Album Review – Brooks & Dunn’s “Reboot II”
35 years into their existence, a decade after their brief disbanding, five years after being elected into the Country Music Hall of Fame, and with both members now nearing 70 years on this planet, somehow Brooks & Dunn remains perhaps the best duo in all of country music, still. The CMA Awards sure though so, recently awarding them Vocal Duo of the Year, 17 years after their last win for the award, and 32 years since their first.
Meanwhile, it’s been 17 years since the duo has released a new, original album. So how does Brooks & Dunn continue to reign as the most popular country duo around? Combine a weak field where they’re competing with the likes of Dan + Shay for recognition, and the timeless aspect of their incredible catalog that only increases in quality with age. Like all great country music, the songs of Brooks & Dunn are eternally relevant.
But instead of exploiting a moment when Kix Brooks and Ronnie Dunn still have tread left on the tires to give it another shot with original songs, we get a second installment in their Reboot series under the false pretense that they need young and hip performers to help re-integrate their catalog back into the country music consciousness.
Reboot II does have quite a few cool collaborations and interesting new interpretations of the duo’s legendary songs, just like Reboot I did. But overall, it’s an exercise that simply frustrates you as a Brooks & Dunn and classic country fan that this duo can’t give it one last hurrah with new songs before their talents and faculties start succumbing to age, which invariably happens with every performer.
Making the Reboot II experience one shade worse is the production decisions by Dan Huff to turn so many of these tracks into rock/metal songs, probably under the false presupposition that Brooks & Dunn songs are too fuddy duddy for modern ears, so they need a jolt of energy to make them fresh. Meanwhile, some of the hottest names in country music at the moment are guys like Zach Top and Braxton Keith who are making hay revitalizing the sounds first forged by Brooks & Dunn.
Sure, you don’t want to make the same song twice. You want to add some new interesting wrinkles to a new version of an old classic. But then again, why are we engaging in this “reboot” process anyway?
Like with any tribute album or compilations, Reboot II is too much of a mixed bag to offer grand summations of it. So we’ll take a look at the individual songs below. But ultimately, this album feels like a fruitless exercise. Get these guys back in the studio with new material, and not to try and keep up with the Morgan Wallen’s of the world, but to double down on what made Brooks & Dunn and ’90s country great in the first place.
Song Reviews:
1. Play Something Country (with Lainey Wilson)
Oh the irony of taking a song called “Play Something Country” and making it sound like a rock song off of ZZ Top’s Eliminator album. Producer Dan Huff duffed this one, and Billy Gibbons deserves a co-producer credit on it. 4/10
2. Neon Moon (with Morgan Wallen)
The treatment on this remake is fine, but it really exposes the trivialness of this entire album. Who on God’s green earth would favor listening to this version of “Neon Moon” over the original where Ronnie Dunn does such a masterful job delivering a timeless song and melody? Morgan Wallen is just very mid, and offers nothing interesting or new. It’s like like choosing Morgan Wallen’s version of “Cover Me Up” over Jason Isbell’s. The only reason one would ever do so is ignorance that the original exists. 6.5/10
3. Rock My World (Little Country Girl) (with Marcus King)
This isn’t entirely terrible. It’s a smart matching of production and arrangement to allow Marcus King to do what he does best, and make a well-known song into something new. It doesn’t knock your socks off, but shows the possibilities of what a good tribute record can do when done right. 7.5/10
4. Ain’t Nothing ‘Bout You (with Megan Moroney)
While the original version of this song always felt a little too polished and primped for country radio, Megan Moroney really helps bring out the meaning in the lyrics by showcasing the contours of her voice in a rendition that’s arguably greater than original one. The more muted and understated tones seem so much more appropriate to this song, and Moroney proves she can be a really emotive singer when she has confidence behind her delivery. 9/10
5. Brand New Man (with Warren Zeiders)
Warren Zeiders is like all the worst parts of Morgan Wallen distilled into one performer. He’s an embarrassment to “country music,” and this “version” of an iconic country song is an embarrassment to us all. The world is a little more worse off because this take on “Brand New Man” exists. The rock excesses of Reboot II are really what make the project significantly more inferior than it needed to be, and this track is one of the worst offenders. 1/10
6. Believe (with Jelly Roll)
If you hate Jelly Roll, or sappy music in general, you want to hate on this track. But Jelly Roll makes it really hard to. “Believe” is a song that sits right in his wheelhouse, and even his loudest detractors have to admit the guy can sing. The problem is that he’s not country. Jelly Roll is some sort of version of a contemporary Christian artist where well over 50% of his material is religious. “Believe” fits right in with his original material. And while very few of the collaborators on Reboot II rose to match the vocal quality of Ronnie Dunn, Jelly Roll did. 8/10
7. She Used To Be Mine (with Riley Green)
Not a bad version of a B-level Brooks & Dunn hit. Riley Green might leave a lot to desire in the songwriting department, but he’s always reliable for keeping it country like he does here. This is one of the more classy tracks of the album. 8/10
8. She Likes to Get Out of Town (with The Cadillac Three)
What makes a song legendary is not just the words, and not just the vocal performance. It’s the melody. The melody is what stokes the positive brain chemistry and nostalgia, and too often on Reboot II, the melody gets completely ignored for droning rock treatments that attempt to be “edgy,” but instead take everything cool out of the song. That’s the fate of this collaboration with The Cadillac Three on one of the better songs from the Brooks & Dunn catalog that Kix Brooks sings. 3.5/10
9. Boot Scootin’ Boogie (with Halestorm)
Just no. For whatever reason, Lzzy Hale of Halestorm has always been a reliable collaborator in the country-adjacent world, from Eric Church to Ray Wylie Hubbard. But this song goes off like a fart in church. It’s “Boot Scootin’ Boogie.” It’s not meant to be a metal song. Why is this so hard to understand, and why wasn’t this version squashed in the womb after the first take proved the idea was only good on paper? 1/10
10. That Ain’t No Way to Go (with Mitchell “Bitches” Tenpenny)
This was always a weaker Brooks & Dunn track held back by schmaltzy contemporary production. Adding Mitchell “Bitches” Tenpenny to the mix and trying to contemporize the sound even more makes it even a measure worse. 3/10
11. How Long Gone (with Earls of Leicester)
Excellent track here that recognizes that “How Long Gone” was always a bluegrass song, just one that Brooks & Dunn made country. Jerry Douglas co-produces this rendition with Shawn Camp who was one of the original co-writers on the song. A bluegrass album of Brooks & Dunn songs could be killer. 8.5/10
12. I’ll Never Forgive My Heart (with Jake Worthington)
This is more like it. Why they didn’t team Brooks & Dunn with more younger artists inspired by their original sound is perplexing, especially after listening to the results of this collaboration with Jake Worthington. 8.5/10
13. She’s Not the Cheatin’ Kind (with Hailey Whitters)
Like so many of the tracks on this “Reboot,” the collaboration with Hailey Whitters take a more contemporary approach. But in this instance, it still works with a great performance by Whitters, and by allowing the original melody to still live within the new version. 7.5/10
14. Hard Working Man (with Christone “Kingfish” Ingram)
You would have appreciated a more country-sounding version of this song. But similar to the Marcus King collaboration, you appreciate crafting a rendition that fits with the established sound of the collaborator, Christone “Kingfish” Ingram. If nothing else, this track exposes how versatile Ronnie Dunn can be keeping up with Kingfish’s own game. 7.5/10
15. Hillbilly Deluxe (with HARDY)
HARDY really is the worst. Any thoughtful moments or rootsy elements to his music have been almost wholly replaced now by his headlong foray into butt rock. As he’s fully embraced his role as the Nickelback of modern music, he’s become an embarrassment to himself and others. Truth is, “Hillbilly Delxue” was always a weak, pre Bro-Country song. Somehow, HARDY made it a measure worse. 0/10
16. Indian Summer (with ERNEST)
ERNEST never seems to disappoint when he gets a hold of a classic country song, especially since he seems to bring such passion to the enterprise. “Indian Summer” was a semi-hit released on Brooks & Dunn’s #1’s…and Then Some album. But ERNEST sells you on the idea that it was one of the strongest tracks from their catalog. 8.5/10
17. Drop in the Bucket (with A Thousand Horses)
Yet another rock song on the album, though this song originally was more of a Southern rock song than a country one to begin with. And if we’re being honest, Michael Hobby of A Thousand Horses might sing this song better than Kix Brooks did originally. “Drop in the Bucket” is a pretty forgettable track from the Brooks & Dunn catalog, but this version sells you better on its merits than the original one. 7/10
18. Only in America (with Corey Kent)
At this point, it sounds like a broken record. But taking a country song and giving it a more rock interpretation bleeds the melody out of it and results in a more bland listening experience. The Corey Kent version isn’t bad, but definitely doesn’t improve anything from the original one. 5.5/10
Phil
November 29, 2024 @ 11:30 am
Randy Houser’s voice would be so good on one of these. *cough* Believe
Spoony
November 29, 2024 @ 11:51 am
It would be practically indistinguishable, however.
Jerry
November 29, 2024 @ 11:39 am
I will say this in general – the harmonies of Kix and Ronnie together are so incredible, that I like the album just to hear their harmonies again. But I agree that new music would be much better.
Spoony
November 29, 2024 @ 11:52 am
Megan Moroney killed it. Wow. I didn’t bother to listen to anything else.
Flick
November 29, 2024 @ 12:50 pm
How about some new music or a live cd. The songs on both reboot cds are not nearly as good as the original versions.
CK
November 30, 2024 @ 8:20 am
I agree for the most part, except for the Jon Pardi collaboration on My Next Broken Heart (the production is awful, but Pardi’s vocals are great)
Howard
November 29, 2024 @ 12:59 pm
The Maroney and Earls tracks were the standouts for me. Tenpenny’s voice grates on my ears like few others. Not country at all no matter what he sings. And to think his mother is in the business.
Absolute shame the direction Hardy has chosen.
Harris
November 29, 2024 @ 1:48 pm
I’m fully onboard with Ernest at this point except well he’s kind of the worst. Cause he could clearly be one of the best country singers of his generation if he wanted to be. But he spend too much time with wallen and hardy. But he’s great on this track
glendel
November 29, 2024 @ 2:00 pm
Ronnie Dunn singing is my only county bucket list item,* so no matter what the rebooted album sounds like, I’m intending to be at the local B / D stop on their 2025 tour.
*Kix did a local songwriters circle during the B and D disbandment w/ Bob DiPiero, David Lee Murphy & The Band Perry.
Jimmy
November 29, 2024 @ 2:48 pm
I saw some in-studio videos from the recording of this project. Lame as fuck. No need for reboot. B&D have nothing to prove. New album would be nice, but at this point they might as well do their tour and rude off into the sunset.
Strait
November 29, 2024 @ 8:00 pm
I’ve never been a Riley Green fan but I respect his choice with the track ‘She used to be mine’. That shows maturity and respect for the original artist that I don’t see from much of the other artists on this project. It reminds me of Jamey Johnson selecting Kern River for the Merle Haggard tribute concert.
TwangBob
November 29, 2024 @ 2:56 pm
There are two bluegrass tribute albums to Brooks and Dunn, titled “Pickin’ On Brooks & Dunn: The Bluegrass Tribute” released in 2002 on CMH Records, a bluegrass label. A second volume titled “Pickin’ On Brooks & Dunn, Vol. 2: A Bluegrass Tribute” was released by CMH in 2005. These albums are part of the CMH “Pickin’ On” series. As far as I know, no major label artists were involved in these recordings.
GarytheBrit
November 29, 2024 @ 3:00 pm
Agree 100% with the writer of this article, new material please guys. And don’t forget your fans in the UK
Blackwater
November 29, 2024 @ 3:08 pm
Jelly Rolls agent has got to be the greatest agent of all time. That fat turd is everywhere.
Sofus
November 29, 2024 @ 7:27 pm
Frankly, he’s hard to hide.
CK
November 30, 2024 @ 10:55 am
Probably the funniest comment of all time 🙂
Howard
November 30, 2024 @ 1:52 pm
Johnny Russell, writer of “Act Naturally,” “Song of the South” and numerous other country classics, was about as wide as Jelly and always slipped this line into his Grand Ole Opry appearances: “Can all of you back there see me?” Occasionally, he’d also look over at a cameraman and advise him to “use a wide-angle lens.”
Silver Z
November 30, 2024 @ 6:48 pm
Belly Rolls
Kevin Smith
November 29, 2024 @ 3:41 pm
Absolutely no point to any of this. Nothing needs a reboot from their catalog. Their body of work stands entirely on its own merits and always will. Their sound isn’t dated, its a honky- tonk exhibit A for all generations. They should never have been subjected to the Hardys and the Jellys of the world. It doesn’t make them more cool or relevant. Hardy and Jelly belly only wish they could be as cool and relevant as Brooks and Dunn. Sadly, nothing they ever do in life will even remotely equal the work of B& D. Nope, not even close.
Look, if the goal here is to raise consciousness to Brooks and Dunn, just put out new original material , tour with it and watch the $$$ roll in. This cliched concept of pairing legends with up and comers is trite, worn out and insulting. What a waste of resources and time. That is all.
Sofus
November 30, 2024 @ 5:33 am
It’s all about grabbing some quick cash.
Ronnie Dunn’s solo outings sank like a stone (he embraced pop and rock, not the country he’s so voiced for) and Kix Brooks… I’m not sure what he’s been up to, probably ruining the strings on his guitar as usual.
If you’re 70 today… forget it. Not even Willie’s been able to produce anything close to a hit in 30+ years.
I know it’s said that country music is hotter than ever. That’s bullshit. Country music is dead.
The “hotter than shit” they’re pushing today, will never be country, no matter how many times they label it so. What goes for country now makes “Achy Breaky Heart” sound like “Crazy Arms” in comparison.
Jimmy
November 30, 2024 @ 12:37 pm
Dunn’s so albums sounded like typical B&D. They were solid albums. Kix’s solo was good, too. They didn’t sell because few people are interested in new music from legacy acts.
Vista
November 29, 2024 @ 6:04 pm
I still download my music rather than stream and the test for me is whether there is any music worth adding to my library. Yes. The songs with Marcus King, Riley Green, Jake Worthington, Hailey Whitters, and Ernest are better than the originals to me. Sure new music would be nice but releasing this reboot and new music are not mutually exclusive.
King Honky Of Crackershire
November 29, 2024 @ 6:32 pm
Most of the big stars of the 90s recorded music, that while country, was probably not as country as the music they’d have liked to record if they’d had their way.
B&D, Strait, Jackson, Tritt… and even lesser stars like Byrd, Lawrence etc. grew up on the good stuff. In their post-radio eras, I’d be tickled pink if they’d all start recording the countriest music of their entire careers to close things out. Record what they came to Nashville to record, and what us country fans want to hear.
Sofus
November 30, 2024 @ 5:24 am
I must admit; I mostly ignored the commercial artists ever since 93-94.
Alan Jackson, Garth Brooks, Clint Black, Mark Chesnutt, Tracy Byrd, Brooks & Dunn… the first two-three albums sounded like country, often traditional country. But by the third or fourth album, it was all pop or 70’s AOR.
I held on to the independents like Wylie & the Wild West, Chris Wall and Dale Watson (even tho he became a joke).
I discovered Big Sandy recently, but him aside, I feel left out. No more fiddles and steel guitars, no more 4/4 shuffles, no swing or fancy Travis picking, just folk/rock/punk-ish wannabe country ala Colter Wall, Ryan Bingham, Hank 3, Shooter Jennings etc.
The traditional country (by a new artist) obviously died for good 30 years ago.
Trigger
November 30, 2024 @ 8:11 am
“The traditional country (by a new artist) obviously died for good 30 years ago.”
Did you read the Tris Munsick review from yesterday? There is still tons of traditional country music out there.
Luckyoldsun
November 30, 2024 @ 5:42 pm
I’ve seen interviews with a lot of those ’90s country stars and most of them–Garth, Clint, Trace and Tracy, et al–say they grew up on rock as much as country. Randy Travis is about the only one that I can think of who kind of made it a point to express something like an aversion to music that is not country. Travis Tritt says (and it’s obvious from his sound) that he listened to a lot of R&B and southern rock. Heck, even Chesnutt says he grew up listening to Aerosmith, Led Zeppelin and Fats Domino–in addition to his father’s country music. If these artists were to record strictly what they like, market be damned–I it probably would be a lot more diverse than what some people here are looking for.
PJinAtl
November 29, 2024 @ 7:09 pm
Not sure why they decided to include songs on this album that were already done on the first Reboot album (e g. Kacey Musgraves taking on Neon Moon).
