Album review: Toby Keith's 'Bullets in the Gun' - Los Angeles Times
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Album review: Toby Keith’s ‘Bullets in the Gun’

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Toby Keith has a genuine gift for writing blue-collar scenarios full of imagery that’s ready-made for music videos.

Case in point: The new album’s first single, “Trailerhood,†paints a scene of guys with beer guts and poker-playing old coots living in a mobile-home park. The title track —a variant on Marty Robbins’ tragic folk fable “El Paso†— is equally cinematic, as is “Kissin’ in the Rain.â€

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Generally, his songs about the world around him are more vividly distinctive than those dealing with what may be going on within. “Somewhere Else,†“Is That All You Got†and “In a Couple of Days†have a few nice writerly details in their romance-gone-bad setups, but they don’t offer much wisdom.

The album, however, concludes with the gloriously lunk-headed “Get Out of My Car.†Enlightened male-female relations it ain’t, but Keith does know how to set up a musical punch line. Besides, it’ll make a great music video.

A deluxe edition includes four bonus live tracks that show off his good taste in picking outside material by Roger Miller, Waylon Jennings, Gordon Lightfoot and Johnny Paycheck.

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—Randy Lewis

Toby Keith
“Bullets in the Gunâ€
(Show Dog/Universal)
Two and a half stars (Out of four)

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