Country superstars don't come any more reliable
than Alan Jackson. Closing in on two dec-ades on the job, he still
hasn't broken his string of strong singer-songwriter records, without
ever wandering anywhere near the mainstream-pop spotlight. On Good Time,
he doesn't push himself hard, sticking to the familiar themes of "Small
Town Southern Man," "Country Boy" and "Laid Back 'N Low Key." When he
gets hold of a honky-tonk ditty like "Good Time," he lets it roll on
past the five-minute mark just to prove he can. Sometimes he goes
overboard, as in "I Still Like Bologna," where he gets sentimental over
cold cuts on white bread as a refuge from the world of laptops and cell
phones. But his finest songs are always his romantic ballads, and the
best one here also sounds like the one he wrote the quickest: "1976,"
where he sings about meeting his wife in the good old days when "Jimmy
Carter moved to D.C./A Georgia boy just like me" and reflects, "Wonder
Woman sure looked fine/Bionic Man was still prime time."
(Posted: Feb 7, 2008)
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