HDCD technology.
<p>"How Do I Live" was nominated for 1998 Grammy for Song Of The Year and won the Grammy for Best Female Country Vocal Performance. "In Another's Eyes" won the 1998 Grammy Award for Best Country Collaboration With Vocals and was nominated for Best Country Song.
<p>SONGBOOK combines 10 hits from the first part of Yearwood's career (through 1995's THINKIN' ABOUT YOU) with a soundtrack cut ("How Do I Live," from "Con Air") and a new duet with Garth Brooks ("In Another's Eyes"). The album makes a case for Yearwood as one of the finest country singers of the '90s. Yearwood's painfully real portraits of lovers on the ropes are rigorously absent of the standard Nashville tricks. There are no cookie-cutter melodies, no needless swings into honky-tonk nostalgia, no superfluous steel guitars, no emotional resolutions achieved in two perfect verses--just stuff that's real.
<p>In "Like We Never Had A Broken Heart" (another duet with Brooks, from her debut album), she tries to patch up a failing affair with a good night of sex, advising her partner, "Pretend I'm someone that you love." The heroine of "XXX's and OOO's" wakes up to this casually brutal world: "Phone rings/Baby cries/TV diet guru lies." Yearwood sings with a matter-of-fact emotion that acknowledges the struggles and the sadness (and occasional bliss) without ever overdoing it. She trusts these songs, and the degree to which she doesn't cry all over them suggests a confidence in the material that's increasingly rare in Nashville.
Track Listing :
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Album Information :
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UPC:008817001128
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Format:CD
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Type:Performer
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Genre:Country - Contemporary Country
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Artist:Trisha Yearwood
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Guest Artists:Garth Brooks; Don Henley
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Label:MCA Nashville
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Distributed:Universal Distribution
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Release Date:1997/08/26
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Discs:1
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Mono / Stereo:Stereo
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Studio / Live:Studio
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S. Foster (Moira, Co Armagh United Kingdom) - January 28, 2000
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
- Smooth and Sensual
I have always been intiruged by Trisha Yearwood after seeing her sing ''Everybody Knows'' on Ellen a few years bak and enjoy watching her sing each time I watch that episode. I becale affixed after seeing her support Garth Brooks in Ireland a few years bak. I then decided to buy this cd and ''Everybody Knows'' (as it isn't on this cd), but in the words of Janice from ''Friends'', 'Oh my Gawwwwd!', what a revelation this is. Far from being a Country Music connoisseur or an avid fan, I just knew from the delivery of songs such as Like We Never Had a Broken Heart and Down on My Knees, I was listening to a hidden revelation (certainly here in Ireland anyway). Personal favourites are Like We Never Had A broken Heart, The Song Remembers When and Wrong Side of Mmephis. All these songs carry beautiful and evocative lyrics and touch upon everyday subjects like doing grocery shopping or parents being over protective of their offspring, but done so in a charming and fun stlye, tat simply makes this release a must for any self-repecting music collection, and one which warms me every time I listen to it (especially driving home late at night). To continue with the Trisha/Leann brouhaha, there is no comparison. While Leann's delivery is tone perfect and enjoyable, it lacks the emotional depth and range that Trisha's brings - she ''lives'' the song, and does so with tremendous spirit. This is of course a subjective view, but one which I think few would disagree with, making the album an additional must
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
- Great Introduction To Trisha
If Linda Ronstadt had gotten started in the `90s instead of the `60s, she'd be Trisha Yearwood. Well not really, but we wouldn't need both of them. Besides their obviously similar sopranos, they share other vocal traits, be it a zestful exhuberance on a toe-tapper or an aching sensivity on a MOR ballad. And while neither write their own material, they both possess the impressive ability to regularly interpret a tune better than the originator.
For Yearwood, that also includes being able to select first-rate material. The hits assembled on (Songbook) are some of the most stimulating to emerge from Nashville in the `90s. "She's In Love With The Boy" is a light-hearted white-trash tale where young love conquers all while "XXX's and OOO's" cheerfully depicts a working woman trying to balance it all in a hectic modern world - with a little help from Aretha Franklin and Patsy Cline. Those romps are offset by some stunning ballads; in particular, the tragic teen saga "Walk Away Joe," with lovely harmonies from Don Henley, and the comparitive yet understanding "The Woman Before Me." Fast or slow, jovial or serious, all are deserved hits.
In addition to the prior hits, (Songbook) offers three new selections. The first single, "How Do I Live," from the film Con Air, is a delightfully inspirational ode of devotion. It is easy to see why Yearwood's womanly version has beaten LeAnn Rimes' rival girlish version on the country charts (age does wonders for believability when it comes to love songs). Yet even more high profile than that Con Air song battle is the second single, "In Another's Eyes," which presents the mega-event pairing of Yearwood with Garth Brooks. Too bad the song itself is so ordinary. Likewise, the uptempo third new track, "Perfect Love," with lines such as "yeah, this is a perfect love, we're doing nothing, but, what a perfect love does..." Yadda, yadda, yadda.
If Yearwood wanted another uptempo number to add some pep to this ballad-heavy collection, she should have gone with the raucous "That's What I Like About You" from her 1991 self-titled debut album. It's the only major omission on this twelve track set (along with recent hits "Baby I Lied" and "Everybody Knows" which were left off to maximize sales of this collection's predecessor, the Everybody Knows album). Still, all of the prior hits found here are just as good (if not quite as infectious). For those consumers of pop and adult contemporary who want to add a little country to their diet, (Songbook) is a great place to start.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
- what a voice
How many times have I listened to this CD? Countless. It's just lovely. Whether you are heartbroken or madly in love, there's a song on here for you.....and Trisha's voice says more than her lyrics....just brilliant. My personal favorites are "How do I live?" and "Down on My Knees" both capture the longing we've all felt at some point in our lives. Buy this CD, put it on and sit back and enjoy.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
- truly a collection of hits
this was my first TY album. and a good choice. if you are only going to own one TY album this should be the one. it contains alot of good songs from her previous albums, and there are some new songs, like How do i live(from the movie Con Air), perfect love, in another's eyes(from garth brooks album sevens) and in the version of the cd that i own(there are 17 tracks all together. it might be the uk or european version????). each one plays out to you with the same quality. good tunes, good lyrics and that great voice. this is one of the best Greatest Hits album i've ever heard!! worth your money and your time....
Customer review - November 20, 1998
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
- You just can't say enough about Trisha Yearwood
Trisha Yearwood's Songbook: A Collection of hits captures your soul. Her immense talent for singing makes everyone else's look like nothing.Her powerful yet soothing voice can bring tears to your eyes or a smile to your face. My personal favorite is " Down on my Knees"." Down on my Knees" is a lovely ballad expressing great feeling. Trisha sings without hesitation and puts her whole heart into this song and the rest of her work. We are all so privileged to have Ms. Yearwood to sit down, drink our coffee, and relax by a warm fire to her music. She is truly one of the great ones.
Eileen Wagner
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