Greatest Hits Volume Two

Reba McEntire

MCA Records, 1993

http://www.reba.com

REVIEW BY: JB

ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED: 10/27/1997

I'm a sucker for songs about love gone wrong (like I would know, haha). My friends suggest Sarah McLachlan but I lean to the mellow side of country music for my dose of corny oversentimentalism. It's good, healing stuff.

Reba McEntire's Greatest Hits Volume Two rarely showcases raw catharsis. Songs like "Rumor Has It" needs some delving and perhaps some sing-along (not a bad drawl for a Sweden-born Korean!). I remember giving "For My Broken Heart" one spin, disliking it, and months later having the song come back to me; now I know it by heart. One innocently bustling moment of you day, a particle of a lyric will echo in your head and after that it's for life.my_heart_sings_the_harmony_web_ad_alt_250

Some songs are just for fun. "Love Will Find Its Way to You" is easy listening, if a little misplaced in the cohesion of the album (hey, it's a greatest hits). "You Lie" is one of Bob's hated voice showcases but she's more interested in keeping it long and no-vibrato; the instinct to sing backup is overpowering.

But I have to confess, it's the more poppy theme tunes I gravitate towards. Before you crucify me for my fondness for single-material, try "Does He Love You." This ironic confrontation with Linda Davis at the upper-part has the two ladies almost asking "Does this mean we're related?" "Fancy" is the rise of a woman in the South with McEntire unleashing her native drawl in determined passion. Yes it has a power chorus but the song boils throughout creating a sharp fluidity.

"Is There Life Out There" was the first McEntire song I've ever heard and it's still fresh today. Its misleading title, questioning vocals and open-all-the-windows-I'm-going-to-suffocate-! arrangement will make many a homemaker ask the same question.

Being the Spoiled One, "The Greatest Man I Never Knew" doesn't click with me. Try as I might, "They Asked About You" sounds like a rough draft of "Rumor Has It" before the latter was equipped with better hooks.

But overall, the mix is on the quiet side of country; even "Fancy"'s rage and injustice is a silent rumble. After the grating sounds of Everyday Life, the album's sincerity will speak to you gently ... if you let it.

Rating: B

User Rating: Not Yet Rated


Comments

 








© 1997 JB and The Daily Vault. All rights reserved. Review or any portion may not be reproduced without written permission. Cover art is the intellectual property of MCA Records, and is used for informational purposes only.