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Live, Laugh, Love
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Live, Laugh, Love
Current price: $17.99
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Barnes and Noble
Live, Laugh, Love
Current price: $17.99
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Clay Walker
is a good journeyman singer. He has a strong voice, knows how to twist cliches to his advantage, and knows that straying too far from the cliches will lose his wide audience. In turn, that means that he's enjoyable, but a little predictable, which is an accurate assessment of
Live, Laugh, Love
, his fifth album. The album never really distinguishes itself from its predecessors. Like those records, it's a safe blend of pop ballads, mild rockers, and polished honky tonk, all delivered in
Walker
's twangy tenor. Even if the ballads occasionally touch on adult contemporary (witness
"Once in a Lifetime Love"
), it's considerably more country than, say,
Tim McGraw
, but the music doesn't show enough imagination and isn't organic enough to stand apart from the neo-traditionalist pack. That said, it's hardly bad -- the material may be uneven, but
"She's Always Right"
has a good sense of humor and
"Lose Some Sleep Tonight"
is quite good, while the title track is an amusing twist on
Faron Young
's
"Live Fast, Love Hard, Die Young,"
a calypso-ish number that is designed for yuppies into hat music. Ultimately,
drags a bit too much to rank among
's best, but it has its moments. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
is a good journeyman singer. He has a strong voice, knows how to twist cliches to his advantage, and knows that straying too far from the cliches will lose his wide audience. In turn, that means that he's enjoyable, but a little predictable, which is an accurate assessment of
Live, Laugh, Love
, his fifth album. The album never really distinguishes itself from its predecessors. Like those records, it's a safe blend of pop ballads, mild rockers, and polished honky tonk, all delivered in
Walker
's twangy tenor. Even if the ballads occasionally touch on adult contemporary (witness
"Once in a Lifetime Love"
), it's considerably more country than, say,
Tim McGraw
, but the music doesn't show enough imagination and isn't organic enough to stand apart from the neo-traditionalist pack. That said, it's hardly bad -- the material may be uneven, but
"She's Always Right"
has a good sense of humor and
"Lose Some Sleep Tonight"
is quite good, while the title track is an amusing twist on
Faron Young
's
"Live Fast, Love Hard, Die Young,"
a calypso-ish number that is designed for yuppies into hat music. Ultimately,
drags a bit too much to rank among
's best, but it has its moments. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine