Jason Aldean – They Don’t Know (2016) [FLAC 24 bit, 44,1 kHz]

Jason Aldean - They Don't Know (2016) [FLAC 24 bit, 44,1 kHz] Download

Artist: Jason Aldean
Album: They Don’t Know
Genre: Country Rock
Release Date: 2016
Audio Format:: FLAC (tracks) 24 bit, 44,1 kHz
Duration: 49:09
Total Tracks: 15
Total Size: 600 MB

Tracklist:

1. Jason Aldean – Lights Come On (03:14)
2. Jason Aldean – A Little More Summertime (03:39)
3. Jason Aldean – This Plane Don’t Go There (02:59)
4. Jason Aldean – Comin’ In Hot (02:59)
5. Jason Aldean – First Time Again (with Kelsea Ballerini) (03:24)
6. Jason Aldean – Bad (03:33)
7. Jason Aldean – They Don’t Know (03:15)
8. Jason Aldean – One We Won’t Forget (03:17)
9. Jason Aldean – Whiskey’d Up (03:11)
10. Jason Aldean – In Case You Don’t Remember (03:00)
11. Jason Aldean – All Out of Beer (03:18)
12. Jason Aldean – Any Ol’ Barstool (03:23)
13. Jason Aldean – The Way a Night Should Feel (03:04)
14. Jason Aldean – Reason to Love L.A. (03:22)
15. Jason Aldean – When the Lights Go Out (03:26)

Download:

Never the liveliest of country singers, Jason Aldean settles into his slow stride on 2016’s They Don’t Know, his seventh studio set. Facing the onset of his forties, Aldean chooses to pivot off of the smoldering moments of 2014’s Old Boots, New Dirt, a slow-churning intensity achieved partially through a sly adoption of electronic rhythms. On They Don’t Know, Aldean largely strips away such nods toward modernity, adding some loops to lead track (and lead single) “Lights Come On,” an ode toward hitting a big country concert at the end of a hard work week — a number designed as a rocker but proceeding at the same deliberate tempo as the power ballads that dominate the album, including “When the Lights Go Out,” which cleverly closes They Don’t Know. Often, the question of rocking hinges on a matter of volume: the party songs are slightly louder due to the preponderance of guitars, not due to quicker rhythms or any suggestion of chaos. By marching all 15 songs to the same deliberate beat, Aldean winds up creating the illusion that he’s running in place; each track bleeds into the next, distinguished perhaps by a few more or a few less acoustic guitars or, on “First Time Again,” the presence of Kelsea Ballerini as a duet partner, but usually seeming as if they’re cut from the same cloth. It’s comfortable ground for Aldean and, strikingly, he sounds comfortable too, never singing with an audible scowl. He seems settled in his skin, knowing he’s at his best in a maudlin minor key, and that shift is welcome even if it accidentally accentuates just how slowly They Don’t Know plods. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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