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The Song Remembers When

The Song Remembers When
TrishaYearwoodSongRemembersWhen.jpg
Studio album by Trisha Yearwood
Released October 26, 1993
Recorded Sound Emporium
(Nashville, Tennessee)
Genre Country
Length 36:54
Label MCA Nashville
Producer Garth Fundis
Trisha Yearwood chronology
Hearts in Armor
(1992)Hearts in Armor1992
The Song Remembers When
(1993)
The Sweetest Gift
(1994)The Sweetest Gift1994
Singles from The Song Remembers When
  1. "The Song Remembers When"
    Released: October 1993
  2. "Better Your Heart Than Mine"
    Released: January 1994
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4/5 stars
Entertainment Weekly C+
Los Angeles Times 2.5/4 stars
Rolling Stone 3/5 stars

The Song Remembers When is the third studio album by American country music artist, Trisha Yearwood. The album was released October 26, 1993 on MCA Nashville Records and was produced by Garth Fundis. It was Yearwood's third collaboration with Fundis, who also produced her 1992 album, Hearts in Armor which received wide critical acclaim, as well as her platinum-selling eponymous debut. The title track was the album's lead single, becoming a major hit, peaking at #2 on the Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart in 1993.

The Song Remembers When was recorded in Nashville, Tennessee in 1993 and contained ten tracks. Thom Jurek of Allmusic called the content "contemporary country" and "top notch no matter where the pair get it from." John McAlley of Rolling Stone called The Song Remembers When's tone "somber." McAlley goes on to explain that, "Love (Sort of) Stinks" might have been a more apt title for this album, such are the voices of heartache, spite and uncertainty that permeate it. So total, in fact, is its focus on the tribulations of romantic love that Song resembles a concept record." The album opens with the title track, which was described by Jurek as "innocent love gone bad." The second song, "Better Your Heart Than Mine," which was written by Lisa Angelle and Andrew Gold was said to evoke the Rock-inspired style of Bonnie Raitt, according to Jurek. The third track, "I Don't Fall In Love So Easy" features background vocals from Rodney Crowell, who also wrote the song.

Most of the songs included on the album are further recorded in a country pop style, including "The Nightingale" and "Lying to the Moon." The album includes two cover versions. The first is a cover of Linda Ronstadt's "Mr. Radio," one of Yearwood's major influences. McAlley called "Mr. Radio" a "reverent cover" of Ronstadt's song. The second cover is Willie Nelson's 1966 single, "One In a Row," in which Nelson performs a guitar solo. In addition, Nelson also contributed his vocals to another track on the album, "Here Comes Temptation."Matraca Berg's "Lying to the Moon" (originally recorded by Berg on her 1990 album of the same name) was considered by McAlley to be, "the hit-bound title track so undeniably sad that songs intended to offer reconciliation and uplift." He further stated that "The Nightingale" and "I Don't Fall In Love So Easy" to also possess what "Lying to the Moon" has, stating they, "buckle under their own ambivalence and the album's cumulative weight."


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