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Review: Garth Brooks Double Live

Okay, I'll admit it. I'm not the hippest guy on the Internet. I don't have any pierced body parts, I don't spend all night staring at porno, I actually find myself often with absolutely no motivation to turn on my computer. So I suppose that it's no suprise that I'm a bit of a closet country fan.

And like a lot of people, I became a country fan just about the time that Garth Brooks released his first album. While I was forced to listen to country music as a child, the twangy sounds of artists like Bobby Bare, Jerry Reed and Tammy Wynette left me clutching my head in agony. But Garth grew up on the same music that I did, and so we ended up enjoying the same taste in country music.

I became a fan of his early on when I caught him at a show in Missouri when he was the opening act for Holly Dunn. And over the years I've found his albums and live performances to be honestly enjoyable and very pop-like in its charm.

And more so than any other country artist, Garth Brooks has managed to transfer his charms to television. Besides his frequent appearances on The Tonight Show, he's done a string of NBC specials, and they've all done well in the ratings. But even more importantly, they were all darn entertaining.

That's why I find this latest special so disconcerting. It's not only not much of a concert--it's not all that great of television.

If you've been following the relentless NBC promo campaign, you might be under the mistaken impression that the Garth dude was prepared to perform live. Especially since the network promises the one-hour program will be performed three times back-to-back, so it will air live in all three time zones.

As it turns out, that only means you'll be able to watch this informercial live, which you'd be able to do if he were only appearing on the Home Shopping Network.

The special manages to turn Garth into little more than a Vee-Jay. He sits with his guitar and introduces previously filmed clips from his concerts. He answers a few questions from the audience, and plays a few brief snippets on his guitar.

Now I don't mind watching excerpts from his concert tour, but these are the same clips that aired previously on the network during his earlier specials. And even worse, Garth doesn't exactly light up the stage with his sparkling banter and introductions. "Yeah, this is one of our favorites....we've always enjoyed it. " Um...thanks, Garth. Let me write that one down.

But I suppose I shouldn't be surprised by this play it safe approach. Garth has increasingly become more obsessed with marketing than with entertainment value. The double live CD the special is promoting may be priced to move, but it doesn't include much a fan isn't familiar with already. All of the tracks are recent, the arrangments aren't substantially different than the radio versions, and he isn't even adding any of the cover versions he frequently adds to his concert mix. Those, he admits, he's saving for an upcoming CD of all cover versions.

So in the end, we're left with a live special with little live music, and a double live CD that might as well be a studio greatest hits package. And it's a shame, because Garth Brooks is a strong country artist and an often captivating performer. It just goes to show that even a marketing major can misread his audience.

 


 

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