Reviews

Ronnie Dunn: Ronnie Dunn

Ronnie Dunn
Ronnie Dunn
(Arista Nashville)
[Rating: 4 stars]

After ending his successful two decade run as part of country music duo Brooks & Dunn, Ronnie Dunn has released his eagerly awaited solo album, and the result was well worth the 20-year wait. Dunn has dug deeper into his formidable songwriting skills and created an album markedly different than anything found in previous Brooks & Dunn fare.

Helming production duties himself, Dunn also wrote or co-wrote nine of the highly anticipated albumโ€™s ten tracks with some of Nashvilleโ€™s heavyweight writers (Craig Wiseman, David Lee Murphy, and Terry McBride) and Dunn himself has called the album โ€œthe most important record of my life.โ€

Ronnie Dunn kicks off with the upbeat fist-pumper โ€œSinger In A Cowboy Band,โ€ and contains top 10 hit “Bleed Red,” as well as the just released follow-up โ€œCost of Livinโ€™.โ€ Although his recent contribution to the Country Strong soundtrack โ€œSheโ€™s Actinโ€™ Single (Iโ€™m Drinkinโ€™ Doubles)โ€ is unfortunately absent, the 12 tracks included are strong enough to make up for that omission. โ€œSang in every dive and joint in Oklahoma/Been in every hole-in-the-wall from Memphis to Maine/Mama donโ€™t get it, preacher donโ€™t understand/Why Iโ€™m a singer in a cowboy band,โ€ Dunn confesses in the albumโ€™s opener, which is followed by two superb heartbreak ballads โ€œI Donโ€™t Danceโ€ and โ€œYour Kind of Love.โ€

The fast-paced โ€œHow Far to Wacoโ€ is one of many standouts, and includes a dynamic dose of mariachi style horns featured throughout the track as Dunn sings about closing the distance between himself and his beloved. โ€œOnly thing on my mind is gettingโ€™ back to my baby again/Highway miles they go so slow/Sheโ€™s waitinโ€™ down the road from El Paso.โ€

The notable โ€œOnceโ€ is an upbeat track about finding that once in a lifetime kind of love, which is the type of song that Dunn does best, and seems destined to become one of the albumโ€™s future radio hits. The albumโ€™s only low point is the lackluster, run-of-the-mill sounding โ€œLet the Cowboy Rock,โ€ which ironically sounds like it was an outtake from the last Brooks & Dunn album.

Ronnie Dunn is an admirable solo effort and is as rock-solid as any Brooks & Dunn album, which should appease old and new fans alike. Longtime fans of Dunn will undoubtedly deem it worthwhile to seek out the two exclusive iTunes bonus tracks โ€œBoots & Diamondsโ€ and โ€œKing of All Things Lonesome.โ€