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Some People Change | 
| Artist: Montgomery Gentry Label: Sony Category: Music
List Price: $18.97 Buy New: $8.63 You Save: $10.34 (55%)
New (45) Used (22) Collectible (1) from $6.99
Avg. Customer Rating: 48 reviews Sales Rank: 13810
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 94888 UPC: 827969488829 EAN: 0827969488829
Release Date: October 24, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Established company with many years experience in the Music and DVD industry. Please allow 10-14 days for delivery.
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| Tracks:
| • | Some People Change | | • | Hey Country | | • | Lucky Man | | • | Takes All Kinds | | • | Your Tears Are Comin' | | • | Clouds | | • | Twenty Years Ago | | • | What Do Ya Think About That | | • | Redder Than That | | • | A Man's Job | | • | If You Wanna Keep An Angel | | • | Free Ride In The Fast Lane |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com It might have been tempting to subtitle the latest from Eddie Montgomery and Troy Gentry ...And Some People Don't. Though the soaring title ballad that opens the album celebrates the power of redemptive transformation, much of the material finds the duo pledging allegiance to roots that remain proudly hick ("Hey Country," with its interplay of banjo and screaming rock guitars) and defiantly redneck ("Redder," "What Do You Think About That"). Highlights include a deathbed reconciliation between a stubborn father and his rebellious son on "20 Years Ago" and a revenge song that channels a "Pretty Woman" groove on "Your Tears Are Coming." Wherever Montgomery Gentry are taking their music, they haven't forgotten where they came from. --Don McLeese
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| Customer Reviews: Read 43 more reviews...
like it July 5, 2008 never heard of these guys until I saw the video of the song, "What do you think about that?" I really like that song, so true it is. Good album.
What a great album March 24, 2008 I'm not really a country music fan. I normally listen to contemparary Christian / gospel / rock / alt. That being said I really really like this album. It's honest, heartfelt, and just downright good. This is probably the best country album I've ever heard.
Hell Yeah! December 30, 2007 No. That song isn't on there. But the country-rock sound of the MG twins still exists with this loaded CD!
I recall hearing the title track "Some People Change" as an unreleased single from the Kenny Chesney CD "When the Sun Goes Down." The song needed to be released. It's a terrific ballad about the problem of alcohol use and racial critizism. In my opinion, it is truly a Montgomery Gentry song.
There's Jay in the backseat! The rocking track "Hey Country" puts fourth the actual sound of country music from where it started out: cowboy hats!
It's about time they acheived a number one hit when the single "Lucky Man" was released. You really have to listen to the words of the song to appreciate that your'e lucky for having a few dollars, a good running truck, supper in the oven, and a "ticking ticker."
If a girl throws you down, she shouldn't be laughing about it for long. This is true in the single "Your Tears Are Comin'". What goes around comes around!
The highlight of the CD would have to be the newly expressed emotion in the track "Clouds." You can tell Eddie felt his son and his father's passings with that side of him that never before have I heard! Their somewhere up in the clouds, and when it rains their's crying. Someday he'll be up there to see him in the clouds. It's a really amazing song.
Every day sons get in trouble with their fathers from not thinking alike. This is especially true in the well-written "Twenty Years Ago" where his dad is running down his friends, hair, and rock and roll. Their differences are forgotten about when the old man waits in the hospital bed and lets go of life. It is then and there that he realizes that all he wanted was to be his kid.
While there is quite a lot of heart-felt tracks that seems like a new gentleman side of MG, the track "What Do Ya Think About That" re-enforces that in-your-face side of Montgomery Gentry that everybody likes! Some people do care about what other people think, and they don't need to. Theyr'e the way they are and shouldn't give a holy damn of what other people feel for them!
There's humor in the song "A Man's Job". Her new guy is never home, and she has to raise the baby on her own. That boy can't do a man's job, and Eddie was called for advice. He said what anybody else in his place would say: too bad. Your'e on your own.
Everybody always thinks they're something until they actually go out into the real world. The song "Free Ride in the Fast Lane" tells you that for every ounce of pleasure there's a pound of pain. One thing in life is true, your'e either dead or your'e hurting!
This record was an excellent choice. I thought it would be mostly calm tunes sense the last releases seemed to have that peaceful and soft new sound. It's good to know that the MG boys haven't changed that much. In fact, they dropped the "A" bomb three times in the record!
My kind of music December 22, 2007 I adore this CD. The song What DoYou Say AboutThat mirrors many of my own attitudes. There are a great many people today who think it is their business what their neighbors drive or what color their house is painted. It ain't none of their darn business. If people spent as much effort taking care of their own business and staying out of their neighbors business, it would be a much nicer world.
Lucky Man - Montgomery Gentry August 23, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The song "Lucky Man" speaks volumes for the sincerety of how one should feel and is of excellent quality as well.
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