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The Band Perry (album)

The Band Perry
The Band Perry –The Band Perry (album).jpg
Studio album by The Band Perry
Released October 12, 2010 (2010-10-12)
Recorded 2010
Genre Country pop, country, bluegrass
Length 39:45
Label Republic Nashville
Producer Nathan Chapman
Paul Worley
The Band Perry chronology
The Band Perry EP
(2010)
The Band Perry
(2010)
Pioneer
(2013)
Singles from The Band Perry
  1. "Hip to My Heart"
    Released: November 16, 2009
  2. "If I Die Young"
    Released: June 7, 2010
  3. "You Lie"
    Released: January 18, 2011
  4. "All Your Life"
    Released: August 8, 2011
  5. "Postcard from Paris"
    Released: March 5, 2012
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 3/5 stars
Country Weekly 3/5 stars
Entertainment Weekly B
The Guardian 2/5 stars
Roughstock 4.5/5 stars

The Band Perry is the self-titled debut album of the American country music group The Band Perry.The album includes five songs from the band's digital EP The Band Perry EP, which was released in April 2010. The album has produced five singles: "Hip to My Heart", "If I Die Young", "You Lie", "All Your Life", and "Postcard from Paris". Of these, "If I Die Young" and "All Your Life" were number one hits on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart.

Thom Jurek of Allmusic gave the album a three-star rating out of five, saying that the album was "carefully crafted" and thought that the singles were among the strongest tracks on it.Country Weekly reviewer Jessica Phillips said that the album was "more introspective and engrossing than typical radio fare", and praised Kimberly's "unpolished" voice, but thought that some songs had "aimless" lyrics. She also gave it three stars out of five. Also giving it a positive review, Michael McCall of the Associated Press compared the band favorably to Taylor Swift and Lady Antebellum, and said that the album's "emphasis is on easygoing, back-porch music."BBC Music's Sid Smith cautioned that "whilst there’s no faulting the tightly-drilled performances turned in by the trio and an array of skilled sessioneers, the delivery has a by-the-numbers feel that’s workman-like rather than inspired", yet he reasoned that "perhaps the fault lies with a set of committee-written tunes that are well-worn and overly-familiar." Lastly, Smith said that with respect to this album its "blandness becomes difficult to ignore".

At Entertainment Weekly, Leah Greenblatt found that the listener needs to "think of them as a more modest, homegrown Lady Antebellum" that comes "with twangier roots and dustier boots." However, Maddy Costa at The Guardian evoked how "their country-rock sound has been lacquered to a high gloss, burying Neil Perry's mandolin and Stuart Duncan's fiddle beneath slick guitar, domineering pop rhythms and sickly strings. Frontwoman Kimberley Perry has a belter of a voice, but it's too clean to communicate real emotion." Costa found only one good track, which was "Double Heart" that she suggested what the "band could be", and the song has "one part sleazy rock'n'roll, two parts country sass and snarl, it has more personality than the rest of the album put together." Roughstock's Bobby Peacock did not agree with Costa, when he wrote that this is a "surprisingly diverse debut album", and this is done with Kimberly voice that is "matched perfectly to an uncluttered, mostly acoustic production that's clean without being slick." Furthermore, Peacock argued that Kimberly as being the featured songwriter "has a solid command of the language, she sometimes falls into a Clint Black-esque trap of getting so wrapped up in the turns of phrase that the storyline gets a little ensnarled; however, even when these pitfalls occur, the songwriting is still quite impressive." Lastly, Peacock told that "the songs are vaguely reminiscent of Taylor Swift's exuberance, lyrical detail and boy-craziness, not to mention her way with a catchy melody."


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