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# Disc length: 2426 seconds
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# Processed by: cddbd v1.5.2PL0 Copyright (c) Steve Scherf et al.
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DISCID=8909780a
DTITLE=Alabama / 40 Hour Week (Japanese Pressing)
DYEAR=1985
DGENRE=Country
TTITLE0=Forty Hour Week (For A Livin')
TTITLE1=Can't Keep A Good Man Down
TTITLE2=There's No Way
TTITLE3=Down On Longboat Key
TTITLE4=Louisiana Moon
TTITLE5=I Want To Know You Before We Make Love
TTITLE6=Fireworks
TTITLE7=(She Won't Have A Thing To Do With) Nobody But Me
TTITLE8=As Right Now
TTITLE9=If It Ain't Dixie (It Won't Do)
EXTD=Originally Released 1985\nCD Edition Released 1987 ??\n\nAMG EXPE
EXTD=RT REVIEW: Opening with the driving title track, 40 Hour Week enc
EXTD=apsulates why Alabama was the top country group of the '80s. Alte
EXTD=rnating between restrained rockers and well-crafted ballads, it c
EXTD=aptures the band at its peak. Nevertheless, it isn't quite as str
EXTD=ong as their first albums -- the performances and production are 
EXTD=a bit too mannered -- but its professionalism is appealing. And t
EXTD=hat professionalism made 40 Hour Week the group's most popular al
EXTD=bum, as it crossed over into the pop Top Ten.  -- Stephen Thomas 
EXTD=Erlewine\n\nAmazon.com Editorial Review\nFive years and seven alb
EXTD=ums after signing with RCA Records, Alabama took a creative turn 
EXTD=with 40 Hour Week. The title song best represented the change. Th
EXTD=e music contained a tougher, more driving edge, while the lyrics 
EXTD=celebrated American workers rather than love or the rural South. 
EXTD=For the most part, the stylistic shift was slight. The first mill
EXTD=ion-selling group in country music remained breezily energetic an
EXTD=d acutely polished. But the slightly more aggressive sound made t
EXTD=his the quartet's most successful crossover album, as it entered 
EXTD=the pop Top 10 in 1985. It's also the album most likely to appeal
EXTD= to those who think the band's early '80s work is too soft and co
EXTD=ntrived. --Michael McCall \n\n\nAMAZON.COM CUSTOMER REVIEW\nMore 
EXTD=of the same, August 9, 2006\nReviewer: T. Simning\nThis album con
EXTD=tinues the signatures of the band's 80's output: A mix of band-pe
EXTD=nned and outside songs, along with the typical song or two fronte
EXTD=d by bassist Teddy Gentry or guitarist Jeff Cook instead of main 
EXTD=vocalist Randy Owen. And as usual, these forays are hit and miss.
EXTD= Typically, if you like a particular album from the first six ("M
EXTD=y Home's In Alabama" through this one), you will like them all. G
EXTD=et this one before it goes the way of Ronnie Milsap's albums from
EXTD= the same era, and is unobtainable for less than $40.\n\n\nHalf.c
EXTD=om N/A
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