Gene Watson: CMP Album Reviews
Gene Watson has been singing professionally since the late 1950s & has been
a country music (album) recording artist since the late 1960s.
Gene Watson steps into a recording studio and, like a great chef, uses the
perfect ingredients to create an aural feast. When Gene Watson takes a step
behind the microphone, magic happens.


Gene Watson's contribution to the country music genre is immeasurable and it
is here that you have an opportunity to read a CMP review of Gene Watson's
'In a Perfect World' (Shanachie
Records, 2007), as published in the
October 2007
issue of Country Music People.

Country Music People is the United Kingdom's No. 1 Award Winning Country
Music Magazine, and was the recipient of the Country Music Association's
2003 Wesley Rose International Achievement Award.
Country Music People was first published in 1970 and protects its integrity
fiercely. The magazine has always brought its readers detailed, honest
record reviews untainted by advertising considerations, as well as genuine
interviews with country stars that are not faked from interview discs sent
out by publicists and record labels.

Country Music People have
long ago nailed its colours to the mast where Gene Watson is concerned.
The magazine has rigorously championed Gene's cause down through the years
and have published a number of reviews of his album releases.


'In a Perfect World' (Shanachie Records, 2007)
This CMP review by Jon Philibert, which was published in the October 2007 issue
of Country Music People, is reproduced here with the kind permission of the
publishers.
Album Review by Jon Philibert / Album Awarded
'CD of the Month' Accolade
(***** out of 5)
'The good news is that one of country music's greatest singers Gene Watson
('Gene Watson is one of my all-time favourite ballad singers' -
George
Jones) will be heading for these shores for an October tour. The bad news
is that said tour will only be taking in a few dates in Ireland. Good for
our Irish friends but for us benighted folks on the mainland, should we not
be able to get to the likes of Letterkenny, Castleblaney and Sligo, we do at
least have this superlative album as a consolation.
First things first. Gene Watson is a commanding singer who has never been
less than 100% country and who always manages to select great material that
suits him to a tee. A quick glance at the track listing indicates that the
album consists of much loved comfortable country standards mixed in with
newer material and that Watson has invited some stellar friends in for the
session.
Most of the guests though - which include some of the best voices in the
business - make respectful background harmony contributions as opposed to
trading lines or verses, so 'In a Perfect World' is not a duet album in the
classic sense.
An exception is
Rhonda Vincent's duet with Watson on a sublime 'Together
again' which finds equally upfront vocal wise with Watson, but only
Mark
Chesnutt
busts loose and has a verse and some lines of his own on the hard
rocking and menacing 'This side of the door'. This is an effective
Tim Mensy/Shawn Camp
leaving song which Chesnutt first aired on his own 'What a
Way to Live' album in 1994 (other versions include cuts by co-writer Mensy
and recent Warner Brothers singing and one-time Nashville demo regular Lance
Miller).
The album kicks off stunningly with Watson's take on one of the finest
country shuffles ever minted,
Hank Cochran's 'Don't you ever get tired of
hurting me'. Watson's smooth, poised, almost insouciant vocal is close
enough to a perfect performance as I've encountered all year. Wonderful.
Other recognisable fare, meanwhile, include 'Today I started loving you
again' which might have suffered from overkill by anyone else but sounds
like it was written yesterday in Watson's hands, such is the freshness he
brings to the table. A little wiggly guitar riff accompanies him during the
opening chorus with Lee Ann Womack joining him for the repeat chorus in a
fiery and abandoned performance.
An undeservedly little known Harlan Howard
song, 'Let me be the first to go'
(only a Wynn Stewart
track seems to be on record) is an ace tearjerker in
which Watson asks the Lord to call him home first and take him rather than
his wife as life without her would not be worth living for him or the
children. This is a superb vehicle for Watson who handles the lyric in
supreme and sensitive fashion and Vince Gill's bright, crystal clear backup
vocals add tremendously to the cut.
The title track, 'In a perfect world', with
Joe Nichols in support is a
slow, dark song full of sorrow and troubled emotions. Watson, a man
anchored at the bottom of his life, imagines it as he wishes it to be and
how it was before he lost his love, not how it is today. The chorus runs:
'In a perfect world it never rains on Saturday, In a perfect world I
wouldn't hate the holidays, I'd sleep just like a baby and have one down the
hall, You'd still be my girl, in a perfect world', and, believe me, it is
almost too much to take.
More suffering and anguish come with the closing slowie, 'Like I wasn't even
there', which, musically, is a little more contemporary, with chords other
than the usual 1-4-5 changes found on most of the rest of the album. Yet it
is still classic Gene Watson and a great way to round the album off.
I had the enormous pleasure of writing the sleeve notes to a recent Hux Gene
Watson twofer reissue, 'Because You Believed in Me/Beautiful Country' - a
real labour of love - and if you don't know Gene Watson, it's a good place
to start, covering the period when the artist was at his commercial peak.
However, once you have that one, turn your attention to this mighty,
flawless piece of work that is 'In a Perfect World'. Probably the best
album I have heard in 2007. Hmm, maybe Ireland isn't so far after all -
'Hello, Ryanair'?'
Jon Philibert
Country Music People
October 2007



