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Livin' My Best Life
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Livin' My Best Life
Current price: $13.59
Barnes and Noble
Livin' My Best Life
Current price: $13.59
Size: CD
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Dylan Scott
opens his long-awaited second album,
Livin' My Best Life
, with a song about a "New Truck" and concludes it with an ode to a small "Nothing to Do Town." Between those two points, he lingers on a variety of other country cliches, emphasizing bonhomie and bros over boozed-up partying. This softer touch allows
Scott
to pour his heart into the cornball "Can't Have Mine (Find You a Girl)," where he implores that you "find you a girl that leaves you speechless, gets wild on the town but still loves Jesus," a sticky sentiment that nevertheless sums up his appeal: he's an average dude who isn't afraid to let everybody know he has a good heart. Such amiable spirits can warm the clean contours of his slick country, one that seems tethered to the melodic country-pop of the mid-2010s, which just happens to be when he released his eponymous debut.
isn't necessarily stuck in the past so much as he traffics in shopworn ideas: he delivers standard country fare in a standard way, which places the album's success squarely on the strength of his own charisma. He's not a forceful singer, nor is he a monotone -- he's merely an average country singer, capable of navigating the twists in a melody without putting a distinctive spin on the tune. That makes for a perfectly competent and complacent listen: it goes down easy and leaves no trace. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
opens his long-awaited second album,
Livin' My Best Life
, with a song about a "New Truck" and concludes it with an ode to a small "Nothing to Do Town." Between those two points, he lingers on a variety of other country cliches, emphasizing bonhomie and bros over boozed-up partying. This softer touch allows
Scott
to pour his heart into the cornball "Can't Have Mine (Find You a Girl)," where he implores that you "find you a girl that leaves you speechless, gets wild on the town but still loves Jesus," a sticky sentiment that nevertheless sums up his appeal: he's an average dude who isn't afraid to let everybody know he has a good heart. Such amiable spirits can warm the clean contours of his slick country, one that seems tethered to the melodic country-pop of the mid-2010s, which just happens to be when he released his eponymous debut.
isn't necessarily stuck in the past so much as he traffics in shopworn ideas: he delivers standard country fare in a standard way, which places the album's success squarely on the strength of his own charisma. He's not a forceful singer, nor is he a monotone -- he's merely an average country singer, capable of navigating the twists in a melody without putting a distinctive spin on the tune. That makes for a perfectly competent and complacent listen: it goes down easy and leaves no trace. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine