Hold off on that Faith Hill/Tim McGraw duets disc
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Hold off on that Faith Hill/Tim McGraw duets disc

Friday, February 22, 2008 – Hold off on that Tim and Faith duets album. While apparently rumored to be in the works, a spokesperson for Faith Hill said Friday that the reports are false.

"Tim and I have always talked about making an album together, but at this time there are no plans for one this year," said Hill in a statement about an album with husband Tim McGraw

"We're both working on our own projects, me on my first Christmas record and perhaps a few other surprises in '08, and he on a new tour, his next album and a movie to be released this Christmas."

Hill and McGraw, of course, have released a number of hit singles and toured together on their Soul2Soul tours.


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CD review - Here on Earth Tim McGraw's collection, "Here on Earth," finds the country star sounding peaceful and down to Earth. He's more meditative than overly active, throughout. It's very much an adult album in that McGraw is speaking from the perspective of maturity, rather than pretending he's still a young man. If he's got any barbecue statins on his white t-shirt, he's not letting on here. McGraw burns through five mellow tracks before he gets to anything with a discernable beat. ...
CD review - Damn Country Music Tim McGraw said of his 14th studio album, "Damn Country Music," "It's is all about passion, (taking him back to 1989) "when I came to Nashville to chase my dreams." Country music has richly rewarded him over the past two decades, and he honors the genre's tradition here. The album gets off to a very traditional start with Celtic folk. The flute and skillful acoustic picking on the opener "Here Tonight" bring a Mark Knopfler tune immediately to mind. ...
CD review - Sundown Heaven Town The banjo comes first out of the speakers, the opening strains of "Overrated," the lead-off song on Tim McGraw's latest. But with a "1-2-3-4" count, the mood changes and goes for a more modern country approach. McGraw does about the same on the follow-up "City Lights" with Michael Landau's steely, but rocking lead guitar taking over near the conclusion as it does later hard on "Sick of Me" where the protagonist contemplates a need to turn his life around. ...


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