I think the most disappointing thing to me was a chance to include the post 9/11 verse of Only in America on a studio recording – much like adding the 3rd verse of Tennessee River on Alabama and Friends. But then to hear it recorded but mixed down so much it is virtually inaudible…
Tap
November 29, 2024 @ 7:43 pm
A classic 90s country duo reimagining their hits in an a Bro-County style in the midst of a 90’s country revival makes absolutely no sense. Anywho.
Strait
November 29, 2024 @ 7:49 pm
I always liked the original version of ‘That Ain’t No Way to Go’. Never heard of Mitchell Tenpenny but he is basically a pitch-corrected version of Rehab (Bartender song) and bad John Mayer. The people who still jam to ‘Lips of an Angel’ by Hinder will love this album
Corporate Country is clearly passing the torch to these modern butt rock artists. WIth all the obvious (to me) pitch correction going on in these songs it’s more like ‘butt-lift rock’. There is no soul in this brand of music. Now that I’ve finally heard it and realized it, all these bellowing vocals have been digitally dragged to 440 hertz for every high note. This is such a weird course correction in Country music. Shitty music that died out 15-20 years ago has been ressurected within the Country genre – yet they are using the studio trickery and crutches that Taylor Swift used. (I’m not hating on Marcus King or Kingfish, both are legit)
To anyone who thinks I am overdoing it with my complaints about vocal correction, I encourage you to actually look into it. This “tool” has went far beyond cleaning up small parts of vocal lines in the studio to being used to quite literally change the entire sound of modern vocalists to computerized perfection that is pushing out legitimate singers. It’s akin to facial filters on instagram that are used to alter everyone’s perception of what is real.
david murphy
November 30, 2024 @ 1:28 am
strait-
you are on the right track, although your gripe about the vocals is more “complicated” than that.
if you really want to know what the deal is, search youtube for “wings of pegasus”, and watch a few of this guy’s videos. prepare to be horrified.
the eagles stuff he deconstructs is mind-numbing. everyone who has paid lots on money to see them is gonna be livid. they’re not actually singin’? preposterous! but so true…
i know you are speaking on the studio stuff, and i hear ya. but nobody uses autotune for vocal pitching anymore. the program is called Melodyne Studio. unless there’s a new version out…
Strait
November 30, 2024 @ 4:44 pm
That Youtube channel Wings of Pegasus helped opened my eyes to this “trend.” I was using the word auto-tune in a colloquial sense, but yeah Melodyne Studio and the like are responsible for taking vocal lines and snapping them to the 440 hertz – which is why those high notes all sound computerized. Once my ears were opened up to this trend I can’t unhear it.
murf
December 1, 2024 @ 10:08 pm
what i meant by the wings of pegasus reference was that it could be worse- cause the eagles aren’t even singing at all!! if i had paid to see them milli vanilli their way thru a “show”, it would piss me off. and he (wings of pegasus) has proven they aren’t singing at times. “the waveforms don’t lie”.
indeed.
Strait
November 30, 2024 @ 4:50 pm
The Eagles has been one of my favorite bands since high school and I was on the fence about shelling out the money for tickets to see them last year but the Wings of Pegasus videos showing the obvious pitch correction made me decide to never shell out the money to see them live now.
Di Harris
November 30, 2024 @ 7:38 pm
“…everyone who has paid lots on money to see them is gonna be livid.”
: D Wrong.
Strait
December 1, 2024 @ 12:25 am
You’re right, most people won’t know, or care. It’s the same group of people who believe that their favorite “jacked” celeb did not take steroids. It’s the same group of people who share AI-generated images of a child holding a guitar in a boat (or whatever other dumb bullshit) on Facebook without realizing that it is AI because they cannot tell the difference. It’s the same people who still believe that people in caves in the middle east hate us for our freedom which is why 9/11 happened.
Di Harris
December 1, 2024 @ 12:29 pm
I understand you are trying to make a point here, and that’s great.
But, you are all over the map with this comment.
Be more direct. Help me understand what you are trying to say.
I do not want to respond, or think about responding until you directly say what you would have me glean from your comment.
Strait
December 1, 2024 @ 3:04 pm
I am making fun of older people. They don’t understand how technology is skewing reality and they are often more blindly patriotic and don’t question the status quo and are less willing to accept that they are being tricked and lied to.
Di Harris
December 1, 2024 @ 4:53 pm
Respectfully disagree.
It is the older generations holding things together.
You mentioned something about not trusting anyone over a certain age, with decisions (paraphrasing) within the last few weeks.
Believe you said you are 38?
I will be 68 in May.
Certainly respect your right to voice your opinions.
Your elders, if you will, on a global level, as it were, have wisdom that comes with age. Along with a certain elan’ and Peace, from having seen and learned so much.
Appreciate you getting back with.
Hope you have had a wonderful Thanksgiving weekend.
Sofus
November 30, 2024 @ 5:13 am
Ray Price once quipped; yeah, it’s pitch perfect, but can they repeat it on stage with only a guitar in their hands?
Strait
December 1, 2024 @ 12:22 am
The problem with the pitch correction software is YES they can repeat it live because the same tools used in the studio are commonly used by live sound engineers.
Sofus
December 1, 2024 @ 6:57 pm
You missed the point.
With ONLY a guitar. No electricity.
Zach M
November 29, 2024 @ 8:50 pm
The Halestorm version would be a fun bonus track on a Halestorm album but it’s a terrible track on this album, if that makes sense
Trigger
November 29, 2024 @ 9:20 pm
It does.
Though I would have picked a track that wasn’t so country in its lyricism.
Michelle
November 29, 2024 @ 11:04 pm
There are very few “tribute” tracks that I prefer over the originals. I’m perplexed that someone would want to listen to a knock-off, when the original is just a click away on Spotify. A lot of music is tied up in memory; for me, that’s a big part of the enjoyment of hearing those songs again. Maybe these new people should just stick with what they do and leave the classics to the masters.
goldenglamourboybradyblocker71
November 30, 2024 @ 2:33 am
Glad the boys are “Rebooting!” Congrats,Kix and Ronnie !!!
Luckyoldsun
November 30, 2024 @ 3:57 am
I’m pretty sure the record label has researched it and there’s no market for new material from Brooks & Dunn–but there is a market for seeing and hearing them do their old classics with hot current artists. Hey, the fact that B&D can still make a splash in 2025 at a combined 140 (69 and 71) is amazing in itself. Their younger cohorts–Clint Black, Travis Tritt, aren’t seen anywhere except on the back of milk cartons. I’d add Montgomery Gentry, but they’re half-dead.) Sinatra also made duet albums with younger artists when he got into his 70s.
Trigger
November 30, 2024 @ 8:14 am
My guess is if a major label did research, they would tell Brooks & Dunn this is the most commercially lucrative thing to do. But who cares? You’re Brooks & Dunn. You’ve made your millions. Why risk sullying your legacy working with Warren Zeiders? A label would have told Johnny Cash that recording acoustic songs in Rick Rubin’s living room was a catastrophic career decision. And it was, until it wasn’t.
Sofus
December 1, 2024 @ 2:01 am
I remember some reviews of Cash’ first “Rubin” album – I won’t mention Robert Christgau’s name – and the conclusion was “meh”. Boring. Stale. Oh, and the voice, the crappy guitar picking. A shame.
6 out of 10, average. Quite a few of those reviews, in USA and abroad.
The same reviewers turned 180 degrees when the album became a phenomena – I refuse to mention Robert Christgau and Nick Tosches and John Tobler – because, well, I guess a reviewer must be cool, first and foremost, and you’re not cool when you shoot down an underground hit. Hypocrites.
I agree with Haggard; Cash’ Rubin years isn’t worth a bit compared to his 50’s and 60’s outlet, but hell, John R. deserved it.
CountryKnight
December 1, 2024 @ 9:26 am
The Cash Rubin gave the world a hoard of people saying “I don’t like country music but I love Johnny Cash.”
It would have been better for the genre if those albums were never made.
Sofus
December 1, 2024 @ 9:54 am
True words.
Kevin Smith
December 1, 2024 @ 3:54 pm
I know you and a few others despise Cash. I understand why you do. It became irritating when the whole music world went Johnny Cash crazed. Hipsters, soccer moms, punks and metal-heads and everyone else declared themselves Johnny Cash fans even if they hated Country. And he got Grammys for every one of those Rubin recordings. As a Country fan it was a bit much I suppose. And its true his voice is nowhere near the quality of Hag or Jones or Whitley or Paycheck or Frizzell or Price. I get that. I do.
Yet, speaking strictly from a musician kind of perspective, the Rubin recordings are pretty great. For me the first three were pretty good. Yes its a Rock take on Cash, but aesthetically/sonically it works well. Tom Petty, Marty Stuart, Norman Blake and the others made something compelling. His weathered voice on those first three albums wasn’t perfect, it was gloriously imperfect, but it sucks you in. Delias Gone, Drive On, Tennessee Stud, Why Me Lord, Rowboat, Rusty Cage, I Wont Back Down, and so many others resonated well to my ear. Mercy Seat is one of the eeriest cuts I have ever heard. Its a brutal take on a killers last thoughts sitting in the electric chair. Look, I know its not everyone’s cup of tea and I respect your take CK. And admittedly its much more rough edged folk rock than Country, but whatever.
Trigger
December 1, 2024 @ 4:56 pm
CountryKnight loves to breeze onto Saving Country Music, leave the most negative, cynical takes possible on whatever is being discussed, throw a wet blanket over everything, and breeze back out. Pretty much anyone here will agree that the overhyping of Johnny Cash before his death with CASH T-shirts in Hot Topic was over the top. That doesn’t mean he still didn’t make some excellent music, and that the final era of his career wasn’t monumental. All the more reason to explore it in narrative form, including how he basically became an unlikely pop star.
CK
December 2, 2024 @ 7:57 am
In what universe would country music be better off without those Cash Rubin albums? They were worldwide hits, gave him to a massive new group of fans and a Grammy late in his career.
You’re a supposed country fan and you’re unhappy with Johnny Cash? Thanks for stopping by lol
Skyler Peters
November 30, 2024 @ 6:59 am
I just don’t understand why the second tribute album which is a sequel to that first “reboot” includes many of the same songs. If anything, a mix of the performers from 1 and 2 would be a better country mix
NPC
November 30, 2024 @ 8:55 am
I feel the same way about these albums as I do people singing the songs of still living artists as those still living artists sit in the audience at awards shows and tribute shows: Why?! Like at the CMAs, who wanted to hear everyone else sing George Strait’s songs when George is right there? I can appreciate wanting to honor artists while they are alive, but don’t ignore their talent when they are right in front of you.
Dawg Fan
November 30, 2024 @ 10:24 am
Cash grab perhaps?
Strait
December 1, 2024 @ 3:11 pm
Album sales in 2024 are piddly compared to the 90’s. This is likely an attempt for B&D to win more fans and get booked on more concerts with modern artists.
WuK
November 30, 2024 @ 11:18 am
Not sure this album really adds much to the originals which are all almost certainly better. Some of the reboots are not bad but some are pretty awful. This is a miss for me and i will return to the originals. Still this is country and it is better than the Post Malone album!
Kevin C.
November 30, 2024 @ 4:05 pm
Not going to put the whole album on repeat any time soon. But the Megan Moroney track is fantastic (and a good advertisement of what a “Reboot” can accomplish)
Bull Mason
November 30, 2024 @ 8:09 pm
Should have brought on George Strait for Boot Scootin’ Boogie and Tim McGraw for That Ain’t No Way to Go.
They performed those songs (well) at the B&D tribute concert a few years back.
Luckyoldsun
November 30, 2024 @ 11:39 pm
You’re right. I looked it up–There’s a lot of overlap.
The first Reboot album was released in April 2019–five and a half years ago. We’ve had two impeachments and acquittals, two Trump-Biden elections, one Tom Brady and three Patrick Mahomes SB wins, and a whole pandemic since then. Sounds like they don’t think that many fans have been listening to or remember ithat album all that well.
the pistolero
December 1, 2024 @ 10:54 am
Yeah, not a big fan of this concept at all. The good songs didn’t need to be re-recorded, and the bad ones shouldn’t have been recorded in the first place.
For the record, so to speak, the bad songs here were ”Hillbilly Deluxe” and ”Play Something Country.” Those two songs are the reason I think B&D should’ve hung it up after 2003’s Red Dirt Road.
Howard
December 2, 2024 @ 5:16 am
What? Hang it up in 2003? But then we’d never have heard “It’s Getting Better All the Time,” IMO Ronnie Dunn’s crowning vocal achievement. So glad that song didn’t wind up on either “Reboot,” as I can’t think of any other singer who could sell its power and emotion the way Dunn did.
Huntsman
December 1, 2024 @ 5:57 pm
She Used to Be Mine is a B level Brooks and Dunn song!? You really think so?