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Sawyer Brown Six Days on the Road Album Art

1997 studio album past Sawyer Brown

Six Days on the Road
Sawyerbrownsixdays.jpg
Studio album by

Sawyer Brown

Released April 15, 1997 (1997-04-15)
Recorded 1996 at Javelina Studios (Nashville, Tennessee) and LaLa Land (Louisville, Kentucky).[one]
Genre Country
Length 44:53
Label Curb
Producer Mac McAnally
Marker Miller
Sawyer Brown chronology
This Thing Called Wantin' and Havin' It All
(1995)
Six Days on the Road
(1997)
Hallelujah, He Is Built-in
(1997)
Singles from Six Days on the Road
  1. "Six Days on the Road"
    Released: 1997
  2. "This Night Won't Last Forever"
    Released: June 16, 1997

Six Days on the Road is the title of the 12th studio album released past the American country music band Sawyer Chocolate-brown. Information technology was released in 1997 (come across 1997 in land music) on Curb Records. Its championship rail and atomic number 82-off single is a encompass of the Dave Dudley hit from 1963. This comprehend reached number 13 on the Billboard country charts. Post-obit this song was another cover, this fourth dimension of "This night Won't Final Forever", which was a pop hit for Bill LaBounty in 1978 and later for Michael Johnson in 1979. Sawyer Brown's cover was a number half dozen country hit in late 1997. Also released from this album were "Some other Side" and "Pocket-sized Talk", both of which failed to make the country Height 40.

Content [edit]

"The Nebraska Song" is a tribute to Nebraska Cornhuskers quarterback Brook Berringer, who was killed in a aeroplane crash in 1996.[2] The vocal is rails number 18, the same as Berringer'due south jersey number. (To make this possible, tracks 13 through 17 are blank.)

Critical reception [edit]

Bob Cannon of New Country mag rated the album 3.5 stars out of 5. He wrote that the band "serve upward a batch of tunes that, while never matching the emotional depth of 1992'south 'All These Years', is a peak-shelf collection that stresses the group's versatility." He praised the stone influences on some tracks and called "The Nebraska Song" "intimate", criticizing only the encompass of "This Night Won't Last Forever" by proverb that it was "as bland as the original."[three]

Track listing [edit]

  1. "Another Side" (Mark Miller) – 4:11
  2. "Talkin' 'bout You" (Mark Alan Springer) – 3:39
  3. "This night Won't Final Forever" (Bill LaBounty, Roy Freeland) – 3:56
  4. "Six Days on the Route" (Earl Greenish, Carl Montgomery) – 2:53
  5. "Small Talk" (Mac McAnally, Miller) – iii:42
  6. "With This Band" (McAnally) – iii:12
  7. "Transistor Rodeo" (Miller) – three:06
  8. "Dark and Twenty-four hour period" (McAnally) – iii:35
  9. "Half a Heart" (Gregg Hubbard, Miller) – 3:02
  10. "Between You lot and Paradise" (Neal Coty, Springer) – 4:15
  11. "A Dear Like This" (Miller, Bill Shore) – 2:fifty
  12. "Every Twist and Turn" (Hubbard, Miller) – 3:11
  13. (bare rails) – 0:04
  14. (blank rail) – 0:04
  15. (bare rails) – 0:04
  16. (blank runway) – 0:04
  17. (blank track) – 0:05
  18. "The Nebraska Vocal" (Miller) – ii:53

Personnel [edit]

Equally listed in liner notes[ane]

Sawyer Brown

  • Mark Miller – pb vocals
  • Gregg "Hobie" Hubbard – keyboards, backing vocals
  • Duncan Cameron – atomic number 82 guitars, bankroll vocals
  • Jim Scholten – bass
  • Joe Smyth – drums

Additional Musicians

  • Clayton Ivey – keyboards, acoustic piano
  • Mike Lawler – synthesizers
  • Steve Nathan – keyboards
  • Matt Rollings – audio-visual piano
  • Scott Emerick – acoustic guitar
  • Joe Erkman – electric guitar
  • Mac McAnally – acoustic guitar
  • Rick Vito – electrical guitar, slide guitar
  • Dan Dugmore – lap steel guitar
  • Paul Franklin – steel guitar
  • JayDee Maness – steel guitar
  • Rob Hajacos – fiddle
  • Roger Hawkins – drums, percussion

Additional vocals (background hollers and caterwauling) on "Six Days on the Route"

  • Mark Miller, Gregg "Hobie" Hubbard, Mac McAnally, Mitch DeNeui, Frank Miller and Alan Schulman

Production [edit]

  • Mark Miller – producer
  • Mac McAnally – producer
  • Alan Schulman – recording, mixing
  • Brian Tankersley – boosted recording, mixing
  • Greg Stride – boosted recording
  • Kent Bruce – recording banana
  • Ken Hutton – recording banana
  • Steve Lowery – recording banana
  • Sandy Jenkins – mix assistant
  • Denny Purcell – mastering
  • Jonathan Russell – mastering assistant
  • Monica Mercer – art management, design
  • John Chiasson – photography

Chart performance [edit]

Chart (1997) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Top Country Albums 8
U.Due south. Billboard 200 73

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b Half dozen Days on the Road (CD). Sawyer Brownish. Curb Records. 1997. 77883. {{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  2. ^ Tarradell, Mario (1997-04-15). "Strong songwriting drives Sawyer Brown's Half-dozen Days". The Dallas News. Retrieved 2009-02-09 .
  3. ^ Cannon, Bob (July 1997). "Reviews: Six Days on the Road". New Country. 4 (8): 52. ISSN 1086-1076.

External links [edit]

  • Six Days on the Route at Allmusic

birabandonser.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Six_Days_on_the_Road_(album)