| Given how easily Dwight Yoakam makes the songs of others his own, including 
        classics like "Sin City" and "Streets of Bakersfield" 
        as well as the Doc Pomus nugget "Little Sister," it's a wonder 
        it took him 11 years to record an album of covers. Yoakam had nothing 
        left to prove as a songwriter, penning hit after hit and album after album 
        of constantly evolving country music that remained true to the honky tonk 
        tradition while stretching it sonically -- without revisionism. Here, 
        Yoakam interprets everyone from Roy Orbison to the Clash to the Beatles 
        to Danny O'Keefe, often radically reworking these genuine enduring classics 
        of popular music to bring out the hidden meanings rather than remake them 
        in his own image, the near bluegrass version of "Train in Vain" 
        being a prime example. The Orbison tune that opens the album, "Claudette," 
        rocks with a country swagger the original never had and feels like more 
        of a celebratory tome to a third party than it does a love song. The Raymond 
        Douglas tune "Tired of Waiting" made a household radio favorite 
        by k.d. lang is as far from a country song as can be with a full horn 
        section -- and this cut works the least -- and is an oddity but entertaining 
        when heard once. O'Keefe's "Good Time Charlie's Got the Blues" 
        is less melodic than the writer's version, but it is far more desolate 
        and haunting. The duet on Sonny Bono's "Baby Don't Go" with 
        Sheryl Crow doesn't really work either, because Crow is not a country 
        singer and there's enough countrypolitan in Yoakam's read that the two 
        singers seem cold and at odds with each other. The lush, funky version 
        of Jimmy Webb's "Wichita Lineman" may not replace Glen Campbell's, 
        but it is a credible, even fine read with all of its textural embellishments 
        (Pete Anderson, Yoakam's guitarist and producer is a genius), a B-3, layers 
        of guitars, double-timed drums...awesome. "Here Comes the Night," 
        with its ringing electric 12-string guitars and faux Caribbean rhythm 
        is stunningly beautiful, and the Beatles' "Things We Said Today" 
        is a psychedelic country jewel. While this set is not perfect, it's still 
        damn fine and warrants repeated listens to come to grips with Yoakam's 
        visionary ambition.  (by Thom Jurek, All 
        Music Guide) |