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Track Listing 1. There Goes My Baby 2. Never Let You Go Again 3. That Ain't the Way I Heard It 4. Powerful Thing 5. Love Wouldn't Lie to Me 6. Wouldn't Any Woman 7. I'll Still Love You More 8. Heart Like a Sad Song 9. I Don't Want to Be the One 10. Bring Me All Your Lovin' 11. Where Your Road Leads - (with Garth Brooks)
Album Notes Personnel includes: Trisha Yearwood, Garth Brooks (vocals); Larry Byrom (acoustic & electric guitar, mandolin); Steve Gibson, Brent Mason (acoustic & electric guitar); Al Anderson (acoustic guitar, background vocals); Mark Casstevens (acoustic guitar); Steuart Smith, Chris Leuzinger (electric guitar); Paul Franklin (steel guitar); Sam Bush (mandolin); Stuart Duncan (fiddle); Steve Nathan (piano, Hammond organ, keyboards, strings); Bobby Wood (piano, organ); Matt Rollings, John Hobbs (piano, keyboards); Michael Rhodes, Mike Chapman (bass); Paul Leim, Milton Sledge (drums, percussion); Tim Buppert, Gordon Kennedy, Wayne Kirkpatrick, Harry Stinson, Kim Richey, John Wesley Ryles, Tabitha Fair, Buddy Miller (background vocals). Producers: Tony Brown, Trisha Yearwood, Allen Reynolds. Recorded at Ocean Way Studios and Jack's Tracks Recording Studios, Nashville, Tennessee. All tracks have been digitally mastered using HDCD technology. WHERE YOUR ROAD LEADS was nominated for a 1999 Grammy for Best Country Album. "There Goes My Baby" was nominated for a 1999 Grammy for Best Female Country Vocal Performance. "Where Your Road Leads" was nominated for a 1999 Grammy for Best Country Collaboration With Vocals. WHERE YOUR ROAD LEADS is another winner from Trisha Yearwood, a singer of undeniable talent and often astonishing prowess. This is an excellent collection of songs about relationships, good and bad. Yearwood's vocal chops get a serious workout on the opening track, "There Goes My Baby," as she soars to Roy Orbison-like heights to tell the story of a woman who lets a good man slip away. She handles ballads like "Love Wouldn't Lie To Me" with a delicate, Tammy Wynette-like finesse, but she's at her most impressive when belting out you-done-me-wrong rockers like "Wouldn't Any Woman." Another highlight is "I'll Still Love You More," a killer ballad written by Diane "How Do I Live" Warren. Garth Brooks provides harmony on the title track, a big production number complete with a choir. But the real winner is "Bring Me All Your Loving," in which Trisha's longing vocals (and Buddy Miller's harmonies) bring to life a track purposely designed to echo the Stones' "Wild Horses." Note to Country fans: follow this ROAD.
Industry Reviews ...why is a singer this grand this professedly in loev with dark balladry expending her self on such functional stuff when she ought to be out in search of a song that could actually break our hearts?....Yearwood's album is on the bloodless side... - Rating: C+
...why is a singer this grand this professedly in loev with dark balladry expending her self on such functional stuff when she ought to be out in search of a song that could actually break our hearts?....Yearwood's album is on the bloodless side...- Rating: C+ Entertainment Weekly (07/24/1998)
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