A Lot About Livin' (And a Little 'bout Love)

| Alan Jackson

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A Lot About Livin' (And a Little 'bout Love)

A Lot About Livin’ (And a Little ’bout Love) is the third studio album by American country music artist Alan Jackson. It was released on October 6, 1992, and produced the singles, “Chattahoochee”, “She’s Got the Rhythm (And I Got the Blues)”, “Tonight I Climbed the Wall”, “(Who Says) You Can’t Have It All”, and “Mercury Blues”. “Chattahoochee”, and “She’s Got the Rhythm (And I Got the Blues)” were both #1 hits on the Hot Country Songs charts, while the other three songs all reached Top 5.-Wikipedia

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  • My Kind of Country

    Overall, I don’t like this album quite as much as Don’t Rock The Jukebox, but it’s a much stronger collection than some of Jackson’s more recent work. It peaked at #1 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart and was certified six-times platinum, making it Jackson’s best-selling studio album.  

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  • AllMusic

    Three years after his first number one single, Alan Jackson took his brand of new honky tonk country and pushed it all the way into the mainstream, making it possible for another batch of acts to follow him. . . . . The uptempo numbers with the jukebox kick are what works best with Jackson's restless country-soul voice . . . . 

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  • Escapist Magazine

    All in all, this is the most impressive and remarkable album I have ever had the luck to listen to in my entire life. 

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  • Escapist Magazine

    The album is relatively short, at a length of around 30 minutes, but there is also no filler songs which makes it a very good album to listen to repeatedly. It doesnt get boring. 

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  • The Boot

    A Lot About Livin' (and a Little 'Bout Love), which was Jackson's first No. 1 album, also peaked at No. 13 on the all-genre Billboard 200 chart.  

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  • Entertainment

    More than merely hook-filled and tuneful, Jackson’s songs crackle with succinct character sketches and vibrant language, whether capturing the insouciance of a lad who settles for ”a burger and a grape sno-cone” instead of sex in the Chevy, or the despair of the romantic loser who’s ”Lord and Master/of a fool’s Taj Mahal.”  

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