Urban, Rascal Flatts dish out new sounds
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Urban, Rascal Flatts dish out new sounds

Tuesday, November 16, 2010 – It's a big day for new releases because Keith Urban and Rascal Flatts are out with new discs. Urban put out "Get Closer," which contains the radio hit Put You in a Song. The disc comes in three different versions with the basic version having eight songs. Target is carrying 10- and 15-song versions as well. The latter contains a combo of live tracks and new songs.

Rascal Flatts is doing something different this time. They're on a new label with "Nothing Like This" (Big Machine). The set includes the single Why Wait. The trio alternated between Santa Barbara, Cal. and Nashville to record the music.


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CD reviews for Rascal Flatts

CD review - How They Remember You Rascal Flatts' swan song EP grapples with the issues like legacy, time and memory. Right off the bat, "How They Remember You" posits that it's not a question of if, but how we're remembered. After we leave this planet for good, we won't be forgotten. However, we will be remembered, and we'd like to be remembered well. Then again, if one assumes there is no afterlife, does it really even matter? If there is no one to remember you, your legacy is basically a moot point. ...
CD review - Back to Us As summer insistently steps forward and knocks at our doorstep with bright sunny rays and promises of sun-soaked hijinks, longtime pop country superstars Rascal Flatts aim to provide the perfect soundtrack with "Back To Us." Loaded with the band's signature tight harmonies and upbeat jams built around lyrics of love and loss, Rascal Flatts doesn't move far off the beaten path while carving out a high energy declaration of summer love. Fans looking for those beach cruising jams ...
CD review - The Greatest Gift of All It's the big things - and sometimes the little things - that make Rascal Flatts' Christmas album "The Greatest Gift of All" stand out. On the macro level, the country vocal trio put a little funk - well, as much funk as three Nashville guys can muster - into "Go Tell It on The Mountain." And then, the cool little bass line introducing "Let It Snow" helps differentiate this act's version from possibly millions of other versions. Much of "The ...


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