Reviews

Ricky Skaggs: Country Hits Bluegrass Style

Ricky Skaggs
Country Hits Bluegrass Style
Skaggs Family Records
[Rating: 3.5 stars]

Itโ€™s pretty much an accepted fact that Ricky Skaggs is one of the most naturally gifted musicians to ever perform in the country, bluegrass and Christian arenas. Before he decided to abandon Music Row and play more meaningful music โ€“ i.e., more bluegrass โ€“ he had a string of radio hits in the 1980s that were usually good songs by some really good writers. So on Country Hits Bluegrass Style, Skaggs revisits some of those hits, with assistance from his bluegrass band Kentucky Thunder, members of his wifeโ€™s famous Gospel family The Whites, and others.

Itโ€™s been so long since Skaggs was on the country charts that itโ€™s easy to forget how hot he was for a while. New versions of Guy Clarkโ€™s โ€œHeartbroke,โ€ Shake Russellโ€™s โ€œYouโ€™ve Got a Lover,โ€ Mel Tillisโ€™ โ€œHoneyโ€ and Cindy Walker and Webb Pierceโ€™s โ€œI Donโ€™t Careโ€ are on this album, as are new recordings of Tony Colton and Albert Leeโ€™s โ€œCountry Boy,โ€ Bill Monroeโ€™s โ€œUncle Pen,โ€ Flatt and Scruggsโ€™ โ€œDonโ€™t Get Above Your Raisingโ€ and Larry Cordleโ€™s timeless classic, โ€œHighway 40 Blues.โ€ Skaggs did some great stuff in his radio days to be sure, and he still does. But the new down-homey versions of these songs on Country Hits Bluegrass Style donโ€™t really have the energy and pizzazz that one might have hoped for. Perhaps itโ€™s because heโ€™s so consistently good that the bar is already set too high for Skaggs to really knock us out (although he did just that on last yearโ€™s Mosaic album, with Gordon Kennedyโ€™s help). But these new versions sound like they were almost an afterthought, like the artist himself wasnโ€™t getting the same excitement from these songs that he did in his earlier days.

As an album for those who have followed Skaggs through the years and think he can do no wrong, Country Hits Bluegrass Style definitely hits the mark. This is a recording that makes sense at this stage of Skaggsโ€™ career, and certainly one thatโ€™s worth having for his fans. Itโ€™s not a bad album; nothing Skaggs does is ever less than good, as is the case with everything on his label. With this CD, thoughโ€ฆwell, once youโ€™ve heard it, youโ€™ve heard it, and it may actually cause a longing for the original versions of these songs.