Brett Eldredge isn't necessarily Nashville royalty, but as a cousin of
Grascal bassist
Terry Eldredge, he has a passing familiarity with the Music City. More importantly, when he arrived in Nashville eager to pursue a professional career, he was ready to play the game, receptive to advice, and ready to take his time to assemble a winning debut album. He released his debut single "Raymond" in the fall of 2010, and while it wound up reaching 23 on the Billboard Country charts, it took him almost two full years to deliver
Bring You Back, his full-length debut. Such a long delay suggests how seriously Atlantic Nashville took
Eldredge's prospects as a star -- after the 2011 single "It Ain't Gotta Be Love" stiffed, the label certainly decided to rejigger the album, as they weren't going to waste this opportunity -- and the resulting
Bring You Back is crisp, chipper, and eager to please, an album that cheerfully checks off every box on contemporary country radio. Many of those boxes reside somewhere within the
Kenny Chesney universe -- "On and On" cops the breezy charm of "When the Sun Goes Down," while "Go On Without Me" favors
Chesney's arena-country side, complete with an unabashed debt to
U2 -- but
Eldredge has an easy swagger that the perennially reserved
Chesney consciously avoids. That doesn't mean
Eldredge mimics
Jason Aldean's exercises in indulgent machismo -- this is a guy who quite comfortably opened for
Taylor Swift and never seemed out of place -- but he has an easy charm that recalls
Blake Shelton before he became a television star. Apart from the slight bit of bluesy twang that drives "Tell Me Where to Park," everything on
Bring You Back is shiny, happy country-pop -- even the ballads feel bright -- but that's the appeal of
Eldredge and his debut: everybody involved worked hard to deliver a piece of gleaming modern country product, and it's hard to resist all that impeccable craft. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine