Some People Change
| Montgomery GentrySome People Change
Some People Change is the fifth studio album by the American country music duo Montgomery Gentry. It was released by Columbia Records Nashville on October 24, 2006. Certified gold in the United States, the album produced three singles on the Billboard Hot Country Songs charts: the title track (previously cut by Kenny Chesney on his 2004 album When the Sun Goes Down), "Lucky Man", and "What Do Ya Think About That". The title track was a number seven hit on the Hot Country Songs charts, while "Lucky Man" became the duo's third Number One hit, and "What Do Ya Think About That" reached number three.-Wikipedia
Critic Reviews
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AllMusic
While their albums translate to CMT and GAC -- and of course to the Billboard charts -- the duo has never been comfortable making one kind of recording. They dig deep with their producers . . . to find the best songs and let them rip. Guitars roar, wail, and whisper, and Montgomery Gentry's wonderfully contrasting voices and passionate, down-home delivery tie them to the great traditions of both rock and country.
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Country Standard Time
The resulting CD is solid, if not spectacular music. . . . This singing is expressive, and the playing is slick, but there is nothing here that will compel you to hit the replay button again and again.
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Napster
Montgomery Gentry dare to push country music past its limiting song-structured margins on Some People Change.
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Entertainment
There are nobler, less redneck-y moments, but by the time they get to ”What Do Ya Think About That,” a defense of the American right to piss off your neighbors, they’ve plum forgotten that whole ”change” deal.
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Apple Music
. . . Montgomery Gentry shine best when fusing a 1970s country rock base with modern production like on "Free Ride In The Fast Lane."
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Sounds-Of-South.DE
Maybe you can even call the album an upgrade to its predecessor! Be that as it may, those who liked their previous works will also be thrilled by “Some People Change”, if you haven't “tried them out” yet, it's finally time! Excellent performance from Montgomery Gentry!
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CBS News
But the most interesting aspect of their new album, "Some People Change," comes when they till new territory. . . . Southern life is changing, and country music is evolving along with it. Montgomery Gentry sound best when conceding that things do change, no matter how nostalgic they may be for the culture that gave them their values.
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