Rodney Crowell - But What Will the Neighbors Think

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Album Details

Title: But What Will the Neighbors Think
Artist: Rodney Crowell
Release Date: 1980
Re-Released On: 2/8/2005
Label: Warner Bros.
UPC: 081227868260
Genre: Country
Styles: Country-Rock, Contemporary Country, New Traditionalist
Moods: Earthy, Refined/Mannered, Reflective, Rollicking, Romantic, Sentimental, Bittersweet, Earnest, Light, Literate, Passionate, Poignant
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 0
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Here Come the 80's
  2. Ain't No Money
  3. Oh What a Feeling
  4. It's Only Rock & Roll
  5. On a Real Good Night
  6. Ashes By Now
  7. Heartbroke
  8. Queen of Hearts
  9. Blues in the Daytime
  10. The One About England

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2005CDWarner Bros.

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

Similar CDs

  • No similar CDs were found for this album.

Album Review

Rodney Crowell's debut was a near perfect country-rock record: great writing and a few venerable covers all performed with soul and style. But while Ain't Living Long Like This leaned more toward the country side of things, his follow-up, But What Will the Neighbors Think, which was co-produced with Craig Leon (the Ramones, Suicide, Blondie), has a distinct pop and rock edge. This is evident right from the start, with the chunky guitar and drum intro of "Here Come the 80s," which opens the album with an almost new wave feel. When mixed with Crowell's country roots and choice of sidemen, the bulk of side one, which includes tracks such as the cynical rockers "Ain't No Money" and "It's Only Rock'n'Roll" and the minor-key pop of Keith Sykes' "Oh What a Feeling," blurs the lines between Nashville and L.A.. Side two, which kicks off with the Top 40 pop hit "Ashes by Now," adds a bit more twang to the proceedings with Guy Clark's "Heartbroke" and Hank DeVito's "Queen of Hearts" (Crowell's version predated Juice Newton's Top Five hit by more than a year), before closing with a pair of lightweight genre exercises. Much like Rosanne Cash's Right or Wrong, which he had produced a year earlier, there are moments here that suggest the turn country music would take in the coming years. In fact, "Queen of Hearts," "Ain't No Money," and "Heartbroke" would become hits in the next couple of years for Newton, Cash, and Ricky Skaggs respectively, while Lee Ann Womack would score big with "Ashes by Now" more than 20 years later. Though it may not necessarily be what some expected from Rodney Crowell at this point, the slight change of direction seemed to help him avoid a sophomore slump. ~ Brett Hartenbach, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Albert LeeGuitar, Vocals, Piano
Amos GarrettGuitar
Craig LeonPiano, Flute, Producer
Don WhaleyVocals
Emory GordyBass
Frank ReckardGuitar
Hank DeVitoGuitar (Steel)
Larrie LondinDrums
Larry WilloughbyVocals
Rodney CrowellProducer
Steve WoodKeyboards, Vocals
Tony BrownVocals
Tower of PowerHorn