Search - Alan Jackson :: Don't Rock the Jukebox

Don't Rock the Jukebox
Alan Jackson
Don't Rock the Jukebox
Genres: Country, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (10) - Disc #1


     
   

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CD Details

All Artists: Alan Jackson
Title: Don't Rock the Jukebox
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 3
Label: Bmg Special Product
Release Date: 7/2/2001
Genres: Country, Pop
Styles: Today's Country, Neotraditional
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 755174587023

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Member CD Reviews

Judy A. from NEWCASTLE, WY
Reviewed on 12/27/2009...
It may be an older CD but still great listening.
1 of 1 member(s) found this review helpful.

CD Reviews

Maybe the greatest album of all-time!
09/08/1999
(5 out of 5 stars)

"'Don't Rock The Jukebox' just may be the best ever. What else can one album accomplish. Alan is an honor to country music. The hits on this cd speaks for its self. The title track is backed with ballads and self-penned songs that pay homage to George Jones(Don't Rock The Jukebox & Just Playin' Possum)and Hank Williams(Midnight In Montgomery),which is an instant classic. This album is a timeless piece that defines country music."
Brilliant second album
Peter Durward Harris | Leicester England | 02/19/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Alan's debut album, Here in the real world, was a hard act to follow but this is certainly impressive. While I slightly prefer Here in the real world, that preference is only marginal. Four of these tracks earned a place on Alan's first hits collection, these being the title track, Dallas, Midnight in Montgomery and Someday. Whether these are the best four tracks here is debatable as every track here is a classic. This is one of those albums - like its predecessor - where choosing what to release as a single must have been a hard but enjoyable job.The title track was inspired by an event that actually happened, where somebody was leaning on a jukebox and somebody else told him not to rock it. Alan took the phrase and wrote a song in which he changed the meaning of the phrase Don't rock the jukebox - the song is actually a plea to fill the jukebox with country music (especially George Jones records) rather than rock music.The next song, That's all I need to know, is about a relationship that appears to be ending. Until I heard the song Dallas, I didn't know it was a girl's name as well as a city in Texas, allowing Alan to sing about Dallas leaving Tennessee and going back to Texas. Midnight in Montgomery is a tribute to Hank Williams, the title referring to his death. Love's got a hold on you is a light-hearted song about going to a doctor and discovering that his problem is being in love. Someday is about the end of a relationship. Just playing Possum is about George Jones and features a guest appearance by the man himself.From a distance is not the famous song of that title, which was originally recorded by Nanci Griffith and later became a UK hit for Cliff Richard in 1990 and a transatlantic hit for Bette Midler in 1991. No, this is an original song that Alan wrote with Randy Travis about a former relationship.Walking the floor over me is yet another play on words - this time the subject of the song is a lady who lives in the apartment above Alan's. The album ends with the upbeat Working class hero, about a man reaching retirement.This is an outstanding traditional country album with a contemporary edge - exactly what you expect from Alan Jackson."