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Still Feels Good | 
enlarge | Artist: Rascal Flatts Label: Lyric Street Category: Music
List Price: $18.98 Buy New: $6.99 You Save: $11.99 (63%)
New (53) Used (29) Collectible (2) from $5.99
Rating: 75 reviews Sales Rank: 215
Format: Enhanced Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.4
MPN: 000038402 UPC: 050087104504 EAN: 0050087104504 ASIN: B000QCUDL8
Release Date: September 25, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Never opened--CASE is INSPECTED before shipment to be in good condition. Ships out FAST with free upgrade to First Class for standard shipping and priority mail for expedited orders. Brand New in Factory Sealed wrapper, including the hit "Take Me There". Ships out Fast. Standard Shipping will mail out with First Class Mail. Expedited will be with Priority Mail.
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| Tracks:
| • | Take Me There | | • | Here | | • | Bob That Head | | • | Help Me Remember | | • | Still Feels Good | | • | Winner at a Losing Game | | • | No Reins | | • | Every Day | | • | Secret Smile | | • | Better Now | | • | She Goes All the Way | | • | How Strong Are You Now | | • | It's Not Supposed To Go Like That |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Rascal Flatts has always been an anomaly in country music. Signed to the Disney label Lyric Street, they arrived in 2000 as essentially a trio (winning lead vocalist Gary LeVox fronted pin-up boy Joe Don Rooney on electric guitar and Jay DeMarcus on bass) that traveled and recorded with additional musicians to make up a full band. Despite their workingman backgrounds, their repertoire was so pop-oriented that hardly anyone could really call them country, and the group bristled at being dubbed Nashville's Boy Band. Yet while they were primarily marketed to teens (the young set screams their lungs out in concert), a lot of adults found their bouncy, bubbly radio tunes irresistible. And in 2006, when they released their fourth album, the quadruple-platinum Me and My Gang, they sold more than 700,000 records the first week, ending up as the best-selling artists of the year across all genres. Now comes the follow-up, and with the group sharing production credit with hit-meister Dann Huff (Keith Urban, Faith Hill), they turned out an extremely well-built album of heavily layered, grown-up pop. (The one country-ish song, "Bob that Head," about the joys of Friday night cruising in a tricked-out truck, almost amounts to a rap.) DeMarcus has said that the band took its time making the record, and it shows--everything about it telegraphs a growing maturity. Not only do Rooney and DeMarcus play on every cut (which they didn't do until Me and My Gang), but the trio has a hand in writing much of the material that doesn't come from the pens of Nashville's most reliable songsmiths (Jeffrey Steele, Neil Thrasher, Steve Robson, Hillary Lindsey, and headliner Kenny Chesney on "Take Me There"). It all goes down quite smoothly, from the sexy title track to the pain ballad "Better Now," to the (too-obvious) social commentary of "It's Not Supposed to Go Like That." As a measure of that, even actor/singer Jamie Foxx's guest appearance on the silky "She Goes All the Way" blends seamlessly with the rest of the material, much of it crafted to manipulate the emotions with power choruses, stinging electric guitar solos, and throbbing drums. But unlike the Rascals' other albums, there aren't many story songs here. And though LeVox's hangdog tenor hammers home the devastating ache of failed relationships ("Help Me Remember"), there's no standout tune like "What Hurts the Most," and not a lot of this sticks in your head after it's gone. Yes, as the title promises, it "Still Feels Good," but only for a little while. --Alanna Nash
Album Description It all begins when the lights go down. For Gary LeVox, Joe Don Rooney and Jay DeMarcus, it has been that way since they were playing for a handful of people in a club in Nashville's Printers Alley. These days, of course, they play for thousands of screaming fans a night, drawn by state-of-the-art production and sound, and by spectacular vocal harmonies in service to an ever-expanding catalogue of hits. In between, it was the magic of those performances that catapulted Rascal Flatts into the front ranks of entertainers in all genres. By any measure, Rascal Flatts is in elite territory. They are the reigning 2006 CMA, ACM and CMT Vocal Group of the Year. In 2005 they added Billboard and R&R Artist of the Year trophies as well. The trio also picked up its first three Grammy nominations in 2005, and their "Bless The Broken Road" received the Grammy for Country Song of the Year. Coming off the biggest selling artist album of 2006, Rascal Flatts is geared up for their brand new album coming on September 25.
Album Description It all begins when the lights go down. For Gary LeVox, Joe Don Rooney and Jay DeMarcus, it has been that way since they were playing for a handful of people in a club in Nashville's Printers Alley. These days, of course, they play for thousands of screaming fans a night, drawn by state-of-the-art production and sound, and by spectacular vocal harmonies in service to an ever-expanding catalogue of hits. In between, it was the magic of those performances that catapulted Rascal Flatts into the front ranks of entertainers in all genres.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 70 more reviews...
timelyty August 15, 2008 I am new to country music, and I love this cd. did I mention that I am African- American??!!
Very good cd May 22, 2008 As always Rascal Flats has made a cd I love to listen to over and over again!
Love it! May 21, 2008 This album has some more bouncy, rockin tracks than the other albums. I love it!
good May 19, 2008 The only problem I had was that it took so long to be delivered (by regular usps mail).
not true country? so what May 7, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
personally I'm tired of all the whiney "true country" songs, the exception would be Garth Brooks music, and he's not a realy whiney country singer. This cd is fabulous and comes with the lyrics and interactive website stuff. Rascal Flatts has a fresh sound, with great harmonies and instrumentals, and presented as a "group"; not many country bands are presented as a group, usually just the individual singing. So, if RF is not a "true" country sound, so what? Enjoy the music and the harmonies and attend a show or two. Vote for them for the Academy of Country Music award. They have already won the Humanitarian Award: "The members of Rascal Flatts - Jay DeMarcus, Gary LeVox and Joe Don Rooney - were selected by a special blue-ribbon committee comprised of executives in the country music industry as well as local and national philanthropic leaders for their ongoing community service and charitable giving of their time and talent. "Past recipients of the Humanitarian Award include Brooks & Dunn, Vince Gill, Lonestar, Martina McBride, Neal McCoy and Reba McEntire."
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