| ALL Music What I Do - Review
Release Date
Sep 7, 2004
Recording Date
2004
Label
BMG/Arista Nashville
Genre Styles
Country
Neo-Traditionalist Country
Contemporary Country
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Alan Jackson had been a star for a long time before he released Drive in 2002,
but that album turned him into a superstar, largely because it had the post-9/11
anthem "Where Were You (When the World Stopped Turning)," a crossover
smash that made Jackson a household name. Unlike some of his peers, he didn't
embrace this opportunity to become an omnipresent celebrity, he turned out
a second greatest-hits album in 2003 — complete with another crossover
hit in the Jimmy Buffett duet "It's Five O'Clock Somewhere" — before
returning with the full-length What I Do in September of 2004. Filled with
straightforward, unadorned honky tonk and gentle, rolling ballads, What I Do
makes it clear that Jackson doesn't have the slightest interest in becoming
a full-fledged, crossover country-pop star. This is the purest country album
he's cut in a long time, but what makes it one of his very best albums isn't
its purity, it's how it's delivered with a quiet confidence, a big heart, and
a sly sense of humor. Jackson has backed away from any big social statements — there
is a song called "USA Today," but far from being a comment on either
the state of the world or his celebrity, it merely tells the tale of "the
loneliest man in the U.S.A. today" — and sings about love, heartache,
churches, fixing cars, and wishing "If French Fries Were Fat Free." As
that last song suggests, he's learned from his idol George Jones that even
songs about heartbreak can be just as effective if delivered with a sense of
humor, but the best joke here is "The Talkin' Song Repair Blues," where
Jackson haggles with a mechanic who fancies himself a songwriter. Despite these
moments of levity, much of What I Do is heavy on ballads. While it's true that
the loping drinking song "Strong Enough" and rip-roaring "Burnin'
the Honky Tonks Down" are so good it's hard not to wish Jackson threw
a few more ravers into the mix, each of these ballads works splendidly, whether
it's the sweet "Too Much of a Good Thing," the gently supportive "There
Ya Go," or the aching "Rainy Day in June." Given the preponderance
of ballads and the laid-back delivery, What I Do has an intimate, relaxed feel,
the polar opposite of a sequel to a blockbuster like Drive usually is. But
instead of feeling like a retreat, What I Do feels like one of Jackson's most
assured and best albums, proof positive that he's the best mainstream country
singer of this decade.
1 Too Much of a Good Thing Jackson 3:10
2 Rainy Day in June Jackson 4:40
3 USA Today Jackson 3:26
4 If Love Was a River Wright, Wright 3:54
5 If French Fries Were Fat Free Jackson 4:16
6 You Don't Have to Paint Me a Picture Jackson 3:45
7 There Ya Go Hill, Stegall 3:13
8 The Talkin' Song Repair Blues Linde 2:58
9 Strong Enough Wright 4:04
10 Monday Morning Church Baxter, Enderlin 3:23
11 Burnin' the Honky Tonks Down Burnette, Camp 4:53
12 To Do What I Do [live] Johnson 3:00
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