 See Larger Image | Unleashed List Price : $13.98 USD Your Price : $9.97 USD ProductGroup: Music Release Date : 2002-07-23 Studio : Dreamworks Nashville Label : Dreamworks Nashville Avg. Customer Rating : (143 reviews)
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Reviews Customer Reviews for Unleashed Toby having fun Rating: THe is a good fun album. Something you can really sing along with. If you enjoy any of Toby's music you will like this album. He is a pretty decent song writer.
Customer Reviews for Unleashed Cd It's not all about politics! Great CD! Rating: I just had to write a review because some of these over people are getting their panties in a twist over nothing. I own this album, and it's certainly has its fair-share of play time in my CD player.
Anyway, the first 5 songs are the main ones I listen to, and Beer For My Horses and Courtesy Of The Red, White, And Blue are my favorites.
I'm not quite the generalized Toby Keith audience (liberal, college student and a Dixie Chicks fan), and The Angry American is one of my all-time favorite songs. If people are too glim to understand that it has everything to do with Osama, and nothing to do with Iraq then too bad for them.
Of course I don't agree with Toby in some areas, but he's actually a DEMOCRAT people.
But it shouldn't even matter. This a great CD with some really good songs.
Editorial Reviews for Unleashed Audio Cd Amazon.com Toby Keith has never been shy, but on Unleashed the Oklahoman proves he has more in common with Charlie Daniels and Hank Williams Jr. than you might have thought. The headline-making hit single "Courtesy of the Red, White, and Blue (The Angry American)" will either impress you as a piece of jingoistic hooey or rally your fighting blood with its images ("the Statue of Liberty started shaking her fist") of patriotic retaliation. The "eye for an eye" mood continues on "Beer for My Horses," a frontier-justice saga on which Willie Nelson duets. But after that, things start falling into the usual formula: a killer pop ballad ("Rock You Baby"), some smart-ass sexual grandstanding ("Who's Your Daddy"), and a few midtempo ruminations on life and love that catch the ear but ultimately prove forgettable. By the time he gets to "It Works for Me," in which Keith celebrates the virtues of country living ("If it's so good in the city / Why don't anybody smile?"), you'll swear it's a Bocephus CD in your player. Oh, you rowdy boys! --Alanna Nash
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