Try Again

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Try Again album cover
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Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 45:31

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Kurt Wolff

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Mike Ireland And Holler, Try Again
2002 | Label: Ashmont Records / Redeye

Formerly a member of the Starkweathers before setting out solo (and getting signed to Sub Pop), Ireland did not grown up loving country — he came to love it only as an adult. His affection, though, is clear, both for Haggard-esque honky tonk but also smooth, laid-back '60s- and '70s-era countrypolitan, which his gentle, warm voice fits beautifully. His songwriting is stellar, the subject matter both down ("Right Back Where I Started") and upbeat ("Sweet Sweetheart"). Not very well known outside indie-rock and alt-country circles, Try Again is a genuine hidden gem.

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Good Straight Country

EMUSIC-0038B451

Nothing super fancy...just good, solid songwriting and good solid music. Mike Ireland has a unique voice, and the music suits it. Definitely worth the download.

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Give it a try

cutinhas

I haven't downloaded this one because I already own the CD, and it's a good one. It's certainly accessible to non-country fans. Good melodies, enough kick, and nice orchestration.

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They Say All Music Guide

In 1996, Mike Ireland’s life turned into something out of a country weeper when his wife and the guitar player from his band ran off together, leaving Ireland without a band, a marriage, or a home. In 1998, Ireland and his new group, Holler, turned two years of heartache into one of the finest (and certainly most underappreciated) country albums of the decade, Learning How to Live. If Learning How to Live was a song cycle about the struggle to survive a broken heart, Ireland’s second album, 2002′s Try Again, brings together a dozen songs about the nuts and bolts of starting your life over again. The album’s opening cut, “Welcome Back,” follows a man who returns to his old hometown to find it only a shadow of its former glory, and it sets the stage well; breaking free from a painful past to venture into an uncertain future is the recurring theme here, and the title “Love’s the Hardest Thing You’ll Ever Do” sums things up quite well. But despite the recurring bouts of loneliness that mark these songs, there are also moments of hope and even joy — “Sweet Sweetheart” is a positively jaunty love song, while “I’d Like To” could become a standard first dance at second weddings. Whether happy, mournful, or reflective, Ireland’s songs hit their emotional marks with honesty and subtle grace, and his clear, Missouri-accented tenor is the ideal match for his lyrics. Mike Ireland & Holler’s blend of honky tonk concision and countrypolitan melodic styling speaks with clarity and heartfelt humanity on Try Again, and if Ireland doesn’t have the sales figures of a major artist, listening to this album should convince anyone he has the talent. – Mark Deming

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