Country / Western
Rascal Flatts Still Feels Good (2007[
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Torrent description
Type.................: Music
Burn Tested..........: Yes
Artist...............: Rascal Flatts
Album................: Still Feels Good
Year.................: 2007
Genre................: Country
Type.................: Studio
Number of Songs......: 13
Audio Format.........: Mp3
Bitrate..............: 192
Source...............: Other (Specify) DL'd
Track List:
1. Take Me There
2. Here
3. Bob That Head
4. Help Me Remember
5. Still Feels Good
6. Winner At A Losing Game
7. No Reins
8. Every day
9. Secret Smile
10.Better Now
11.She Goes All The way
12.How Strong are You Now
13.It's Not Supposed to go Like That
Bonus Disc:
1. I was Born To
2. The Way
3. Lonesome Road
4. I Can Almost
5. My Wish (The Hot Mix)
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Posted on............: 1/26/2009
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Release Notes
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Rascal Flatts is an American country band founded in Columbus, Ohio. Since its
inception, Rascal Flatts has been composed of three members: Gary LeVox (lead
vocals), Jay DeMarcus (bass guitar, keyboards, vocals), and Joe Don Rooney (lead
guitar, vocals). DeMarcus and LeVox are also second cousins.
Rascal Flatts has released five studio albums and a greatest hits album, all on
Lyric Street Records. Their first two albums, 2000's Rascal Flatts and 2002's
Melt, have been certified 2× Multi-Platinum and 3× Multi-Platinum, respectively,
in the United States, while 2004's Feels Like Today and 2006's Me and My Gang
have received 5× Multi-Platinum and 4× Multi-Platinum certifications
respectively. 2007's Still Feels Good, their most recent album, is certified 2×
Multi-Platinum.
They have also released twenty-two singles on the Billboard Hot Country Songs
charts, including nine Number Ones. A cover of Tom Cochrane's "Life Is a
Highway", from the soundtrack to the 2006 film Cars, also entered the country
music charts from unsolicited airplay. Their longest-lasting Number One is
"Bless the Broken Road" (late 2004-early 2005) at five weeks, while their
biggest crossover single is "What Hurts the Most", which topped both the country
and Adult Contemporary charts in 2006, and was a Top Ten pop hit.
In early 2000, the group made their debut with their single "Prayin' for
Daylight". This song, which reached #3 on the Billboard country charts. This was
the first of four consecutive Top Ten hits from their self-titled debut, which
was issued in early 2000 on Lyric Street. Following "Prayin' for Daylight" were
"This Everyday Love", "While You Loved Me" and "I'm Movin' On", which
respectively peaked at #9, #7, and #4 on the country charts. "I'm Movin' On" was
awarded Song of the Year by the Academy of Country Music in 2002.
Melt was the title of their second album, released in 2002. Unlike their
previous album, Rascal Flatts co-produced Melt. Its first single, "These Days",
also became their first Number One hit. This song was followed by "Love You Out
Loud" at #3, "I Melt" at #2, and "Mayberry", their second Number One. "I Melt"
featured a controversial music video which featured partial nudity, and as a
result, the video was banned from the Great American Country network.
Rascal Flatts' third album was entitled Feels Like Today, and it was released in
late 2004. Although its title track quickly fell from a peak position of #9, its
follow-up, "Bless the Broken Road", became their biggest Number One, with a
five-week run at the top of the country charts. This song had previously been
recorded by Marcus Hummon (who co-wrote it with Jeff Hanna of the Nitty Gritty
Dirt Band), and had previously been a #42 single in 1998 for Melodie Crittenden.
"Bless the Broken Road" also brought the group to the Adult Contemporary charts
for the first time, peaking at #20 there.
Following "Bless the Broken Road" was their fourth Number One hit, "Fast Cars
and Freedom". While this song was climbing the charts, a hidden track from Feels
Like Today, entitled "Skin", also received enough airplay to chart in the Top
40. Due to the success of "Skin" on the charts, it was then officially added to
the album's track listing on later presses, and was shipped to radio under the
title "Skin (Sarabeth)". This song went on to peak at #2 in late 2005, and was
the final single from the album.
Rascal Flatts' thirteenth chart entry, "What Hurts the Most", was released in
December 2005. This song, which had previously been recorded by Mark Wills in
2003, was the first single from their fourth album, 2006's Me and My Gang. This
album also brought a new producer in Dann Huff. "What Hurts the Most" was a
crossover hit, not only spending four weeks at the top of the country charts,
but also topping the Adult Contemporary charts, and reaching Top Ten on the
Billboard Hot 100. This song was followed by the album's title track at #6, and
then two more Number One country hits in "My Wish" and "Stand". Also in 2006,
the group charted in the Top Ten on the Billboard Hot 100 with a cover of "Life
Is a Highway", which they recorded for the Pixar film Cars. Although "Life Is a
Highway" was not released to country radio, several country stations began
playing the song, causing it to chart as high as #18 on the country charts while
"My Wish" was also climbing. As a result of its chart success, "Life Is a
Highway" was added to later presses of Me and My Gang.
Me and My Gang had the highest US debut of 2006, with 722,000 units in April.
The album spent 15 weeks as the number one album on the Billboard Country Chart
and was the second-best selling album of 2006 (behind High School Musical) with
sales totaling 3.5 million by year's end. The album's success led the band to
take the spot of top-selling artist for all genres of music, which hadn't been
accomplished in 15 years by a country group.
Carrie Underwood and Rascal Flatts performed together at the 2007 Grammy Awards ceremony. Later the same year, the group released the single "Take Me There", a song which Kenny Chesney co-wrote and had initially planned to record himself. A Number One hit by September of that year, this was the first single from their album Still Feels Good. It was followed by "Winner at a Losing Game" and the ballad "Every Day", both of which peaked at #2. The fourth single from Still Feels Good, entitled "Bob That Head", became their first official country
release to miss the Top Ten, when it peaked at #15. The album's fifth and
current single, "Here", was released in August 2008 and became their ninth
Number One hit on the chart week of January 3, 2009.