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No Rules

No Rules

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Artist: Rebecca Lynn Howard
Label: Time Life Entertainment
Category: Music

Buy New: $13.98



New (47) Used (15) from $5.23

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 38042

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 80002
UPC: 610583233124
EAN: 0610583233124
ASIN: B0017LEFW0

Release Date: June 17, 2008
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Tracks:

  • Shakey Ground
  • New Twist on an Old Groove
  • Do Right Woman Do Right Man
  • Soul Sisters
  • What Dying Feels Like
  • Better Someday
  • Just Let It Burn
  • As One as Two Can Be
  • Sing Cause I Love To
  • Real Love
  • I m Over You
  • The Life of a Dollar
  • We re in This Love Together
  • Throw It Down

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Acclaimed singer/songwriter Rebecca Lynn Howard's new studio album No Rules is the inaugural release for Saguaro Road Records. Howard's compositions are marked by timeless lyrical themes layered with important social statements. Her songwriting makes the perfect partner to her impassioned vocals, which found new depth and range on No Rules, a seamless combination of country, rhythm and blues, rock and Americana.

Album Description
Country singer-songwriter Howard has always been musical, singing since she was a toddler and teaching herself the piano. She sang in school and church, and toured with the Kentucky Opry Variety Show. She begged her mother to take her to the mecca for country singers, Nashville, a trip which she later recounted in a track on her 2000 debut album, "Tennessee In My Windshield". As a solo artist she opened for country stars such as Ricky Van Shelton and Sammy Kershaw. Her break came when she recorded "Softly & Tenderly" for the soundtrack of the acclaimed Robert Duvall movie, The Apostle, in 1997. This album embraced the idea of letting the music set its own direction, without category or preconception - with no rules.


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars It is just not what I would call Country. I loved it anyways. :)   July 3, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

It is just not what I would call Country. I loved it anyways. :)

It is jazz.

I thought she sounded a little like Tina Turner in some of the songs.

I have seen her at the Grand Ole Opry a few times and I live here in Nashville, Tennessee.




5 out of 5 stars Do You Like It Loud?   July 3, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

To be honest, I had no preconceived ideas of this artist's work. In fact I had never heard her sing before. But this woman's voice is an amazing instrument soaring over 3 octaves managing rocking blues, ballads, and barroom boogie. I'm not sure what came before, but I suspect she was overly produced in a mainstream country fashion. I'll have to check it out. Now she's seemingly come into her own as an independent artist, and she positively shines on this recording. She owns "Do Right Woman - Do Right Man" and I think even Aretha would give her props. No easy task. This is worth a listen. I'd buy a ticket to see her live in an instant.


1 out of 5 stars Very disappointing... What were they thinking?   July 2, 2008
 1 out of 4 found this review helpful

I don't know why Rebecca Lynn Howard doesn't make an album that showcases her beautiful voice. It was torture to listen to this CD. I was so looking forward to new product from her. She sounds shrill and screechy with wild music. She should listen to her song "Forgive" or her duet with Ronnie Dunn on the Livin' Loving and Losing CD to see what people want to hear from her.


2 out of 5 stars A long wait for emptiness......   June 23, 2008
 1 out of 5 found this review helpful

I'm sorry....I expected something so much better from someone who has such amazing talent! This girl has proven she can sing but the songs she chose for this album are horrific and do nothing for her voice! I'm sticking Forgive back in the cd player!


4 out of 5 stars "No Rules" Liberates Howard to Be Herself   June 18, 2008
 11 out of 13 found this review helpful

Prime Cuts: The Life of the Dollar, What Dying Feels Like, As One as Two Can Be

Without the rules often imposed by major recording companies on their artists, Rebecca Lynn Howard on her new independently released CD lets her hair down and ushers her most honest effort to date. Previously when this singer-songwriter was under the auspices of MCA Records, her two major outing were cookie-cutter Nashville pop-country excursions leaving something more to be desired. Six years later, teaming up Michael Curtis, to release a CD that Nashville would not release. For starters, these 14 songs were recorded in Muscle Shores Alabama, which should is a dead giveaway to the direction of this disc. Hardcore funk and swamp blues with some sensibilities to country earmarked this release: evidence most prominently by its 4 covers which include songs garnered from the repertoire of Al Jarreau, the Temptations and Aretha Franklin. Nevertheless, the cynosure is Howard's vocals--she has never sounded more confident often allowing herself to give in to the soulful tenor of the songs with a refreshingly spiritual abandonment.

The highlights are aplenty, most affecting being the single "What Dying Feels Like." A gorgeous piano-led ballad with some echoes of Bonnie Riatt's "I Can't Make You Love Me," Howard subtlety understated delivery shows her mastery over this musical piece of heartbreak wringing out every ounce of emotion. When love turns out right on the gospel-pop ballad "As One as Two Can Be," Howard's delivery is transcendently divine. She ups the ante in the creativity department with the engaging story song "The Life of the Dollar." With flurries of some delightful fiddling, Howard acts as our tour guide chronicling the odyssey of the dollar note from the pockets of a preacher to the banker to a bum on the street told with Kodak-like perspicuity. Similar picturesque is one of the album's most rustic moments "I'm Over You," a track that begs for a great video and perhaps an offering country radio would embrace.

Howard does step out of her country box into some swaggering blues with her self-composed "New Twist on an Old Groove." Propelled by a funky upright bass line and some smoky horns in the backdrop, Howard spits and struts with brazen sensual appeal on this song that calls for fresh moves to a moldy relationship. She takes on the Temptations' "Shakey Ground" head-on with some Motown funk without giving in to carbon copying the original when Howard adds her own southern charm to the mix. Less convincing is her take on Aretha Franklin's "Do Right Woman, Do Right Man." Vocally Howard does not have the grit and shaft of insights as the Queen of Soul. Quite pointless though is the self-professing "Sisters of Soul."

"No Rules" breaks all the hedges placed around all Nashville CDs. Howard risk-taking creativity adds flavor, texture and color to this entire effort. This CD is a reason to avoid imposing a moratorium on the very tired country genre. Though "No Rules" may not make Howard a country radio darling, but it's a career record that she ought to be proud of in years to come.


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