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This Side of the Moon

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This Side Of The Moon
An image of a blonde woman standing in front of a white background. She is wearing a yellow dress, and the words "Elizabeth Cook" and "This Side of the Moon" are included in different colored fonts.
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 2004
Studio
GenreCountry
Length38:53
LabelHog Country Production
ProducerJeff Gordon
Elizabeth Cook chronology
Hey Y'all
(2002)
This Side Of The Moon
(2004)
Balls
(2007)

This Side of the Moon is the third studio album by American singer Elizabeth Cook, released on May 17, 2005, by Hog Country Production. Cook based the album on her experience with the Warner Bros. record label, which had released her second studio album, Hey Y'all in 2002. Initially signed to AOL-Time Warner, she was transferred to Warner Bros. and experienced problems with the label, including an album delay. Hey Y'all was commercially unsuccessful and was not heavily promoted; its songs were not played on country radio. Cook voluntarily left Warner Bros. in 2003, and used her disappointment working in Nashville's Music Row as inspiration for her follow-up album.

A country album, This Side of the Moon features lyrics about love and heartbreak. Before being packaged as an album, the songs were recorded independently, with the assistance of five producers in eight Tennessee recording studios. Most of the songs were written by Cook and songwriter Hardie McGehee, both of whom worked for music publisher Sis 'N Bro Music. Critics likened Cook's vocals to those of country artists such as Loretta Lynn and Dolly Parton.

This Side of the Moon had a limited release in August 2004 before becoming more widely available the following year. Cook promoted it with live performances at the Grand Ole Opry and international music festivals. The album received little airplay and, after its release, Cook worked as a waitress to secure steady pay. Critical response at the time was generally positive and, in retrospective articles, reviewers felt This Side of the Moon helped enhance Cook's musical career.

Background and recording

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A photograph of Randy Scruggs playing a guitar.
Elizabeth Cook collaborated with eight producers, including Randy Scruggs (pictured in 2009), on "song experiments" which were later grouped together on This Side of the Moon.

Elizabeth Cook signed a recording contract with Atlantic after receiving positive reviews for The Blue Album, her 2000 self-released debut studio album.[1][2] The recording sessions for her second studio album Hey Y'all began in the spring of 2001, but its release would be delayed to 2002 because of record label issues.[3][4] When AOL-Time Warner – which owned Atlantic – closed its Nashville office, the company transferred Cook's contract to its parent company Warner Bros.[4] Hey Y'all was commercially unsuccessful, and its songs did not receive airplay on country radio.[5][6] In a 2005 Country Standard Time article, Rick Bell attributed this to Cook receiving "little label support".[4] Cook left Warner Bros. voluntarily to look for another record label in 2003.[7]

According to Cook's website, This Side of the Moon was constructed from separate "song experiments".[3] No Depression's Grant Alden described the album as a "collection of demos she scraped together" following her Warner Bros. contract.[8] "Funny Side of Love" was one of the first tracks recorded in this process.[9] Five producers, including Randy Scruggs and Sugar Hill's A&R director Steve Fishell, handled the songs which were recorded at eight recording studios throughout Tennessee.[10] Jeff Gordon was the executive producer for This Side of the Moon; along with producing a majority of the album, he mastered all of its songs.[11] Cook had met Gordon when he was looking for a "traditional girl country singer" to re-record his demos.[12]

This Side of the Moon was inspired by Cook's departure from Warner Bros., which she described as her "divorce from Music Row" and a "period of extreme frustration". In 2005, Cook told the Country Standard Time that she preferred being an independent artist, saying: "This is much more grass-roots, more real to me."[4] Cook has writing credits on the album's thirteen songs;[3] she co-wrote seven of them with songwriter Hardie McGehee,[11] who she worked with because they were signed to the same music publisher (Sis 'N Bro Music).[13][14] Cook and McGehee had collaborated on seven songs for Hey Y'all.[15][16]

Following the release of This Side of the Moon, McGehee moved to Birmingham, Alabama, and Cook shifted to writing music by herself. She believed they had "reached a real good stride" with the album, saying: "And I'm not sure where we would go from there."[12] Cook wrote two songs, “Ruthless" and "Heather Are You With Me Tonight", by herself and worked with her then-husband Tim Carroll on "Where the Blue Begins", which they recorded as a duet.[2][11]

