• Report Links
    We do not store any files or images on our server. XenPaste only index and link to content provided by other non-affiliated sites. If your copyrighted material has been posted on XenPaste or if hyperlinks to your copyrighted material are returned through our search engine and you want this material removed, you must contact the owners of such sites where the files and images are stored.

Dolly Parton - Backwoods Barbie (2008)


🦊 DNSProxy Layer 7 DDOS Protection 🥷 / DMCA Ignored 🫡 / Advanced Browser Checks 🕸

King

Administrator
Joined
Jul 12, 2021
Messages
25,005
Reaction score
5
Points
38

cef2c01c3c2e397f73e95a5a7c1ae358.jpeg




FLAC (tracks+ Playlist) | Blues/Country/Folk Country | 00:48:14 | 262.07 MB
Label: Dolly Records​


Tracklist
It's been three years since Dolly Parton released a new album, and nearly two decades since she put out anything close to a mainstream country offering, so Backwoods Barbie ought to get some serious media attention, although it remains to be seen whether the now 62-year-old Parton will get much play on the new country stations. The first single from the album, the cloyingly wise "Better Get to Livin'," is certainly catchy enough, but the fact remains that Parton's voice isn't quite what it used to be and she wasn't exactly Patsy Cline in the first place. What she is, and has been all these years, is a true iconic presence in country music, a shrewd marketer, an astute businesswoman (Backwoods Barbie appears from her own Dolly Records), and a frequently brilliant if understated songwriter (nine of the 12 tracks here are Parton originals). Unlike her last couple of albums, which were bluegrass-based, she isn't trying to reinvent herself here, but works in her usual pop and country hybrid style (even tenderly covering Smokey Robinson's "The Tracks of My Tears"), not trying too hard to be contemporary, although the production touches are there (the album was co-produced by Parton and her bandleader, guitarist Kent Wells), certainly, and her version of Betsy Ulmer and Craig Wiseman's "Jesus & Gravity," even more than "Better Get to Livin'," could well find itself in regular rotation on new country radio stations, at least in a fair and equitable world. Other highlights here include the title song, which shows Parton still in tune with her public image (she really always has been, of course), and the beautiful and delicate original "Only Dreamin'," which shows that, beneath all the big wigs and glamour, Parton is still a fine songwriter with an...

Read more

Continue reading...
 
Top