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Darryl Worley (Lyrics included with album, Enhanced CD-ROM)

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1 Disc(s)

  1. 1.

    Awful Beautiful Life 3:52

    Darryl Worley

    Play Awful Beautiful Life
  2. 2.

    If I Could Tell the Truth 3:42

    Darryl Worley

    Play If I Could Tell the Truth
  3. 3.

    I Love Her, She Hates Me 3:33

    Darryl Worley

    Play I Love Her, She Hates Me
  4. 4.

    If Something Should Happen 4:40

    Darryl Worley

    Play If Something Should Happen
  5. 5.

    Work and Worry 4:01

    Darryl Worley

    Play Work and Worry
  6. 6.

    If It Hadn't Been for Love 4:13

    Darryl Worley

    Play If It Hadn't Been for Love
  7. 7.

    Was It Good for You 3:27

    Darryl Worley

    Play Was It Good for You
  8. 8.

    Find Me 3:50

    Darryl Worley

    Play Find Me
  9. 9.

    Wake Up America 4:14

    Darryl Worley

    Play Wake Up America
  10. 10.

    What Makes a Man Do That 4:20

    Darryl Worley

    Play What Makes a Man Do That
  11. 11.

    Better Than I Deserve 4:05

    Darryl Worley

    Play Better Than I Deserve
  12. 12.

    Whistle Dixie 4:40

    Darryl Worley

    Play Whistle Dixie

Description

This self-titled effort is album number three and a half for Darryl Worley, if you count his last release, 2003's Have You Forgotten?, largely cobbled together from his first two albums to cash in on the jingoistic single of the same name (which in turn was made to cash in on the run-up to the U.S. invasion of Iraq) and featuring only six new songs, as half an album. Actually, Worley might have been better advised to wait a little longer before putting out a new disc, but then he and his advisors may have wanted to reposition him quickly from his flag-waving persona of 2003; the press release for this album claims it "completely reinvents him as an artist." If so, it reinvents him as a man somewhat humbled by world events, but still interested in them. In "Awful Beautiful Life," the single released long in advance of the album, he mentions in the song's bridge a cousin serving in Iraq (mispronounced "EYE-rack," of course), adding "We're all aware that he may never make it back." "Wake Up America" (the title should have a comma after "Up") sounds like it's going to be a political diatribe from the title, but it turns out to be a lament about drug addiction, an interesting cause for a singer whose songs are sopping with alcohol. More like it is the character of Earl, the protagonist of "I Love Her, She Hates Me," whose reply to every question, whether about Wall Street or football, is, "I love her, she hates me, I drink." Worley and his 18 fellow songwriters are steeped in standard country music subject matter: drinking, cheating, drinking, redemption, drinking, murder, drinking, being Southern, and drinking. They describe these subjects in lyrics that are filled with near and not-so-near rhymes (in one song, the word "drink" is rhymed with "tank," "gain," "game," "thing," and "lane") and littered with clichés, and Worley's backup musicians play typical country music with rock rhythms, a fiddle and a steel guitar never out of the mix for long. Worley has a serviceable but basically anonymous low tenor. This is nearly generic Nashville product, but Worley performs it with conviction, and that earns him his moment in the sun. William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide

Details

Description

    This self-titled effort is album number three and a half for Darryl Worley, if you count his last release, 2003's Have You Forgotten?, largely cobbled together from his first two albums to cash in on the jingoistic single of the same name (which in turn was made to cash in on the run-up to the U.S. invasion of Iraq) and featuring only six new songs, as half an album. Actually, Worley might have been better advised to wait a little longer before putting out a new disc, but then he and his advisors may have wanted to reposition him quickly from his flag-waving persona of 2003; the press release for this album claims it "completely reinvents him as an artist." If so, it reinvents him as a man somewhat humbled by world events, but still interested in them. In "Awful Beautiful Life," the single released long in advance of the album, he mentions in the song's bridge a cousin serving in Iraq (mispronounced "EYE-rack," of course), adding "We're all aware that he may never make it back." "Wake Up America" (the title should have a comma after "Up") sounds like it's going to be a political diatribe from the title, but it turns out to be a lament about drug addiction, an interesting cause for a singer whose songs are sopping with alcohol. More like it is the character of Earl, the protagonist of "I Love Her, She Hates Me," whose reply to every question, whether about Wall Street or football, is, "I love her, she hates me, I drink." Worley and his 18 fellow songwriters are steeped in standard country music subject matter: drinking, cheating, drinking, redemption, drinking, murder, drinking, being Southern, and drinking. They describe these subjects in lyrics that are filled with near and not-so-near rhymes (in one song, the word "drink" is rhymed with "tank," "gain," "game," "thing," and "lane") and littered with clichés, and Worley's backup musicians play typical country music with rock rhythms, a fiddle and a steel guitar never out of the mix for long. Worley has a serviceable but basically anonymous low tenor. This is nearly generic Nashville product, but Worley performs it with conviction, and that earns him his moment in the sun. William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide

Features

Additional Information

  • DPCI: 244-08-5251
  • ASIN: B002PTFDQU
  • Catalog #: 11683250
  • Item can not be gift wrapped.

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