Composition and lyrics

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Sound

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This Side of the Moon is a thirteen-track country album,[2] which Rick Bell further defined as "hard-edged country".[2] Kelefa Sanneh, while writing for The New York Times, described the album as "old-fashioned" and likened its simple arrangements to demos.[17] A contributor for The Tennessean noted that Cook often used retro influences in her music.[18] In The Tampa Tribune, Stephen Thompson remarked that the songs had different styles, ranging from a "slow ballad" to a "rollicking mid-tempo number".[19]

Critics compared Cook's vocals to those of Dolly Parton and Loretta Lynn.[20] Alden described Cook's voice as "high [and] clear", saying it was "reminiscent in its quiet moments of Dolly Parton, or of a more burnished Julie Miller".[3] The Philadelphia Inquirer's Nick Cristiano interpreted Cook's vocals as having an "industrial-strength vocal twang" and "Loretta Lynn spunkiness", citing "Cupid", "All We Need Is Love", and "Somebody's Gotta Do It" as examples of this.[21] Although Thompson noted that Cook lacked a "knockout voice" like Patsy Cline, Kelly Willis and Iris DeMent, he wrote that she had a "sincere, unfussy style of singing".[19] While describing Cook's voice as "high" and "agile", Sanneh remarked that unlike other singers' approaches to ballads, Cook "chuckles where others might sob".[17]

Lyrics

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Throughout This Side of the Moon, Cook sings about her experiences with Warner Bros.[22] In "Funny Side of Love", she uses humor to process her feelings of "disappointment and sense of lost opportunity" after leaving the label.[9] Cook said that while "Here's to You" and "Hard-Hearted" sound like break-up songs, the lyrics are about her career.[4] The album also focuses on love and heartbreak.[19] Cook warns her partner in the ballad "Before I Go That Far" about what will happen if they break up.[21] In "This Side of the Moon", she sings about the hard work required in a relationship, specifically how it involves "going through struggles and becoming disenchanted with what you started working towards in the first place".[9] The album's final track "Somebody's Gotta Do It" is about satisfying a woman's needs.[23]

"Heather Are You With Me Tonight" is a love song about a soldier's loneliness and thoughts of his girlfriend.[2][3] The lyrics focus on his moral struggle over carrying out an airstrike and his hope that his girlfriend will understand him and remain faithful.[3] Cook wrote the song during the bombing of Baghdad in the 2003 invasion of Iraq.[9] Alden viewed it as a war song rather than a protest song,[8] and author Alice Randall and songwriters Carter and Courtney Little compared its message to Glen Campbell's 1969 single "Galveston", saying they both ask a similar moral question: "Can war and love exist in the same heart?"[24]

Release and promotion

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This Side of the Moon had a limited release in August 2004.[4][a] Media outlets described the release as independent.[26][27] Hog Country Production gave This Side of the Moon a larger release on May 17, 2005 as an audio CD.[4][11]

Before the album's release, Cook had performed its music as part of her live shows.[26] According to a 2005 press release, Cook planned to embark on a summer tour and perform at the Grand Ole Opry to further support This Side of the Moon.[9] Cook also promoted it by performing at international music festivals.[28] The album was later released on streaming services.[29]

In 2005, Cook recorded a music video for "Before I Go That Far" in New Mexico.[12] Entertainment company Thirty Tigers uploaded the video to its YouTube channel on April 10, 2007.[30] According to the company's YouTube channel, This Side of the Moon was later licensed to the Orchard Music on behalf of Hog Country Production.[30]

This Side of the Moon's tracks received little airplay,[6] and following the album's release, Cook worked as a waitress to secure a steady salary.[28] She recounted taking that job because she was not emotionally attached to it, and she felt comfortable quitting to perform at live shows.[28] In a 2007 CMT interview, Cook said she developed a fanbase from "a small handful of cult country music fans" that she thought were frustrated with her lack of commercial success; she also mentioned reaching a sense of peace about her experiences with different record deals.[6]

Critical reception

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A photograph of Elizabeth Cook playing a guitar
Critics later believed This Side of the Moon helped Elizabeth Cook (pictured in 2009) with her career.

