Blake Shelton video for "Home" released
COUNTRY STANDARD TIME
HomeNewsInterviewsCD ReleasesCD ReviewsConcertsArtistsArchive
 

Blake Shelton video for "Home" released

Monday, April 7, 2008 – Blake Shelton's music video for his new single, "Home," will be added to CMT's Hot Shot Rotation starting today and will also be featured on CMT's Top Twenty Countdown on Thursday, April 10. The video is also available on Shelton's web site, www.blakeshelton.com.

Shelton's video was filmed in Nashville and directed by Stephen Scott, Picture Vision. Scenes switch between a lonely Shelton waiting in an airport and a forlorn Shelton in various hotel rooms across the world - from Paris to Rome to New York. The longing for home and the one he loves is evident in each scene. At the conclusion of the video Shelton is reunited with his love - and is finally home.


More news for Blake Shelton


CD reviews for Blake Shelton

CD review - Fully Loaded: God's Country Blake Shelton has been openly critical of the traditional album format. "Fully Loaded: God's Country" is his fourth greatest hits album and third in the "Loaded" series. In an effort to release music more often, he packages five new songs with seven of previously released material that has received considerable airplay and time on the charts. if you're looking for the fresh stuff, this is essentially an EP spearheaded by the Platinum lead single "God's Country. ...
CD review - Texoma Shore Blake Shelton's 11th studio album finds The Voice advisor in a contented, one might even say homey, frame of mind. The opening track and first single "I'll Name the Dogs" sets the tone. It's a rollicking ode to domesticity that manages to make household chore distribution ("You find the spot and I'll find the money / You be the pretty and I'll be the funny") both romantic and amusing. The beat switches to hip-hop on "Money," but the sentiment ...
CD review - Live EP This six-song "Blake Shelton Live EP" seems a little odd. It's not as though Shelton had an especially noteworthy tour to document. Besides, at only six songs long, it's a relatively short document, anyhow. While it may be little more than a post-it note of a project, though, it also packs a powerful punch. You recognize right away the large amount of enthusiasm the act of singing to an audience brings out of Shelton. When compared to the recorded versions of these hits, ...


©Country Standard Time • Jeffrey B. Remz, editor & publisher • countrystandardtime@gmail.com
AboutCopyrightNewsletterOur sister publication Standard Time
Subscribe to Country Music News Country News   Subscribe to Country Music CD Reviews CD Reviews   Follow us on Twitter  Instagram  Facebook  YouTube