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Chris Cagle
Chris Cagle

Released April 1, 2003 on Capitol, EMI

Available on: CD, CS

 
Track No. Song Title Length
1. What a Beautiful Day 3:45 
2. Chicks Dig It 4:00 
3. Look What I Found 4:08 
4. I Love It When She Does That 4:47 
5. Night on the Country 3:55 
6. I'd Be Lying 4:26 
7. Everything 3:34 
8. It Takes Two 5:13 
9. Growin' Love 5:10 
10. Just Love Me 5:09 
11. Look at What I've Done 4:58 
Shannon Forrest
Percussion, Drums
Chris McHugh
Percussion, Drums, Loop Programming
Michael Noble
Guitar (Acoustic)
Joe Rogers
Design
Doug Sax
Mastering
Steve Turner
Drums
Craig White
Engineer, Digital Editing, Mixing
John Willis
Guitar (Acoustic)
Jonathan Yudkin
Fiddle, Mandolin, Strings, Cello, Mandocello, String Arrangements, Octophone
Jon Carroll
Guitar (Electric)
Marina Chavez
Photography
Hank Williams
Mastering
Chris Cagle
Producer
Denise Jarvis
Producer
Mike "Frog" Griffith
Production Coordination
Jennifer Kemp
Stylist
Robert Hadley
Mastering
Gary Smith
Strings, String Arrangements
Mark Hybner
Executive Producer
Robert Wright
Guitar (Bass), Vocals (Background), Producer, Engineer, Digital Editing
Casey Wood
Assistant
Ilya Toshinsky
Banjo, Guitar (Electric), Guitar (Classical), Guitar (Resonator)
Joanna Carter
Art Direction
Paula Turner
Make-Up, Hair Stylist
Though there are moments when he's clearly trying a little too hard, Chris Cagle delivers a generally agreeable set on his sophomore release. There are a few problems: the extremely crisp production has almost too much presence and the artist and his musicians seem to be emoting about an inch in front of the listener's nose. And Cagle's writing leans too often on the creaky formula of hanging the song on the hook of a knee-slap punch line. This can work as long as the language feels natural, like something someone in the country demographic might actually say -- which is why "we're not growing old, we're growing love" misses the mark on "Growin' Love," for example. (Cagle's decision to rhyme "change" with "change" in the same song is even more awkward.) Elsewhere, though, his earnest, nasal singing and overall exuberance sell even the weaker material, and where he comes up with a writing gimmick that's actually fresh, such as the chronological breakdown of a happy relationship on "What a Beautiful Day," he hits a clean home run. ~ Robert L. Doerschuk, All Music Guide