Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Water & Bridges

 
Album Review: Water & Bridges

  • Artist: Kenny Rogers
  • Rating: StarStarStar
  • Release Date: March 21, 2006
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Country

Review

If there was ever a record that sounded like a swan song, Kenny Rogers' fine, vulnerable Water & Bridges is it. The cover is a bit startling; who thought he'd ever age? He always looked like he was somewhere in his middle to late fifties. But that look is traceable if you look deep enough, while Rogers seems to wear his age proudly, like Kris Kristofferson and Willie Nelson. The disc sounds like a goodbye to all the illusions, regrettable mistakes, and foolhardiness brought by living into the wisdom brought by the golden years. Rogers' career has seen so many heights, it's dizzying to think about. And he's still hanging out on Capitol while many of his contemporaries are struggling on independent labels, if they're recording at all. Water & Bridges isn't a perfect record, but it's a sincere one, and there are many tracks here that no other singer could pull off. And to be truthful, as in his very best material, Rogers has this uncanny ability to make everything on this record sound like it came from his own pen. It's a melancholy record about passage, from one stage to the next, of life, of love, of youth, of ignorance, of spirit. The 11 tracks here are all slow, all reflective. It's that particular brand of slick, soft, modern country and pop that he does better than anyone. There is one true dud in the bunch called "The Last Ten Years (Superman)," which is merely a novelty song about all the famous ones who passed on in the last decade. But there are so many tracks here where one can hear the spirit of mortality railing against the dying of the light. There is the title cut, which opens the disc and charts generations of fathers hurting their sons both born and unborn, where the protagonist finds himself as guilty as anybody he's charged; "Someone Is Me," about taking on civic responsibility; the killer "Someone Somewhere Tonight," which finds magic in the mere presence of everyday life. Don Henley joins Rogers on "Calling Me." It's a white man's country-soul tune that sounds too much like Curtis Mayfield's classic "People Get Ready." (Litigants get ready, set, go!) The vocal performances are stellar. "I Can Feel You Drifting" is a fine pop song, and it's a true heartbreaker. In the now thinning grain of Rogers' awesome voice, all the emptiness and sorrow and confusion in the world comes to call. Water & Bridges is as good as anything out there in 2006 and a whole lot better than most of the dross Nash Vegas shovels out. Hopefully Rogers scores big one more time. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Water & Bridges Craig Wiseman, Tim Nichols Kenny Rogers (4:09)
Someone Is Me (Lyrics) Bryan Loren, Derek Allen Kenny Rogers (3:30)
Someone Somewhere Tonight (Lyrics) Walt Wilkins, Davis Raines Kenny Rogers (5:18)
I Can't Unlove You (Lyrics) Wade Kirby Kenny Rogers (3:24)
Calling Me Annie Roboff, Craig Wiseman Kenny Rogers, Don Henley (3:59)
Half a Man (Lyrics) Anthony Smith Kenny Rogers (3:18)
I Can Feel You Drifting (Lyrics) Bat McGrath, Billy Kirsch Kenny Rogers (3:51)
The Last Ten Years (Superman) Tommy Conners, D. Vincent Williams Kenny Rogers (3:42)
You'll Know Love (Lyrics) Don Pfrimmer, Marc Beeson, Mike Reid Kenny Rogers (4:13)
My Petition (Lyrics) Bryant Simpson, Wade Kirby, Ashley Gorley Kenny Rogers (4:12)
One Life (Lyrics) Tim Johnson, Marc Beeson Kenny Rogers (3:44)

Credits

Paula Hochhalter (Cello), Bruce Bouton (Guitar (Steel)), Mike "Frog" Griffith (Production Coordination), Dann Huff (Guitar (Electric)), Melissa Cabezas Mattey (Mixing Assistant), Steve Churchyard (Engineer), Denise Arguijo (Art Producer), Karen Elaine Bakunin (Viola), Charles Judge (Keyboards), Sarah Buxton (Vocals (Background)), Warren Hartman (Synthesizer), Steve Crowder (Assistant Engineer), Melanie Dunea (Photography), Tom Bukovac (Guitar (Electric)), Perry Coleman (Vocals (Background)), Jonathan Yudkin (Bouzouki), Matt Funes (Viola), Bruce Dukov (Violin), Dan Tobin Smith (Cello), Ron Folsom (Violin), Dann Huff (Producer), Russell Terrell (Vocals (Background)), Alan Grunfeld (Violin), Shannon Forrest (Drums), John Jarvis (Piano), Joanna Carter (Art Direction), Aaron Walk (Assistant Engineer), Haim Shtrum (Violin), Dann Huff (Audio Production), Drew Bollman (Assistant Engineer), Greg Lawrence (Assistant Engineer), Michelle Hall (Art Producer), Russ Pahl (Guitar (Steel)), Susan Chatman (Violin), Allen Ditto (Assistant Engineer), Adam Ayan (Mastering), Chris Rowe (Digital Editing), Charles Judge (Synthesizer), Justin Niebank (Engineer), Kenny Rogers (Vocals), Suzie Katayama (Cello), Carole Mukogawa (Viola), Jeff Balding (Engineer), Miwako Watanabe (Violin), Kenny Greenberg (Guitar (Electric)), Andy Ackland (Digital Editing), Drew Bollman (Mixing Assistant), Jonathan Yudkin (Arranger), Paul Buckmaster (Conductor), Justin Niebank (Mixing), Jonathan Yudkin (Fiddle), Jim Hoke (Accordion), Jed Hackett (Engineer), Jonathan Yudkin (Mandolin), Tereza Stanislav (Violin), Bryan Sutton (Guitar (Acoustic)), Joe Rogers (Design), Matt Chamberlain (Drums), Josephina Vergara (Violin), Natalie Leggett (Violin), Mike Brignardello (Bass), Bob Peterson (Violin), Darius Campo (Violin), Dan Smith (Cello), Travis Daniels (Assistant Engineer), Vince Gill (Vocals (Background)), Gordon Mote (Piano), Michael Rhodes (Bass), Paul Buckmaster (String Arrangements), Eric Darken (Percussion), Darrell Franklin (A&R), Mark Hagen (Engineer), Jonathan Yudkin (Composer), Jonathan Yudkin (Performer), Rudy Stein (Cello), Biff Watson (Guitar (Acoustic)), Bruce Bouton (Dobro)
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Shopping: Water & Bridges
Top
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more