Alan Jackson SKU: EVP-886978802729 Barcode: 886978802729

Alan Jackson | DRIVE | CD

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Personnel includes: Alan Jackson (vocals, acoustic guitar); Bruce Watkins (acoustic guitar, banjo); Brent Mason, J.T. Corenflos (electric guitar); Stuart Duncan (mandolin, fiddle); Jim Hoke (harmonica); Gordon Mote (piano, keyboards); John Kelton (Tictac bass); John Wesley Ryles, Wes Hightower (background vocals); Vince Gill.
"Where Were You (When The World Stopped Turning)" won the 2003 Grammy Award for Best Country Song.
DRIVE was nominated for the 2003 Grammy Award for Best Country Album. "Where Were You (When The World Stopped Turning)" was nominated for the 2003 Grammy Awards for Song Of The Year and Best Male Country Vocal Performance..
Personnel: Bruce Watkins (acoustic guitar, banjo); Greenwood Hart (acoustic guitar, accordion, piano); J.T. Corenflos, Brent Mason (electric guitar); Paul Franklin (steel guitar); Stuart Duncan (mandolin, fiddle); Jim Hoke (harmonica); Gordon Mote (piano, keyboards); Eddie Bayers (drums); Irene Kelley, John Wesley Ryles, Wes Hightower (background vocals).
Audio Mixer: John Kelton.
Recording information: Cartee Day Studio; Manta Sound, Toronto, Canada; The Sound Station, Nashville, TN; Tracking Room; Wedgewood Sound.
Photographers: Tony Phipps; John Russell .
The obvious talking point on Alan Jackson's hugely successful DRIVE is "Where Were You (When the World Stopped Turning)," a song written in response to the September 11 attacks on the Pentagon and the World Trade Center. Its refreshing lack of gung-ho patriotism and focus on small details ("Did you turn off that violent old movie you're watchin'/And turn on I Love Lucy reruns") is a hallmark of Jackson's songwriting, which is adept at finding a telling detail to highlight a bigger truth.
Elsewhere, in the best country tradition, "The Sounds" is a familiar tale of heartbreak freshly told, while "Work in Progress" is a catalog of a redneck doofus's unwitting transgressions that'll find an echo in many male listeners. "Designated Drinker," a duet with George Strait, is another in a seemingly inexhaustible line of country drinking songs. Appropriately for an album named DRIVE, two automobile-related songs bookend the set. The title track is about Jackson's first boat and car, while "First Love," in the tradition of NRBQ's "Little Floater" and Neil Young's "Long May You Run," is also about a much-loved vehicle that should be food for thought for women everywhere.

  • Format: CD
  • Genre: Pop
  • Released: 01/15/2002
  • Released: 1/15/2002