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Friday, January 31, 2014

Rascal Flatts Captures Choice Romantic Moments For "Rewind"

There's something undeniably gorgeous about "Rewind", the latest cut from country hitmakers Rascal Flatts. They're articulating a desire I'm pretty sure we've all had at one time or another...the wish to go back in time and relive one of those too good to be true life moments. Picture if you will a sensational moonlit night, the breeze caressing you and your sweetie with due softness. Everything about the sturm und drang world you live in has melted away. You and your beloved are the only important things going on right now. Sincerity thy name is Gary...LeVox that is. His voice is completely captivating. If he could, he'd construct the time machine necessary to relive what's been an ideal evening. This is one memory worthy of holding on to for dear life. Jay DeMarcus tosses in some appealing body. He makes what is already an inviting whirpool bath of a 3 minutes and change single into an intoxicating couple's gaze that Anthony and Cleopatra only wished they had gotten right when they had the chance. The bass progressions are a great match for Gary's request that his best girl "put her midnight hair back up so she can let it fall one more time". Some occasions are extremely worthy of the sentiment "Take a picture. It'll last longer." The next best thing is Gary's daydreaming in the pulsating rhythm of night to hit the rewind button. As an added bonus Jay contributes a perky slice of keyboard that brings out the wondrous mischievousness in the sequence of events that Gary wants desperately not to fade out from crescendo/climax mode. The drumming is highly charged yet not overblown to the point where it's the percussion yelling "Hey, look at me!! I need love too!!" I'm pleased with the rich chorus harmonies Gary, Jay and Joe Don Rooney sculpt into a masterfully angelic whole. The trio's cosmic reversal of the continuum is a neat trick to behold even if it is pulled off in the smoke and mirrors domain of country music. Red wine is the perfect beverage for enjoying this breed of embraceable tune. Country does have a solid reputation of not being stuck on some high shelf where the populace at large can't reach out and touch it. Rascal Flatts continues to wave this banner proudly. Even the most visual of rewind details pops with an unstoppable arousal. Whether it's unkissed lips or untouched skin Rascal Flatts constructs an incredibly well woven argument for why a time machine would be worth the sweat, pocket change, and possible wood chip slivers. "Rewind" passes to the head of the class when it comes to solid in the pocket modern country charisma and pizzazz. If universality makes the difference, this trio hits the bullseye, no questions asked.

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