Alan Jackson Music:

16 Biggest Hits



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Alan Jackson Music:
16 Biggest Hits



Music
16 Biggest Hits
by Alan Jackson

16 Biggest Hits
List Price: $11.98Label: Arista

Salesrank: 120590

Released: August 7, 2007
Our Price: $7.30
Used Price: $2.28
Media: Audio CD

16 Biggest Hits Track Listing:
1. Chattahoochee
2. Gone Country
3. It Must Be Love
4. Midnight in Montgomery
5. Chasin' That Neon Rainbow
6. Don't Rock the Jukebox
7. Mercury Blues
8. Here in the Real World
9. Pop a Top
10. That'd Be Alright
11. I Don't Even Know Your Name
12. Gone Crazy
13. I'll Go on Loving You
14. Little Man
15. Who's Cheatin' Who
16. Summertime Blues

16 Biggest Hits Reviews:
Alan JAckson 5 Star Review
2008-10-03 - You just can't go wrong with an Alan Jackson CD. I buy all his recordings.

16 biggest 3 Star Review
2008-08-29 - Ok if you like Alan Jackson then you might not need to get just the hits. But it is a great listen it has all his hits. What do you say about a Hits album, I mean it is HITS, not like its a B-sides or lost recordings. HITS are what people know and are familar with.

Great AJ cd!!! 5 Star Review
2008-02-11 - A must for every Alan Jackson fan. Get one for all your friends too!!!

Help me somebody!!! 5 Star Review
2007-09-02 - Can someone tell me the title and artist of the song that went "George Jones, Jack Daniels and me".

Last of the Honky Tonk Heroes 4 Star Review
2007-08-26 - In the 1990s, Alan Jackson was second only to Garth Brooks in country music popularity. Unlike Garth, he has continued to make best selling albums and Top 10 charting singles right up to now. Legacy's latest entry in its 16 Biggest series includes many of Jackson's best known songs, some of which are recognized beyond the confines of country: "Don't Rock the Jukebox," "Chattahoochee," "Gone Crazy," "Midnight in Montgomery." His first hit, "Here in the Real World," is included, as are his superb covers of Eddie Cochran's "Summertime Blues" and Jim Ed Brown's "Pop a Top." And let us not forget the timely satire of "Gone Country" and the populist sentiment of "Little Man." Jackson arrived on the scene in time for the "new traditionalist" movement and quickly staked his claim as the real thing, a worthy heir to the legacies left by Hank, Buck, Merle and George. The musical evidence to support his claim is plentiful on this CD.

copyright © 2007 Port Folio Weekly. All Rights Reserved. Used by Permission.

Originally published in Port Folio Weekly - August 21, 2007










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