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Like a Rose (album)

Like a Rose
AshleyMonroeLikeARose.jpg
Studio album by Ashley Monroe
Released March 5, 2013 (2013-03-05)
Recorded 2012
Genre Country
Length 31:50
Label Warner Bros. Nashville
Producer Vince Gill, Justin Niebank
Ashley Monroe chronology
Ashley Monroe
(2009)
Like a Rose
(2013)
The Blade
(2015)
Singles from Like a Rose
  1. "Like a Rose"
    Released: March 4, 2013
  2. "You Got Me"
    Released: May 20, 2013
  3. "Weed Instead of Roses"
    Released: September 2013
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic (89/100)
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4.5/5 stars
Robert Christgau A–
Country Weekly A
Got Country Online 4/5 stars
Rolling Stone 4/5 stars
Roughstock 4/5 stars
Slant Magazine 4/5 stars
Spin 9/10
Taste of Country 4/5 stars
USA Today 4/4 stars

Like a Rose is the second studio album from American country music artist Ashley Monroe. The album was released on March 5, 2013, via Warner Bros. Nashville. The title track served as the album's first single and was released to radio a day before the album. "You Got Me" and "Weed Instead of Roses" were also released as singles.

Ashley Monroe co-wrote all nine of the album's tracks.Little Big Town provides harmony vocals on "You Got Me" (which was co-written by band member Karen Fairchild) and "You Ain't Dolly (And You Ain't Porter)" is a duet with Blake Shelton.

The album's title track, which Monroe wrote with Guy Clark and Jon Randall, came about when Monroe used the phrase "But look at me, I came out like a rose" after telling Clark her life story. The song ultimately "[set] an autobiographical tone" for the record. It was released to radio on March 4, 2013 as the album's first single, and a music video directed by Traci Goudie premiered on CMT one day earlier. "You Got Me" was released as the second single from the album on May 20, 2013, and "Weed Instead of Roses" was released as the third single in September 2013. "Weed Instead of Roses" became Monroe's first chart single from the album when it debuted at No. 46 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart for the week of October 19, 2013, and reached a peak of No. 39.

For the week of March 23, 2013, the album was the number 10 sold Country album in the United States, and it was the number 43 sold album in the United States as a whole on the 200 chart.

Like a Rose has received universal praise from critics for its traditional country sound. On Metacritic, a website which assigns a normalised rating out of 100 from reviews by mainstream critics, it currently holds a rating of 89 out of 100, signifying Universal Acclaim, based on 9 reviews.

Billy Dukes of Taste of Country favorably said that "no one does anguish quite like Ashley Monroe. On her new album, ‘Like a Rose,’ the singer redefines bittersweet for a country music audience that is still very much learning her name."Slant Magazine's Jonathan Keefe praised Monroe's ability at "bringing authentic emotions and experiences into compelling narratives that showcase a real mastery of voice." Roughstock reviewer Dan MacIntosh compared her favorably to other female artists Kacey Musgraves and Miranda Lambert. MacIntosh complimented the duet with Blake Shelton ("You Ain't Dolly [And You Ain't Porter]") for its humor and its blending of traditional and contemporary country. Stephen Thomas Erlewine of Allmusic praised Monroe for bringing traditional country music to the present and blending it with contemporary attitudes. He named "Two Weeks Late," "Weed Instead of Roses," and "Monroe Suede" as the album's standout tracks.MSN Music's Robert Christgau found that Monroe "put this much care into every song even if you're not convinced by the one that connects whipped cream and whips." Bill West of Got Country Online said that "Ashley Monroe is stepping in to shake things up a bit with a double helping of pedal steel and tradition."Jody Rosen of Rolling Stone called the album "riveting, beautifully sung, sharp-witted", and "even better" than "her hard-drawlin' vocals on Hell on Heels" by the Pistol Annies. Rosen summed up the album as "nine songs, 32 minutes [and] no false moves", writing that although the album "comes on traditionalist, with old-fashioned production, countrypolitan ballads and punchline-packed honky-tonkers", it is also "modern" when it "drops references to Fifty Shades of Grey"


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