Home
From A Room: Volume 1
Barnes and Noble
From A Room: Volume 1
Current price: $12.99
Barnes and Noble
From A Room: Volume 1
Current price: $12.99
Size: CD
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
When his 2015 CMA wins for Album of the Year, New Artist of the Year, and Male Vocalist of the Year turned
Chris Stapleton
into an overnight sensation, it raised the expectations for the sequel to his debut
Traveller
considerably. Released two years to the day after
,
From A Room: Volume 1
surprises with its modesty. Yes, it's the first installment of a two-part album -- a move that, by definition, suggests some level of heightened ambition -- but
benefits from its lean 32-minute running time, its brevity shifting attention to the sturdiness of its nine songs.
Stapleton
revives his
blueprint, adhering to the worn, leathery sound of '70s outlaw country, but his success has slowed his roll, allowing him to proceed with a quiet confidence. Most of the album does move at a leisurely pace, with the bruised ballad "Broken Halos" setting the tone for the rest of the record. A sly cover of "Last Thing I Needed, First Thing This Morning" -- a 1982 hit for
Willie Nelson
-- builds upon this contemplative mood and he returns to it frequently, whether it's on the skeletal "Either Way" or the simmering tension of the closing "Death Row."
expands upon this rumination by offering a couple of soulful heartbreak numbers -- "I Was Wrong" and "Without Your Love" -- an old-fashioned barroom lament ("Up to No Good Livin'"), and a pair of rowdy, funny blues-rockers ("Second One to Know," "These Stems") that give
dimension and color. As good as each of these songs is individually -- and there isn't a bad song in the bunch -- what's best about
is how it holds together. There's no grand concept here: it's just a collection of good tunes, delivered simply and soulfully, and that's more than enough. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Chris Stapleton
into an overnight sensation, it raised the expectations for the sequel to his debut
Traveller
considerably. Released two years to the day after
,
From A Room: Volume 1
surprises with its modesty. Yes, it's the first installment of a two-part album -- a move that, by definition, suggests some level of heightened ambition -- but
benefits from its lean 32-minute running time, its brevity shifting attention to the sturdiness of its nine songs.
Stapleton
revives his
blueprint, adhering to the worn, leathery sound of '70s outlaw country, but his success has slowed his roll, allowing him to proceed with a quiet confidence. Most of the album does move at a leisurely pace, with the bruised ballad "Broken Halos" setting the tone for the rest of the record. A sly cover of "Last Thing I Needed, First Thing This Morning" -- a 1982 hit for
Willie Nelson
-- builds upon this contemplative mood and he returns to it frequently, whether it's on the skeletal "Either Way" or the simmering tension of the closing "Death Row."
expands upon this rumination by offering a couple of soulful heartbreak numbers -- "I Was Wrong" and "Without Your Love" -- an old-fashioned barroom lament ("Up to No Good Livin'"), and a pair of rowdy, funny blues-rockers ("Second One to Know," "These Stems") that give
dimension and color. As good as each of these songs is individually -- and there isn't a bad song in the bunch -- what's best about
is how it holds together. There's no grand concept here: it's just a collection of good tunes, delivered simply and soulfully, and that's more than enough. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine