Something Worth Leaving Behind [Import]

Something Worth Leaving Behind [Import]

Something Worth Leaving Behind [Import]

ASIN: B00006IQDJ

Track Listings
 
1. Something Worth Leaving Behind
2. I Saw Your Light
3. When You Gonna Run to Me
4. Talk to Me
5. Forever Everyday
6. Orphan Train
7. I Need You
8. You Should've Lied
9. He'll Be Back
10. Surrender
11. Blame It on Me
12. Closing This Memory Down
13. Something Worth Leaving Behind
14. Mendocino County Line [*] - Willie Nelson, Lee Ann Womack

Editorial Reviews
Product Description
Features Exclusive Bonus Track "Mendocino County Line" with Willie Nelson, Not on USA Version.

Something Worth Leaving Behind,Lee Ann Womack,Universal Int'l,Contemporary Country,Country,Country-Pop,Country/Bluegrass,Neo-Traditionalist Country,Pop
Something Worth Leaving Behind
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Bonus track also available on Willie Nelson album
Something Worth Leaving Behind
Lee Ann Womack
Manufacturer: Umvd Import
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Contemporary Country | Country | Styles | Music
New TraditionalistNew Traditionalist | Contemporary Country | Country | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Country | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Bluegrass | Country | Styles | Music
ContemporaryContemporary | Bluegrass | Country | Styles | Music
CountryCountry | Imports | Stores | Music
ASIN: B00006IQDJ
Release Date: 2002-10-15

Tracks:

  1. Something Worth Leaving Behind
  2. I Saw Your Light
  3. When You Gonna Run to Me
  4. Talk to Me
  5. Forever Everyday
  6. Orphan Train
  7. I Need You
  8. You Should've Lied
  9. He'll Be Back
  10. Surrender
  11. Blame It on Me
  12. Closing This Memory Down
  13. Something Worth Leaving Behind
  14. Mendocino County Line [*] - Willie Nelson, Lee Ann Womack

Album Details

Features Exclusive Bonus Track "Mendocino County Line" with Willie Nelson, Not on USA Version.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Bonus track also available on Willie Nelson album.......2002-09-04

This album is more pop-sounding than anything Lee Ann has done before, but it's still a classy album which is highly entertaing.

The bonus track on this UK edition is Mendocino county line, a stunning duet with Willie Nelson which has already been made available on one of his albums, The Great Divide. For approximately the same price as that quoted for this import, you could buy both the standard version of this CD and The Great Divide.

The remainder of this review is a copy of my review of the main album.

Lee Ann has recorded her most pop-sounding album yet, but it's brilliant. Lee Ann deserves to take most of her old fans with her. She will certainly lose some, but she will gain more than she loses, just as Dolly, Reba and others did when they followed a similar career path.

Perhaps the hightlight for me is Talk to me, a passionate plea to gain a better understanding of each other. When Lee Ann pleads for you to find the words that you feel because understanding is forgiving, it makes you want to do just that, and it's so true.

Two of the most unusual songs here are Forever everyday, which appears to be a song about re-incarnation, and Orphan train, written by Julie Miller, the true meaning of which I've yet to work out properly.

Elsewhere on this album, Lee Ann demonstrates her ability to sing everything from romantic songs to uptempo rockers, and the whole makes for a very satisfying listening experience.

Nobody should buy this expecting it to be like Lee Ann's other albums. Lee Ann clearly wants to be around for a while yet, and will no doubt return to a more traditional sound when the time is right, just as Dolly has already done. In the meantime, enjoy this album for what it is - contemporary pop-country of the highest quality.

Album Review:

  1. Steelin' For A Livin'
  2. Still Standing
  3. Stupefyin' Jones
  4. Sun Records: The Sun Songbook
  5. Sweet Pea
  6. Taking My Time
  7. The Arms of a Good Woman
  8. The Best of Earl Thomas Conley, Vol. 1
  9. The Best of Gene Watson
  10. The Cypress Hills of Saskatchewan

Album Review

Album Review