HomeMusic Live Like You Were Dying

Live Like You Were Dying

Tim McGraw  Main Performer

See full product details
Choose a format:
Previous
  • Audio Compact Disc   $5.79
  • Used - Audio Compact Disc   $1.99

Used - Audio Compact Disc

Usually Ships Within 48 Hours.

List Price: $2.99

$1.99 You Save: $1.00

Add to Cart Add to Wish List Share with a Friend
Check Store Availability
Next
Track
Listen
1 How Bad Do You Want It Luther/Collins 3:44
2 My Old Friend Wiseman/McEwan 3:37
3 Can't Tell Me Nothin' Giles/Bogard 3:08
4 Old Town New Scott/Robison 5:00
5 Live Like You Were Dying Nichols/Wiseman 4:58
6 Drugs or Jesus James/Lindsey/Mayo/ 4:39
7 Back When Stevens/Lynch/Smith 4:59
8 Something's Broken Beathard/Horne 3:42
9 Open Season on My Heart Slater/Crowell 3:39
10 Everybody Hates Me Hill/Beathard 3:28
11 Walk Like a Man Douglas 3:35
12 Blank Sheet of Paper Schlitz/Warren 4:07
13 Just Be Your Tear Wiseman/Mullins 4:47
14 Do You Want Fries With That Beathard/Phillips 3:59
15 Kill Myself Dipiero/Smith/Terry 3:07
16 We Carry On Slater/Douglas 4:12
  • Overview
  • Production Details
  • Editorial Reviews
Live Like You Were Dying

Audio Compact Disc

Label: Curb

Style: Progressive Country

Live Like You Were Dying

UPC: 715187885820

Release Date: 08/24/2004

Original Release Date: 08/24/2004

Number of Discs: 1

Tracks: [How Bad Do You Want It, My Old Friend, Can't Tell Me Nothin', Old Town New, Live Like You Were Dying, Drugs or Jesus, Back When, Something's Broken, Open Season on My Heart, Everybody Hates Me, Walk Like a Man, Blank Sheet of Paper, Just Be Your Tear, Do You Want Fries With That, Kill Myself, We Carry On]
Contributors:

Thom Jurek

There's good reason for Tim McGraw's endurance at the top of contemporary country: he's a restless visionary who's worked hard to improve as an interpretive singer. In 2002, McGraw bucked the trend and convinced his label, and producers Byron Gallimore and Darran Smith, to let him use his road band in the studio. The rough and tumble intimacy of the set put it over the top and appealed to music fans outside his circle. On Live Like You Were Dying, McGraw ups the ante. Using the same production team and his Dancehall Doctors, McGraw cut a whopping 16 tracks and helped in the mixing of the record, as well as co-producing. The song selection runs the gamut. There's the blues-rock energy of the opener, "How Bad Do You Want It," where he evokes the ghost of the Mississippi Delta as well as the hard country-rock sounds of Marshall Tucker and Lynyrd Skynyrd. Then there's the shimmering Americana of "My Old Friend" that would not be out of place performed by Pierce Pettis, and the fantastic "Old Town New," by renegade songwriters Bruce Robison and Darrell Scott. The monster single from this record, "Live Like You Were Dying," by Craig Wiseman and Tim Nichols, is the very best kind of modern country song; the emotion in McGraw's delivery is honest, not saccharine. In anyone else's voice, a song like "Drugs or Jesus" would be just plain bad. The tune itself is solid and beautifully constructed, a perfect marriage of melody, hook, and direct, simple lyrics. But the temptation to overperform such a song is irresistible to most of the hit factory's mainstays. Not for McGraw though: his understatement underscores the lyric's seriousness. The tenderness in Rodney Crowell and James T. Slater's "Open Season on My Heart" is vulnerable in all the right ways. The moody poignancy of "Walk Like a Man," is a fine and haunting centerpiece for this fine album. "Kill Myself" has to be experienced -- it's a miracle and a testament to McGraw's clout that this tune made it on to the record. "We Carry On" is a soulful anthem, gritty, true, and beautiful. It's a fitting close to McGraw's finest moment yet. The young hell-raiser has grown to be one of modern country's most compelling and multidimensional artists. ~ Thom Jurek, Rovi

Digital Downloads