Roots and Wings (James Bonamy album) explained

Roots and Wings
Type:studio
Artist:James Bonamy
Cover:rootsandwingsbonamy.jpg
Recorded:1996–1997
Genre:Country
Length:33:28
Label:Epic
Producer:Doug Johnson
Prev Title:What I Live to Do
Prev Year:1996

Roots and Wings is the second and final studio album by American country music artist James Bonamy. It was released June 24, 1997, on Epic Records Nashville. The single "The Swing" was a number 31 on the Billboard country charts in 1997. "Naked to the Pain" and "Little Blue Dot" were also released as singles, although neither reached the Top 40. The title song was previously recorded by Doug Supernaw on his 1995 album You Still Got Me.

Critical reception

Thom Owens of Allmusic rated the album three stars out of five, calling the album's content "uneven" but saying that Bonamy "is singing better than ever". Larry Stephens of Country Standard Time was less favorable, saying that Bonamy "sounds like a pop singer trying to do country". He thought that "Daddy Never Had a Chance in Hell" was the best-written song, and that the title track was "touching".[1] Giving it 3 out of 5 stars, David Simons of New Country wrote that "One has to wade through the occasionally predictable slices of hokum[…]to get to the good stuff, but there's enough of that to successfully get Bonamy and his listeners to the end of this record."[2]

Personnel

Chart performance

Chart (1997)Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Top Country Albums25
U.S. Billboard Top Heatseekers11

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Roots and Wings review. Stephens. Larry. Country Standard Time. 26 May 2012.
  2. Simon. David. July 1997. Reviews — James Bonamy: Roots and Wings. New Country. 4. 8. 53. 1086-1076.