"Wrong's What I Do Best," 
Jones sings in one song from 
Walls Can Fall, and listening to the album you almost believe he's telling the truth. 
Jones makes the same albums he's always made; two producers (this time 
Emory Gordy Jr.) since 
Billy Sherrill have failed to do more than decrease the number of novelty songs and tune up 
Jones' sound, which is still defined by low piano melodies and sawing fiddle. 
Jones continues to play off his legend: Songs like "I Don't Need Your Rockin' Chair," "Drive Me to Drink," and a cover of 
Merle Haggard's "The Bottle Let Me Down" sound scarier because of 
George's past. The thing is, wrong isn't what 
Jones does best. What 
Jones does best is consequences, which is why "There's the Door" sounds more emotionally devastating than anything else here. ~ Brian Mansfield