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Peso My Pocket
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Peso My Pocket
Current price: $9.79
Barnes and Noble
Peso My Pocket
Current price: $9.79
Loading Inventory...
Size: CD
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Toby Keith
never stopped working in the 2010s, but by the end of the decade, he seemed kind of adrift, lost in one too many songs about alcohol and taking a full six years to deliver a sequel to his 2015 album
35 MPH Town
. The time away evidently recharged the singer if
Peso in My Pocket
is any indication. Lively, funny, and brawny in a way he hasn't been since his hot streak in the 2000s,
is filled with songs so lean that it takes a moment to realize that
Keith
covers a lot of musical ground here. "Oklahoma Breakdown" opens the record with a bit of nostalgic swagger, providing a keynote for an album where he comes to terms with middle age but still plays with the vigor of a younger man. He spends much of the album looking back upon the "Days I Shoulda Died," concludes that "Growing Up Is a Bitch," and decides that he likes the "Old Me Better." Within those three songs,
plays a gussied-up cowboy ballad, dabbles with wanderlust in the vein of
Bruce Springsteen
, and swings through a jaunty blues, each different style sounding natural in his hands.
even tackles breezy, electronic-inflected pop on the breezy "Old School," a move that doesn't seem like pandering as its romanticization of the small town suits the album's nostalgia. If he pushes this backwards-looking button a bit too hard with the concluding "Happy Birthday America" -- an exercise in both-sides patriotism that lands with a thud -- such joyous moments as the two-stepping rocker "Thunderbird" make up for such missteps and help turn
into
's best record in years. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
never stopped working in the 2010s, but by the end of the decade, he seemed kind of adrift, lost in one too many songs about alcohol and taking a full six years to deliver a sequel to his 2015 album
35 MPH Town
. The time away evidently recharged the singer if
Peso in My Pocket
is any indication. Lively, funny, and brawny in a way he hasn't been since his hot streak in the 2000s,
is filled with songs so lean that it takes a moment to realize that
Keith
covers a lot of musical ground here. "Oklahoma Breakdown" opens the record with a bit of nostalgic swagger, providing a keynote for an album where he comes to terms with middle age but still plays with the vigor of a younger man. He spends much of the album looking back upon the "Days I Shoulda Died," concludes that "Growing Up Is a Bitch," and decides that he likes the "Old Me Better." Within those three songs,
plays a gussied-up cowboy ballad, dabbles with wanderlust in the vein of
Bruce Springsteen
, and swings through a jaunty blues, each different style sounding natural in his hands.
even tackles breezy, electronic-inflected pop on the breezy "Old School," a move that doesn't seem like pandering as its romanticization of the small town suits the album's nostalgia. If he pushes this backwards-looking button a bit too hard with the concluding "Happy Birthday America" -- an exercise in both-sides patriotism that lands with a thud -- such joyous moments as the two-stepping rocker "Thunderbird" make up for such missteps and help turn
into
's best record in years. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine