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Shannon Lawson
Chase The Sun
Shannon Lawson:  Chase The Sun Tell a Friend about this album

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Album Review

Released: 2002
Label: MCA Nashville
Selection #: 144419
Powerful tenor's volatile mix of bluegrass and R&B on country debut. Goodbye On A Bad Day, Chase The Sun, Who's Your Daddy, Let's Get It On, more.
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1 This Old Heart
2 Chase the Sun
3 Dream Your Way to Me
4 Goodbye on a Bad Day
5 Bad Bad Bad
6 Superstar
7 Where Would I Go
8 Who's Your Daddy
9 Slow Down Sunrise
10 Are You Happy Now
11 Let's Get It On
12 [Untitled Track]
  
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Album Review

Imagine if some mad scientist working for the Nashville office of a major record label created a cross between Marty Stuart and Mark McGrath, and you start to get an idea of what to expect from Shannon Lawson. Lawson shares Stuart's fondness for both traditional country flavors and up-tempo rock & roll, and like McGrath he's a high-attitude bad-boy type with the kind of photogenically unruly hair that's all the rage with marketing departments. Trouble is, judging from Lawson's debut album, "Chase the Sun", Lawson falls short of Marty Stuart's chops and good taste; while his guitar and mandolin work are pretty good, his rock influences are strictly by-the-numbers, especially on the high-bombast "Who'S Your Daddy" (which the overly polished production from Mark Wright only emphasizes), and his honky tonk and bluegrass gestures are neither strong nor original enough to make more than a surface impact (and no matter what Lawson thinks, his acoustic version of Marvin Gaye's "Let'S Get It On" is a fun idea, but it sure ain't bluegrass). And while Lawson's pipes are at least as good as Mark McGrath's, he lacks Mr. Sugar Ray's sly humor and easy (if hardly earth-shaking) grasp of musical eclecticism (which, given Lawson's attempted genre-hopping, would help a lot). And as a songwriter, Shannon Lawson suggests he has potential on several tunes here, but never enough to overcome his habit of wandering into clichés. "Chase the Sun" proves that Shannon Lawson has talent, but also suggests he got his record deal because he's easy to market rather than being better than his competition; maybe if this is a hit, listeners will get to hear a stronger and leaner presentation of his style in the future. ~ Mark Deming, All Music Guide

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