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She's All I Got

Johnny Paycheck  Main Performer

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1 (Don't Take Her) She's All I Got Bonds/Williams/Will 2:56
2 You Touched My Life Rice/Foster 3:03
3 Love Sure Is Beautiful Paycheck 2:38
4 She's Everything to Me Foster/Rice 2:26
5 My Elusive Dreams Sherrill/Putman 3:21
6 He Will Break Your Heart Mayfield/Carter/But 3:23
7 You Once Lived Here Butler/Inman/Carter 2:48
8 Only Love Can Save Us Now Killen/Sherrill 2:15
9 Let's Walk Hand in Hand Paycheck 3:10
10 Livin' in a House Full of Love Sherrill/Sutton 2:04
11 A Man That's Satisfied Paycheck/Morrissey 2:46
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She's All I Got

Audio Compact Disc

Label: Koch

Category: Pop/Rock

She's All I Got

UPC: 099923790129

Release Date: 09/25/2000

Original Release Date: 09/25/2000

Number of Discs: 1

Tracks: [(Don't Take Her) She's All I Got, You Touched My Life, Love Sure Is Beautiful, She's Everything to Me, My Elusive Dreams, He Will Break Your Heart, You Once Lived Here, Only Love Can Save Us Now, Let's Walk Hand in Hand, Livin' in a House Full of Love, A Man That's Satisfied]
Contributors:

Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Moving over to Epic in 1971, Johnny Paycheck soon aligned with the label's top producer, Billy Sherrill. Given Paycheck's reputation for rowdy honky tonk and Sherrill's proclivity for opulent productions, the pairing did seem a little odd, but at that point, Johnny hadn't had a Top Ten single in five years and needed a jolt to send him back to the charts. So, he tempered his wild ways and made a Billy Sherrill record in She's All I Got, complete with the strings and heavy emphasis on romantic material. Paycheck had not been strongly associated with love songs prior to She's All I Got -- and once his wild-eyed outlaw days began, he was hardly seen as an ambassador of love -- but his slower sides for Little Darlin' proved that he had a strong honky tonk ballad style, similar to his prot?g?/peer George Jones, and Sherrill exploited that side of him throughout this lovely record. What makes the album work is that the singer and producer found a common ground by muting both the gritty hardcore country of Paycheck and Sherrill's lush, layered arrangements. Strings have been left behind, but there are plenty of choirs and weeping steel guitars, and even when the production is a little thick for a Paycheck song, or the tempos a little too sprightly, it works because the material is first-rate, because Sherrill's production is deft and sensitive, and, of course, because Johnny Paycheck is a superb singer, easily adapting his style to this setting. With its romantic bent, it may be somewhat of an anomaly within his catalog, yet it no doubt stands as one of his consistently greatest albums (all the while setting the template for the great Sherrill-produced George Jones albums of the '70s). ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi