Sleeper Wherever I Fall feels like a temporary corrective to
Bare's trend of relying heavily on
Shel Silverstein's songbook, containing not a single
Silverstein song and placing
Bare a bit closer to contemporary 1978 trends. He's warm and smooth on the lullaby "Sleep Tight Good Night Man," his first song that could comfortably fit within the emerging Urban Cowboy trend, and he follows that mellow sound through the sleek "What Did It Get Me," the lush melodrama "Goin' Up's Easy, Comin' Down's Hard," and a smooth soulful version of
Rodney Crowell's "On a Real Good Night." These are balanced by some outright rockers -- the laid-back funk of "Hot Afternoon (Arizona Desert)," covers of
the Byrds ("I'll Feel a Whole Lot Better") and the
Stones ("The Last Time"), the slow swamp blues of "The Way I Feel Tonight" -- and a song or two that splits the difference, like the mock-gospel pop of "Healin'." It was a record designed to appeal to mass audiences, the way that
Bare didn't, and it worked musically and, to a lesser extent, it worked commercially, with "Sleep Tight" almost reaching the country Top 10. In retrospect, it seems a bit like a transitional album, a stop-gap before
Bare returned to
Silverstein songs, but when he did return he retained much of the rock edge of
Sleeper, as well as some of its slickness.