logo
Music Review: Blake Shelton returns to his roots with ‘For Recreational Use Only'

Music Review: Blake Shelton returns to his roots with ‘For Recreational Use Only'

Blake Shelton's 13th studio album opens with a fitting declaration for both his latest project and the current state of his career: 'Stay Country or Die Tryin'.'
It would be more accurately phrased like a question.
At this stage, Shelton is a longtime veteran of Hollywood on 'The Voice' stage with a pop superstar wife in Gwen Stefani, far removed from his Nashville roots, all while maintaining the position of one of the most high-profile country stars of the current moment. But if country is a lifestyle and an image beyond its musical forms — saying nothing of the opening track's arena-sized rock elements — is he staying true to some ethos? Is Shelton speaking diaristically when he sings 'Boots ain't never seen easy street' in the album's opening verse?
Perhaps not. In 2025, he performs between worlds, but no matter. He's long dedicated himself to big country radio hits and returns to those roots across 'For Recreational Use Only.' The songs here concern themselves with lived-in bars ('Cold Can') and backroad acuity ('Some things we all gotta get through/'Til it's goin', goin', gone in the big rear view,' Shelton sings on 'Life's Been Comin' Too Fast.')
'The Keys' is haunted by past lives, or at least, achingly sentimental in his jukebox country style; 'Don't Mississippi' offers whiskey wisdom: 'You might die from a broken heart,' he sings. 'But you ain't gonna die of thirst.'
Charms are found across the release, like in the honky-tonk happy 'Texas,' and its cheerful reference to George Strait's classic 'All My Ex's Live In Texas,' or the big-hearted and big-voiced ballad on God and grief, 'Let Him In Anyway.'
Collaborations are few and pointed. Shelton and Stefani harmonize beautifully on 'Hanging On''; he does the same with Craig Morgan on 'Heaven Sweet Home,' an affecting meditation of mortality. He taps Josh Anderson for the slow-burn closer 'Years.'
Shelton might live a very different life than the characters found in his songs, as is often true of any larger-than-life celebrity performer. But make no mistake, this is a giant pop country record, with limitless potential for radio ubiquity.
Winnipeg Jets Game Days
On Winnipeg Jets game days, hockey writers Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe send news, notes and quotes from the morning skate, as well as injury updates and lineup decisions. Arrives a few hours prior to puck drop.
___
For more AP reviews of recent music releases, visit: https://apnews.com/hub/music-reviews
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Greg Iles, Mississippi author of ‘Natchez Burning' trilogy, dies of cancer at 65
Greg Iles, Mississippi author of ‘Natchez Burning' trilogy, dies of cancer at 65

Winnipeg Free Press

time5 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Greg Iles, Mississippi author of ‘Natchez Burning' trilogy, dies of cancer at 65

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Greg Iles, the Mississippi author of the 'Natchez Burning' trilogy and other works, has died. He was 65. Iles died Friday after a decades-long battle with the blood cancer multiple myeloma, his literary agent Dan Conaway posted Saturday on Facebook. Initially diagnosed with the incurable condition in 1996, he kept his illness private until completing his final novel, 'Southern Man,' which was published in 2024. Iles was born in Germany but moved to Natchez, Mississippi, with his family when he was just three years old and developed a deep connection with the region. Many of his stories are set in Mississippi, including the 'Natchez Burning' trilogy, historical fiction suspense novels exploring race and class in the 1960s Jim Crow South. Conaway described Iles as 'warm, funny, fearless, and completely sui generis.' 'To be on the other end of the phone as he talked through character and plot, problem-solving on the fly, was to be witness to genius at work, plain and simple,' he wrote on Saturday. 'As a writer he fused story-craft, bone-deep humanity, and a growing sense of moral and political responsibility with the ferocious precisions of a whirling dervish or a master watchmaker.' Weekly A weekly look at what's happening in Winnipeg's arts and entertainment scene. In March 2011, Iles suffered a ruptured aorta and a partial leg amputation and spent eight days in a medically induced coma after another driver struck his car on Highway 61 near Natchez. He eventually recovered. Iles performed with the musical group The Rock Bottom Remainders along with popular authors Stephen King, Amy Tan and others.

RushTok backlash: Why sororities aren't letting prospects post
RushTok backlash: Why sororities aren't letting prospects post

Toronto Star

time15 hours ago

  • Toronto Star

RushTok backlash: Why sororities aren't letting prospects post

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) — Kylan Darnell became an overnight celebrity in the TikTok niche that documents the glitzy, ritualistic recruitment process for sororities. As a 21-year-old rising senior four years later, she's taking more of her sorority life offline. Darnell has until now been the embodiment of RushTok, a week-long marathon that has teens at schools around the country meticulously documenting their efforts to land a cherished spot in a sorority during the colorful, girly and enigmatic recruitment process known as rush week.

100 days of Pope Leo XIV: a calm papacy that avoids polemics is coming into focus
100 days of Pope Leo XIV: a calm papacy that avoids polemics is coming into focus

Toronto Star

time15 hours ago

  • Toronto Star

100 days of Pope Leo XIV: a calm papacy that avoids polemics is coming into focus

VATICAN CITY (AP) — When Pope Leo XIV surprised tens of thousands of young people at a recent Holy Year celebration with an impromptu popemobile romp around St. Peter's Square, it almost seemed as if some of the informal spontaneity that characterized Pope Francis' 12-year papacy had returned to the Vatican. But the message Leo delivered that night was all his own: In seamless English, Spanish and Italian, Leo told the young people that they were the 'salt of the Earth, the light of the world.' He urged them to spread their hope, faith in Christ and their cries of peace wherever they go.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store