Wheelhouse (album)
Wheelhouse is the tenth studio album by American country music artist Brad Paisley. The album was released on April 9, 2013 by Arista Nashville, with Paisley being the only producer on the album instead of Frank Rogers.
Wheelhouse
April 9, 2013
The Wheelhouse, Blackbird Studio, Station West and The Doghouse (Nashville, Tennessee); Cash And Chips (London, UK).
63:16
Brad Paisley (all tracks)
Mike Dean (track 4)
Marten Aston (track 6)
Music and lyrics[edit]
With respect to subject matter, The New York Times Jon Caramanica noted how Paisley "tackles a host of country pieties out in the open, as if sensing the moment might finally be right to hear country songs about difference."[2] Daryl Addison of GAC found that this album was an "adventurous undertaking".[3] At the Los Angeles Times, Randy Lewis affirmed that Paisley "taking on such hot-button topics as spousal abuse, Southern provincialism, racism and social justice alongside characteristically well-crafted mainstream country fare."[4] To this, Jerry Shirver of USA Today exclaimed "bravo to Brad Paisley for being among the wave of mainstream country artists who keep prodding the genre into the here and now, lyrically and musically."[5] So, Caramanica found that "by being studiously strait-laced, though, Mr. Paisley is exactly the type of person who might slip in unnoticed and effect change."[2] However, AllMusic's Stephen Thomas Erlewine alluded to how the album "suffers when the cross-cultural ambition is too great."[6] Spin magazine's Jason Gubbels writes this is because Paisley "forgot his moral insights have always functioned best as ambiguities, not set pieces."[7]
Bernard Perusse of The Gazette said the album features "catchy melodies, plainspoken lyrics and one man's attempt to transplant contemporary country from its red-state ghetto into the hearts of everyone."[8] Taste of Country's Billy Dukes told that "'Wheelhouse' delivers a familiar mix of humor, life lessons and scorching guitar solos, but it does it in a way different from any of the other eight albums the...singer has released," which he evoked how Paisley "took his old formula, balled it up, lit it on fire and tossed the ashes in the garbage".[9] In addition, Lewis of the Los Angeles Times found that the music is packaged up "in an arena-ready singalong," that Paisley "tacitly inviting listeners to sample his perspective."[4] At The Boston Globe, Scott McLennan praised the writing on this album as being "sharp".[10] Addison of GAC found that with Paisley "producing and writing/co-writing every song himself, Brad delivers 14 full songs that are incredibly thoughtful, well crafted and willing to take risks without losing what fans love most – his personality and clever songwriting."[3]
On the topic of musical styling, McLennan of The Boston Globe told that "Paisley cooks through honky-tonk, country swing, the blues, rockabilly, and weepy ballads with assured command, topping off each song with at least one memorable line".[10] Lastly, Bob Paxman of Country Weekly surmised that "with clever splices of sonic experimentation and songs that run from fanciful to downright serious, Wheelhouse seems to stand as Brad's Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band", which it is not "quite that monumental, to be clear", but does give the listener a "declarative statement that Brad is branching out in a more divergent path than ever before."[11] At The New York Times, Caramanica alluded to how "Mr. Paisley isn’t pushing musical boundaries, but that’s by design: the messages would matter less if they were coming from someone other than a country insider."[2]
With respect to the album duration, Roughstock's Matt Bjorke felt the work was rather long in terms of duration it "just [seemed] too ambitious for an artist not exactly known for being all that ambitious" musically, yet he hoped "that Brad maintains some of the juju found on this record -- the explorations of other genres w/o abandoning Country Music's bedrock instruments -- and reigns himself in a little bit on his next album."[12] In agreement, Taste of Country's Dukes said that "seventeen tracks are too many, even if a few are little more than interludes", yet Paisley "earns an extra half star for some daring production," which "a lack of momentum holds back a project that’s full of good ideas spaced apart."[9]
In terms of guitar playing, Gary Graff of The Oakland Press praised Paisley for his instrument playing acumen, when he said "there's nothing at all funny about Paisley’s guitar chops, which are still sharp throughout these 17 tracks."[13] Also, McLennan commented that the guitar work is "impeccable."[10] Paxman of Country Weekly vowed that "the musicianship on Wheelhouse is incredible and Brad just keeps on getting more flavorful as a guitarist".[11] At Premier Guitar Jason Shadrick evoked how Paisley "continues to take chances and push modern country away from the auto-tuned sing-alongs with a simple twist of his B-bender," which he even "throws in just enough EL84-powered twang and Stones-inspired double stops to keep the guitar nerd’s eyes from glazing over".[14] In addition, Chuck Eddy of Rolling Stone noted that "as always, plenty of tasty guitar" from Paisley is featured on the album.[15] Lastly, GAC's Addison proclaimed Paisley a "virtuoso guitar lick."[3] However, Robert Christgau of MSN Music was not so praiseworthy about Paisley on guitar, when he wrote that "a lot of the time he's trying too hard to say too little or trying too clumsily to say too much, sometimes even with his trusty guitar."[16]
Songs[edit]
The songs on the album touches on various aspects such as xenophobia with "Southern Comfort Zone", domestic violence with "Karate", racism with "Accidental Racist" and religion with "Those Crazy Christians".[2][5] "Southern Comfort Zone" has been described as a "cousins of sorts to his multi-cultural paean 'American Saturday Night'",[6] and the song "preaches the value of travel while masking it in a wistfulness for the familiarity of home."[2] "Beat This Summer" has been described as "the perfect summer anthem".[17] The song "Outstanding in Our Field" has been called a "party anthem".[4] "Pressing on a Bruise" is a ballad that has some rap on it by Mat Kearney.[9] The song "I Can't Change the World" is a "poignant ballad" that contains "fingerpicked acoustic guitar with wavering pedal steel start off the track before he enters on vocals", but even though this is a "smartly written love song" Paisley "doesn’t quite have the pathos to deliver."[2][17]
The song "'Onryo' offers up fun around the horn solos, but the focus here is on the songwriting."[3] "Karate" has been referenced as being like "Martina McBride's 'Independence Day,' the Dixie Chicks' 'Goodbye Earl,' and Miranda Lambert's 'Gunpowder & Lead,'" which because "Mr. Paisley may be the first male singer to approach the subject with such a honed sense of justice" in mind that he "pulls off with grace."[2][6] The song "Harvey Bodine" is "about a henpecked man who dies, finds himself at more peace in death than in life and then, after he’s been resuscitated, decides to leave his wife", which the death lasted just "five minutes".[2][9] "Tin Can on a String" has been portrayed as "a ballad of lost love", which "Paisley sings of being stood up at the altar. His emotion is grandly showcased on this track and you can't help but feel for the character in the song."[4][17] The song "Death of a Single Man" has been noted that it "reads like a funeral, but it describes a wedding", which it is "the perfect single man's anthem."[2][17] "The Mona Lisa" has been described as "a love song" that was "inspired by a trip to Paris with his wife, actress Kimberly Williams-Paisley, the fast paced track impresses with gritty guitar."[6][17]
The song "Accidental Racist" featuring LL Cool J is "a don’t-judge-a-book-by-its-cover polemic", which to some "this has about as much sociological insight as a fortune cookie."[11] In addition, this song has been derided as "far less successful than 'Over and Over,' the 2004 collaboration between Tim McGraw and Nelly, and a far less reconciliatory one too."[2] On the other hand, it was seen as a song that is an "honest discussion about race".[3] "Runaway Train" is a "fast-paced" song that "lets loose for some of the project’s most impressive axe-slinging and the cowboy instrumental".[3][17] The song "Those Crazy Christians" is where Paisley "admires faith while harboring doubts of his own, never taking potshots at those who believe", and it "deftly tweaks and salutes the faithful among whom Paisley grew up."[6] Yet, some see it as approaching "massive Christian stereotypes from the eyes of a nonbeliever."[17] "Officially Alive" has been called "anthemic" that is "part autobiographical".[17]
Commercial performance[edit]
The album debuted at #1 in the Billboard Top Country Albums chart, selling over 100,000 copies in the first week, becoming Paisley's seventh number one album.[22] It also peaked at #2 in Billboard 200, behind Paramore's self-titled album.[23] As of June 12, 2013, the album has sold 207,000 copies in the U.S.[24]
Adapted from liner notes.[30]