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Get Off on the Pain

Mca Nashville Product Details - Ratings and reviews for get off on the pain.
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Sales Rank: 36
Mca Nashville
Released: 2010-03-09

Avg. Customer Review: 5 Star
Media: Audio CD
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Title Tracks for Get Off on the Pain
  • 1. Get Off On The Pain
  • 2. I Think I've Had Enough
  • 3. Today
  • 4. That Ain't Gonna Fly
  • 5. Kiss Me When I'm Down
  • 6. We Fly By Night
  • 7. When You Give Yourself Away
  • 8. Along The Way
  • 9. She Gets Me
  • 10. No Regrets

Product Review
Album Description
Allan has recently finished recording his new album GET OFF ON THE PAIN with long-time producer Mark Wright. The first single, "Today," is currently climbing the charts and is spinning on stations across the country now.

The album is being released as a regular 10-song version as well as in a deluxe edition that includes 4 bonus songs and access to exclusive video downloads.

Album Description
Long awaited 2010 album from the Country great, his first in three years. Gary Allan was offered his first recording contract aged 15 in 1982, but his father made him turn it down so that he could concentrate on his schooling. Much later, having left school, he left a demo tape in the car of a couple to whom he had sold a car. They were so impressed that they gave him money to chase his dream. With it, he moved to the Country Music capital Nashville, signed a record deal - and paid them back!

Product Details
Get Off on the Pain
  • Audio CD: 0 pages (2010-03-09)
  • Publisher: Mca Nashville
  • Label: Mca Nashville
  • Studio: Mca Nashville
  • Average Customer Review: 5 Star based on 3 reviews
  • Sales Rank in Music: #36

Customer Reviews
Avg. Customer Review: 5 Star

Customer Rating: 5 Star
Summary: GET THIS "TODAY" 2010-03-09
Comment: Amazing album from country music's most under appreciated artist.
Great album filled with songs of regret, reflection, and moving on.
The album to beat in 2010!
Customer Rating: 5 Star
Summary: What can I say? 2010-03-09
Comment: It's Gary Allan! He's the most amazing UNDERRATED star...oops..COUNTRY star there is!

Yep I said it....he's COUNTRY! Not Taylor swift bubblegum crap that they call "country".

This album (like all his others) are a masterpiece of country art.

If you are into real country then Gary Allan is right up your alley. If it weren't for George Strait,Gary Allan, Jamey Johnson,and Easton Corbin....I might give up on my favorite kind of music!

MUST BUY!!!!
Customer Rating: 5 Star
Summary: Allan's "Pain" Has Never Been Better 2010-03-09
Comment: Prime Cuts: Today, When You Give Yourself Away, We Fly By Night

When Allan sings, "I'm not an easy man to understand," he's telling the truth. Allan is a curly character: beneath his aloof Californian surfer veneer is a vulnerable heart that pulsates with sensitivity. And just like all his albums, Allan vacillates between these two character traits throughout these songs here again. On some of the tracks he puts his foot to the pedal rocking like these is no tomorrow. Yet, on the quieter moments he casts aside his machismo for some heart -to-heart confabulations. Such an approach has continued to garner respect from Allan's male fans while adding much to flourish the romantic fantasy of his female aficionados. As with his other records, Mark Wright is again at the knobs and he's to be thanked for such a quality record without an ounce of filler at all. As far as the backings are concerned, this is your typical contemporary country record--slick and polished augmented by some occasional fiddling and steel guitar riffs.

Allan seems to be at his best when he delves into his soul-searching moment. Lead single "Today" sits comfortably with Gary-Allan's classics such as "Watching Airplanes" and "Tough Little Boys." Performed with shovels of emotions, Allan sings of a man not giving up on his girl until the day of her wedding. Except that she's marrying another man. Prepare a box of Kleenex when Allan sings: "Today is the happiest day of her life/I should be happy for her/So tell me, why are these tears in my eyes?" Though nothing quite comes close to this Titanic of a ballad, "When You Give Yourself Away" comes close. Few men are willing to admit the vulnerability of committing to a relationship, Allan tells it in such a moving way without sounding whimsical. A soothing Keith Urban-like ballad with deft shades of 60s pop, "We Fly By Night" is a homily about not allowing the busy activities of life to rob the joys of our relationships. "She Gets Me," harkens back to country music way back in the 90s, where sensitive love ballads over a gorgeous melodies abound.

Allan does let his swaggering side emerge with the album's title cut "Get Off on the Pain." It's a forgettable busy barnburner with screeching guitars turned up to the max. Thank God producer Mark Wright had the sense to turn down the mix on the bluesy "I Think I've Had Enough" - a coming-of-age confession of a man seeing the futility of a rambling lifestyle. Allan is one who doesn't just sing about songs plastered with rosy glee, "Kiss Me When I'm Down" is a realistic portrayal of a dysfunctional relationship. A mid-tempo narrative "Kiss Me When I'm Down" that tells of the protagonist's obsession with his girl that he's even willing to be abused by her in order to keep her. It's a realistic slice of life that makes the song so intriguing.

As it's the current trend now with most country records, it's often tail end with an inspirational tune. At times such songs can be pretty obligatory but not with Allan. The opening line of "No Regrets" is arresting enough for mandatory listening: "Scarecrows and devils are the only things out this late." "No Regrets" is tell-it-all confession of a life well-spent despite its detours that is so perfect for Allan's rugged delivery. In short, "Get Off on the Pain" scores again with spades of heart tugging moments, honest confessions, and some rowdy party kickers too.
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Get Off on the Pain