Holler Back Explained

Holler Back
Type:studio
Artist:The Lost Trailers
Cover:HollerBack2008BNA.jpg
Genre:Country
Length:35:10
Label:BNA
Producer:Brett Beavers
Blake Chancey
The Lost Trailers
Prev Title:The Lost Trailers
Prev Year:2006
Next Title:Trailblazer
Next Year:2013

Holler Back is the fifth studio album by American country music group The Lost Trailers. It was released on August 26, 2008, as their second album for BNA Records. The album's title track was released in March 2008, becoming their first Top 10 hit that year with a peak at number 9. Following it was "How 'bout You Don't", a Top 20 hit. "All This Love" was originally chosen as the third single for release in June 2009 but after "Country Folks (Livin' Loud)" charted as an album cut, it was released as the album's next single.

Content

Four songs from the group's 2006 album The Lost Trailers are included on this album: "Hey Baby", "All This Love", "Summer of Love" and "Gravy." The band produced most of the album along with Blake Chancey; Brett Beavers produced the title track, as well as "How 'bout You Don't" and "Things You Don’t Grow Out Of."

"Holler Back"

See main article: Holler Back (song). The album's title track also served as its lead-off single. Written by The Lost Trailers' lead singer Stokes Nielson and Tim James, this song became the band's first Top 40 country single in early 2008, reaching a peak of number 9 late in the year.

"How 'bout You Don't"

See main article: How 'bout You Don't. "How 'bout You Don't" was the album's second single, with a late 2008 release. Also co-written by Nielson, it reached a peak of number 17 on the country charts in June 2009.

"Country Folks Livin' Loud"

"Country Folks Livin' Loud" was released as the third single in July 2009 after charting as an album cut in June and replacing "All This Love" which was originally slated to be the third single. Vercher also criticized this song and "Holler Back" for their "inane mischaracterizations" of rural life.[1]

Critical reception

Brady Vercher of Engine 145 gave the album one star out of five, calling it "a ten-song amalgamation of uninspired lyrics, crass commercialism, recycled songs, and exaggerated stereotypes that fail to offer anything of substance."[1] Country Standard Times Robert Loy gave a generally positive review, praising the band's vocal harmonies and the "thematic consistency" throughout the songs, but thought that the lyrics to "Gravy" were "uncomfortable."[2]

Personnel

The Lost Trailers

Additional musicians

Chart performance

Album

Chart (2008)Peak
position
US Top Country Albums (Billboard)5
US Billboard 20032

Singles

YearSinglePeak chart
positions
US CountryUS
2008"Holler Back"966
"How 'bout You Don't"17104
2009"Country Folks Livin' Loud"36
"—" denotes releases that did not chart

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Holler Back review. Vercher. Brady. 29 August 2008. 25 May 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20141218070412/http://www.engine145.com/album-review-the-lost-trailers-holler-back/. 18 December 2014. dead.
  2. Web site: Holler Back review. Loy. Robert. Country Standard Time. 25 May 2010.