During the first half of the 2000s
Brooks & Dunn broadened their horizons, incorporating stronger elements of pop and rock to their neo-traditionalist country. As its title suggests, 2005's
Hillbilly Deluxe finds the duo returning to their roots, creating a lean, tight collection of 13 straight-ahead country songs. This may be a reaction to the romanticization of rednecks in recent country music, but
Hillbilly Deluxe doesn't sound crass or commercial. It sounds like a logical back-to-basics move after the rock flirtations of 2001's
Steers and Stripes and 2003's
Red Dirt Road.
Brooks & Dunn don't hide their intentions at all: not only does the album boast a proudly hillbilly title, but the album kicks off with the anthemic "Play Something Country," where a redneck woman implores the DJ to play some "
Kenny,
Keith,
Alan, and
Patsy Cline," and
Brooks & Dunn follow that advice for the rest of the album, never straying far from country, even when they're covering
Nicolette Larson's early-'80s hit "Building Bridges" with
Sheryl Crow on backing vocals. Most of this direction seems to come from
Ronnie Dunn, who provides the great majority of original material here: six of the 13 songs are from
Dunn (all but one co-written with Terry McBride), and his tunes are the purest country here, whether it's barroom tales like "Whiskey Do My Talkin'" or weepers like "I May Never Get Over You." That's not to say that
Kix Brooks doesn't have a presence here. With the exception of the poppier "One More Roll of the Dice," he also devotes himself to straight-ahead country, highlighted by the sweetly melancholy "Her West Was Wilder" and the rocking closer, "She Likes to Get out of Town."
Brooks might not write as much here as he normally does, but the covers he sings are expertly chosen, and the album as a whole gels as well as either
Steers and Stripes or
Red Dirt Road. Even though
Hillbilly Deluxe isn't quite as ambitious as either of those records, it's just as satisfying and further proof that
Brooks & Dunn are one of the most reliable, consistently enjoyable acts in modern country music. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine