Hillbilly Bone

2010 EP by Blake Shelton From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hillbilly Bone is the first extended play, and seventh studio release overall, by American country music singer/songwriter Blake Shelton. It was released on March 2, 2010 (see 2010 in country music) via Warner Music Group Nashville, his first album under its Reprise label. The only single released was the title track, a duet with Trace Adkins which was released to radio in November 2009. This song reached number one on the U.S. Billboard country singles charts in April 2010.

ReleasedMarch 2, 2010
Length23:39
Quick facts EP by Blake Shelton, Released ...
Hillbilly Bone
EP by
ReleasedMarch 2, 2010
GenreCountry
Length23:39
LabelReprise Nashville
ProducerScott Hendricks
Blake Shelton chronology
Startin' Fires
(2008)
Hillbilly Bone
(2010)
All About Tonight
(2010)
Singles from Hillbilly Bone
  1. "Hillbilly Bone"
    Released: October 24, 2009
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More information Review scores, Source ...
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Background

Hillbilly Bone was conceived as part of an experiment undertaken by Shelton to release multiple extended plays throughout the year. Marketed as "six-paks", these releases were offered as cheaper alternatives to full albums, in an effort to combat the music industry-wide trend of declining album sales that had begun occurring during the preceding years.[1][6][7]

Content

Hillbilly Bone's title track, which features a guest vocal from Trace Adkins, was released on October 24, 2009 as the lead-off single.[6] One month prior to the EP's release, this song reached the country Top 10 and in March it became his sixth Number One.[citation needed] Shelton later reflected that "Hillbilly Bone" marked "the revival" of his career, saying, "I think I was existing up until that point. But that was me finally stepping out. Me finally being the guy to the public that everybody behind the scenes knew. And me going, 'You know what? I’m this guy. I’ve got to be this guy on my records and to the public.'"[8]

The track "Kiss My Country Ass" was co-written and previously released by Rhett Akins on his 2007 album People Like Me.[7] The track "Delilah" was named after a dog owned by Miranda Lambert, Shelton's then-girlfriend and now-ex-wife. Shelton's inspiration to write the song, which is about a woman who overlooks her friend as a potential partner, came while Shelton was pet sitting Delilah, who ignored Shelton and was anxious about not having Lambert nearby.[7]

Critical reception

Jessica Phillips of Country Weekly, Thom Jurek of Allmusic and Jonathan Keefe of Slant Magazine all gave the EP three stars out of five. Phillips wrote that it "finds Blake Shelton coming into his own when it comes to song selection." She also called "Delilah" the strongest-written track on it.[3] Jurek called its material "formula contemporary country" and said that the label's decision to release multiple EPs instead of an album was "risky."[1] Jonathan Keefe criticized the "compressed" production and the lyrics of "Hillbilly Bone" and "Kiss My Country Ass," but commended the recording for having a common theme among its songs.[5]

Commercial performance

The album debuted at number two on the U.S. Billboard Top Country Albums, and number three on the U.S. Billboard 200 chart, selling 71,000 copies in its first week of release.[9]

Track listing

More information No., Title ...
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Hillbilly Bone" (duet with Trace Adkins)Luke Laird, Craig Wiseman3:44
2."Kiss My Country Ass"Rhett Akins, Dallas Davidson, Jon Stone4:12
3."You'll Always Be Beautiful"Lee Brice, Jerrod Niemann, Stone3:47
4."Can't Afford to Love You"Akins, Ben Hayslip, Jimmy Yeary3:23
5."Delilah"Blake Shelton3:41
6."Almost Alright"Clint Lagerberg, Wiseman3:06
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Personnel

Charts

More information Chart (2010), Peak position ...
Chart (2010) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Top Country Albums 2
U.S. Billboard 200 3
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End of year charts

More information Chart (2010), Year-end 2010 ...
Chart (2010) Year-end
2010
US Billboard 200 155[10]
US Billboard Top Country Albums 27[11]
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Singles

More information Year, Single ...
Year Single Peak chart positions
US Country US CAN
2009 "Hillbilly Bone" (with Trace Adkins) 1 40 84
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References

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