Country singer Kenny Chesney has been awfully hard to earn the title of your press releases to:. "The act's most popular live music in the 21 st century," Mr. Chesney sold over one million visits to each of the past eight summers tickets, and now he is tired. When this year off, at least the major stages, he offers in its place, "Kenny Chesney: Summer in 3D," culled from 2009 shows six stages. Chesney country is mostly pop, rock, and the variety relentlessly friendly. There is a lot of introspection, "Summertime" and "Beer in Mexico", "No Shoes, No Shirt, no problem", has long used the Jimmy Buffett party keg Easy listening soft-rock. Yet such indifference takes a lot of effort: more than a dozen members of the band, with arrangements and orchestration sharp slick.
His fans will no doubt be met: the film packs 23 songs in under 100 minutes, and the projectors of the full Chesney, with his tight jeans, tank top faded, worn a cowboy hat. His voice, a baritone with a strong nasal twang, receives constant training. The 3-D is only limited success, Mr. Chesney is often in our laps, but the effect it occasionally surfaces in a picture larger than life.Between songs, the film, directed by Joe Thomas, M. Chesney, over home movies from the early days, said life on the road gives shout-outs to friends, family and fans, and explain how he found peace at sea and sand.Ultimately, this film suggests the dangers of musical tour concerts also: smooth and shining, all the characteristics of little spontaneity. "Old Blue Chair," an ode to Mr. Chesney for a piece of beach furniture, describes how he had slept in it "New Year's Eve and woke up to a hundred mosquito bites," when singing breaks say "Now that's a true story" is the most authentic of a show that seems hungry for them. .
His fans will no doubt be met: the film packs 23 songs in under 100 minutes, and the projectors of the full Chesney, with his tight jeans, tank top faded, worn a cowboy hat. His voice, a baritone with a strong nasal twang, receives constant training. The 3-D is only limited success, Mr. Chesney is often in our laps, but the effect it occasionally surfaces in a picture larger than life.Between songs, the film, directed by Joe Thomas, M. Chesney, over home movies from the early days, said life on the road gives shout-outs to friends, family and fans, and explain how he found peace at sea and sand.Ultimately, this film suggests the dangers of musical tour concerts also: smooth and shining, all the characteristics of little spontaneity. "Old Blue Chair," an ode to Mr. Chesney for a piece of beach furniture, describes how he had slept in it "New Year's Eve and woke up to a hundred mosquito bites," when singing breaks say "Now that's a true story" is the most authentic of a show that seems hungry for them. .

0 comments:
Post a Comment