Album Review – Jake Owen’s “Dreams To Dream”


Outlaw Country (#580) on the Country DDS

There’s no real way to soft peddle or sugar coat it. Jake Owen has been personally responsible for some of the most reprehensible atrocities in country music genre in the last decade, releasing songs that set the pace for non-potable, rant-worthy audio filth, including songs that are fit to call bad parody like “I Was Jack (You Were Diane)” and “On The Boat Again.” At times, Jake Owen has defined the very worst of B-level mainstream country.

But this entire time, there were these inklings that underneath the surface, Jake Owen knew what was up. There was his championing of country Outlaw Tony Martinez all the way back in 2014. The year previous just as Bro-Country was really getting going, Jake Owen offered up in an interview, “We need more songs than just songs about tailgates and f-ckin’ cups and Bacardi and stuff like that. We need songs that get ourselves back to the format that made me love it . . .  [like] when guys like Randy Travis released songs like ‘He Walked on Water’ songs that meant something, man!”

Of course through all of this, he was still releasing his own commercial country radio fare, and up until about 2021, fairly successfully, including nine #1 songs. When you’re in the major label radio-chasing business, sometimes you don’t even have a choice but to record whatever radio ready single the label selects for you. Many performers come to Nashville with strong principles to go along with their dreams. But the Big Machine has a way of breaking you down.

That’s all the setup for Jake Owen’s first independent release in his 20-year career called Dreams To Dream. Produced by Shooter Jennings at his Snake Mountain Studio, it’s like nothing you ever heard from Jake Owen or really any current or former mainstream country music before. It’s the guy who was country music’s sexpot before Riley Green completely and utterly leaving his established sound behind, and not just making a decidedly Country record with a capital ‘C’, but putting the capital ‘O’ back in Outlaw.

There are no half measures taken, or an attempt at a smooth transition from his previous sound. Dreams To Dream is half time beats about bad habits, bad times, bad men, and the women who love them. With co-writers like Kendall Marvel, Channing Wilson, Dean Dillon, Waylon Payne, Scotty Emerick, William Beckmann, and Jamey Johnson who also appears as a guest on this album, Jake Owen went directly to the source of today’s Outlaw country for material, and co-wrote a few of the tracks himself.


These songs were then brought to Shooter to do his worst with, and actualize Owen’s Outlaw vision for the album. The recording of the album is actually part of the story, with the first song on the album talking about Jake’s journey to “Hollyweird” to record with the son of Waylon. The album concludes with a sort of “mission accomplished” salutation about Jake’s field trip into the underbelly of country.

If we’re being honest, the whole thing does feel a little like when a tech bro goes to Burning Man and acts like they’re now a permanent member of the counterculture. But you want to forgive Owen for any missteps, because he’s stepping so far in the right direction. This is the kind of album, and these are the kinds of songs we were saying folks like Jake Owen should have been recording for years while they were chasing radio play.

All you can do is cheer on a transition like this from an artist, welcome them to your side of the country divide, and frankly, hope that more performers catch on. And no, this is no effort at “carpetbagging” by the 44-year-old. Owen’s taking a haircut, if not a bath with this move. You have to think his old running buddies on Music Row are looking at all of this and expecting it to crater him. All the more reason to cheer for its success.

But there is a fly in the ointment of Dreams to Dream. Jake Owen is no Channing Wilson or Tony Martinez. He’s from Vero Beach, not Lubbock or Austin, or Birmingham or Bakersfield. His voice just doesn’t have that boom, that grit or that growl to go along with the attitude this album looks to evoke. Either you’ve got that Outlaw swagger, or you don’t. It’s good that Owen has decided to point his nose in a more traditional country direction. But it’s hard to believe him when he’s singing, especially since he didn’t write much of this material.

But when the material shines, so does Jake Owen. And you come to this album with so few expectations, it’s easy for Owen to exceed them. “Fool Like Me” written by Kendell Marvel and Waylon Payne is a killer track, and Jake makes it his own. Subsequent listens find you settling in better with Jake’s voice on this material better than the first one.

Jake made his millions, and had his #1s. Now the industry has put him out to pasture, and as opposed to complaining, he sees an opportunity to do what he’s wanted to do for years: take after guys like Tony Martinez, and bring the grit and growl back to country.

1 1/2 Guns Up (7.8/10)

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