Search - Shelby Lynne :: Restless

Restless
Shelby Lynne
Restless
Genres: Country, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (10) - Disc #1

Producer Brent Maher had to do something with his time after his prize clients, the Judds, broke up, and in Shelby Lynne, he has found one of the few women in Nashville who can match Wynonna Judd in vocal firepower. In 199...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Shelby Lynne
Title: Restless
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Magnatone
Release Date: 7/25/1995
Genres: Country, Pop, Rock
Styles: Western Swing, Today's Country
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 707191010220

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Producer Brent Maher had to do something with his time after his prize clients, the Judds, broke up, and in Shelby Lynne, he has found one of the few women in Nashville who can match Wynonna Judd in vocal firepower. In 1993, Maher produced and co-wrote Lynne's Temptation, a terrific album of big-band country swing which somehow got lost in the shuffle. Lynne's sequel,Restless, is a return to the country mainstream after her left-turn detour through swing. When Lynne opens all the stops in her throat and just wails, as she does on the album's first single "Slow Me Down," there's no mistaking the sheer strength of her voice. But there's a lot more to her talent than that; she can down shift into a conversational murmur, as she does on "Talkin' to Myself," and still make you hang on every word--just by the way she maintains a full, intense tone even at the lowest volumes. Most importantly, her command of tricky rhythmic phrasing reminds one of Patsy Cline, Willie Nelson and few others in country-music history. All in all, this marks the full flowering of a major country talent and stands as one of the landmark events of 1995.--Geoffrey Himes

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CD Reviews

Hey now, little darlin; whatcha gonna do when I aint around?
rballjones | Des Moines, IA USA | 12/29/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This is an album that swings from start to finish. And it's a country album; Shelby Lynne's voice is right out front, soaring and aching like she does so well. It isn't buried electronically like on her more recent recordings. I never tire of hearing this record. There aren't any bad songs; indeed, they all seem as if they'd fit on the radio. Particularly worthy are "When the Sun Goes Down," "Hey Now Little Darlin'" and "I Wish I Knew"--the latter a real heartbreaker. "I'm not the One" is a song about a woman in love with a man who still loves someone else: "She needs to know how much you miss the kiss..."It's a shame "Restless" isn't currently in print; I think it's easily her best recording. Well, I haven't bought the latest (Love, Shelby); the cover sure makes one think twice about buying, doesn't it? Shelby Lynne isn't Britney Spears and you don't want her to be. With such a great voice and feeling for a song, who needs the other?In any event, "Restless" is a great recording, well worth having."
Shelby Lynne, keepin' it country!
Joe Sixpack -- Slipcue.com | ...in Middle America | 04/29/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Although the album art shows Lynne looking all glammed-up, the music inside is some of her most bare-bones, back-to-basics, honkytonk-oriented country stuff to date. It's pretty darn nice, if the truth be told. Producer Brent Maher (who crafted many of the Judds' biggest hits) slathers on liberal doses of fiddle and pedal steel, and the backbeat is pure Texas shuffle, with Shelby's multitracked vocals sounding mighty fine. She wrote about half of the songs on here, many in collaboration with up-and-coming Jamie O'Hara. A couple of songs drift into torchy pop terrain, but not so much so that it derails the album. Nice record -- hard country fans, take heed!"
Get Ready to Swing
Lee Armstrong | 02/13/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This is a fun album with upbeat songs and Shelby Lynne's wonderful voice. Good music for when you are cleaning house or whatever."