Tammy Wynette – The Ways To Love A Man (1970/2013) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Tammy Wynette - The Ways To Love A Man (1970/2013) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz] Download

Artist: Tammy Wynette
Album: The Ways To Love A Man
Genre: Country
Release Date: 1970/2013
Audio Format:: FLAC (tracks) 24 bit, 96 kHz
Duration: 28:14
Total Tracks: 11
Total Size: 567 MB

Tracklist:

1. Tammy Wynette – The Ways To Love A Man (02:30)
2. Tammy Wynette – The Twelfth Of Never (02:28)
3. Tammy Wynette – I’ll Share My World With You (02:43)
4. Tammy Wynette – Enough Of A Woman (02:06)
5. Tammy Wynette – Singing My Song (02:24)
6. Tammy Wynette – He’ll Never Take The Place Of You (02:52)
7. Tammy Wynette – I Know (02:31)
8. Tammy Wynette – Yearning (To Kiss You) (02:21)
9. Tammy Wynette – These Two (02:24)
10. Tammy Wynette – Where Could You Go (But To Her) (03:03)
11. Tammy Wynette – Still Around (02:46)

Download:

Released after a series of star-making, genre-defining records — and her first new collection of songs since her 1969 Greatest Hits — Tammy Wynette’s 1969 album The Ways to Love a Man found her and producer Billy Sherrill at cruising altitude, delivering an album that easily replicated the sound and feel of Stand by Your Man. If anything, the album felt a bit too easy, as Sherrill began making his productions smoother and silkier, sanding away any of the lingering rough country edges that were on Stand by Your Man, giving Tammy’s impeccably luxurious surroundings. It’s an appropriate setting for the First Lady of Country Music even if it ironically feels a bit more pop than country, but the key to Sherrill’s productions was how he made them grand and then singers like Tammy or her husband George Jones grounded them. More than any of Sherrill’s other vocalists, Tammy seemed to slide into the soft textures of his productions, and nowhere was that sound softer than it was on The Ways to Love a Man, where Tammy comfortably covered Johnny Mathis’ “The Twelfth of Never.” This may have been the only time on the record that she sang an old-fashioned crooner, yet the album retains a romantic mood, verging on being a countrypolitan make-out record (which is quite befitting for an LP called The Ways to Love a Man and whose biggest hit was the title track). This sustained mood is appealing, even seductive, but the album is just a shade less compelling overall than its immediate predecessor…but that is a pretty tough yardstick to judge any country album, really. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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