Brad Paisley

Rate this:

Home > Music > Brad Paisley > Discography

Brad Paisley
Play: The Guitar Album
Release Date: 2008 11 04
Label: Arista

Brad Paisley never made his love of classic '60s country a secret, often inviting his idols into the studio to record cornpone skits straight out of Hee Haw. Paisley is so steeped in the '60s that it's easy to ignore that he was born much, much later, growing up in the heyday of shred guitarists in the late '80s. These two seemingly opposed sides surface on Play, a predominantly instrumental album where the spotlight shines so brightly on the six-string that even the cuts with vocals are either about or are showcases for the guitar. Some of this falls well within the bounds of the expected chicken-picking, with Paisley paying such loving, explicit tribute to Don Rich that he quotes the "Buckaroo" theme on the opening cadence of his duet with the late Buck Owens, "Come on In." Paisley's picking on the hypercharged "Huckleberry Jam" and "Cluster Pluck" is a pleasure, but it's also nice to hear him stretch out and play some deep blues on "Kentucky Jelly," trade licks with B.B. King on "Let the Good Times Roll," cop some swinging jazz from Les Paul on the aptly titled "Les Is More," and roll on the breakers on "Turf's Up" (there may not be any novelty songs here, but Paisley sure makes up for that with his punning song titles). As good as these are, it all falls within the realm of the expected; what surprises on Play is how the '80s shred gods surface -- how Paisley's love letter to his wife, "Kim," sounds like how Joe Satriani slowed things down (and Satch surfaces again on the slow-rolling "Departure"), or how he answers Eric Johnson's "Cliffs of Dover" with "Cliffs of Rock City." These ventures into pure '80s shred go a long way to illustrating just how versatile a guitarist Brad Paisley is, and they wind up as accidental autobiography, revealing a side he's previously camouflaged -- but now that it's surfaced, it's easy to see why his albums are always among the most adventurous and best country music of this decade. Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Tracks:
TitleComposerTime
1Huckleberry JamRogers, Paisley2:52
2Turf's UpPaisley, Rogers3:30
3Start a BandLovelace, Davidson, Gorley5:26
4KimPaisley3:58
5DeparturePaisley, Rogers4:28
6Come on InOwens3:53
7Kentucky JellyPaisley, Rogers, McAnally2:44
8Playing with FireArthur, Paisley4:51
9More Than Just This SongWariner, Paisley5:14
10Is MoreRogers, Paisley3:18
11Pre-Cluster Cluster Pluck Prequel (Prelude)Paisley, Rogers, Grantt1:34
12Cluster PluckRogers, Paisley, Grantt3:31
13Cliffs of Rock CityArthur, Paisley3:44
14Let the Good Times RollTheard, Moore5:30
15What a Friend We Have in JesusTraditional2:31
16Waitin' on a Woman [*]Sampson, Varble5:02

Releases:
YearTypeLabel
LPArista
2008CDArista/Sony BMG



Similar Artists:
Ty Herndon
Rodney Atkins
Kenny Chesney
Keith Urban
Trace Adkins
More >>

Influenced By:
T. Texas Tyler
Patsy Montana
Shenandoah
Dwight Yoakam
George Strait
More >>







Browse More Music:
# A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Follow Starpulse

  • Facebook Twitter MySpace RSS / XML Email Subscribe