Disco de Garth Brooks - Garth Brooks
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Fecha de Publicación:1989-04-18
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Tipo:Álbum
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Género:Country, Greatest Country Hits, Soft Country
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Sello Discográfico:Capitol Nashville
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Letras Explícitas:No
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UPC:077779089727
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Análisis (en inglés) - Yahoo! Music - Brian Mansfield :
The closest thing Brooks has to a traditional country album, with early hits like "Much Too Young (To Feel This Damn Old)" and "Not Counting You." Contains one of the best love songs he's recorded in "If Tomorrow Never Comes," as well as "The Dance," the ballad that really sparked his career.Análisis (en inglés) - AMG :
On Garth Brooks' self-titled debut, his fusion of rock & roll and traditional country genres like honky tonk and Western swing is already fully formed as is his gift for extended metaphors. One listen to his signature song and breakthrough hit, "The Dance," proves that, which is why he broke away from the hat acts that he was initially grouped with. Nevertheless, Garth Brooks is the most straightforward of all of his albums; Brooks sticks with neo-traditional country on about half of the tracks. He sings traditional country quite well -- "Not Counting You" is a particularly effective honky tonk number, demonstrating a debt to both George Jones and George Strait -- but what makes the album an exciting debut are songs like the genre-bending ballads "The Dance" and "If Tomorrow Never Comes"; and that is the style that would bring him mass success with his next album, No Fences. [Brooks re-released the album in 2000, adding the track "Uptown Down Home Good Ol' Boy."] ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
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