This Side of the Moon was met with generally positive reviews from critics.[31] Sanneh included it on his list of 2005's best obscurities,[17] and in an August 2005 article, Thompson named it the best country album by a female artist so far that year.[32] Several reviewers commended the album for its traditional country sound,[33] such as Bell who described it as "a brilliant 13-song collection of hard-edged country sung with steely conviction".[2] Cook's songwriting was also highlighted.[3][32] Praising the album's cohesion as well as Cook's vocals and songwriting, Alden identified her as "an artist to whom attention must be paid".[3] Describing This Side of the Moon as an improvement over Hey Y'all, Cristiano appreciated how "disappointment obviously didn't dull her artistry".[21] Bell believed she deserved "a hard-earned, well-deserved second chance" to work with another major record label.[2]

Cristiano said Cook proved herself to be a "thoughtful and deeply affecting balladeer", pointing out "Before I Go That Far" as an example.[21] In 2006, Randall, Carter, and Little also singled out the track when praising Cook for creating "lush harmonies, traditional arrangements, and simple production".[34] While dismissing the notion that Cook was a guilty pleasure, Cooper praised "Here's to You", "Where the Blue Begins", and "Somebody's Gotta Do It" as "music fit for smiling, humming and other admirable pursuits".[35] Alden highlighted "Heather Are You With Me Tonight" as "the first great song" from the Iraq War years,[3] and said it was his favorite song six years after the album's release.[8]

Retrospective reviews of This Side of the Moon remained positive.[18][27] In a 2006 article, a contributor for The Tennessean described it as Cook's best album.[18] Two years later, an NPR writer said Cook had achieved "some commercial and artistic potential" with the album.[27] Critics identified the album as an important part of Cook's career,[36][37] such as Louisville's Brent Owen who believed it gave her further exposure in the music industry.[37] A staff writer for the River Cities' Reader attributed This Side of the Moon and Balls to helping establish Cook as a "soulful country singer and impassioned songwriter".[36]

Track listing

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Credits adapted from the liner notes of This Side of the Moon:[11]

This Side of the Moon track listing
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Cupid"Scruggs2:50
2."Funny Side of Love"
  • Cook
  • McGehee
Steve Marcantonio2:05
3."Before I Go That Far"
Salley3:20
4."Here's to You"
  • Cook
  • McGehee
Jeff Gordon2:57
5."This Side of the Moon"
  • Cook
  • McGehee
Gordon3:50
6."Kiss Me Again"
  • Cook
  • McGehee
Gordon2:54
7."Ruthless"
  • Cook
Gordon2:48
8."Alone Down Here"
  • Cook
  • Stephony Smith
Smith3:21
9."Hard-Hearted"
  • Cook
  • McGehee
Gordon3:44
10."Heather Are You With Me Tonight"CookGordon2:29
11."All We Need Is Love"
  • Cook
  • McGehee
Steve Fishell2:44
12."Where the Blue Begins"
  • Cook
  • Tim Carroll
Gordon2:39
13."Somebody's Gotta Do It"
  • Cook
  • McGehee
Gordon2:59
Total length:38:53

Personnel

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The following credits are adapted from the booklet of This Side of the Moon and AllMusic:[11][38]

  • Joe Bogan – engineer, mixing
  • Tom Bukovacelectric guitar
  • Spencer Campbell – bass guitar
  • Jimmy Capps – acoustic guitar
  • T.W. Cargile – engineer, mixing
  • Tim Carroll – composer, electric guitar, background vocals
  • Elizabeth Cook – composer, acoustic guitar, primary vocals, background vocals
  • Heather Dryden – art direction, design
  • Howard Duck – keyboards
  • Dan Dugmoresteel guitar
  • Glen Duncan – fiddle
  • Steve Fishell – steel guitar, producer
  • Shannon Forrest – drums
  • Dave Francis – bass guitar, acoustic guitar
  • John Gardner – drums
  • Jeff Gordon – engineer, executive producer, mastering, mixing, producer
  • Kevin Grantt – bass guitar
  • Owen Hale – drums
  • Tony Harrell – keyboards
  • David Jacques – bass
  • Fats Kaplinaccordion, fiddle
  • Suzy Kipp – stylist
  • Sean Locke – background vocals
  • Mills Logan – mixing
  • Steve Marcantonio – engineer, mixing
  • Jim McBride – composer
  • Rusty McFarland – engineer
  • Hardie McGehee – acoustic guitar, keyboards, background vocals
  • Jim McKell – mixing
  • Greg Morrow – drums
  • Duncan Mullins – bass guitar
  • Billy Panda – acoustic guitar, mandolin
  • Mike Poole – engineer, mixing
  • Alison Prestwood – bass guitar
  • Ron Reynolds – engineer, mixing
  • Tammy Rogers – fiddle, mandolin
  • Jerry Salley – composer, producer, background vocals
  • Rick Schell – drums
  • Randy Scruggs – composer, acoustic guitar, producer
  • Michael Severs – electric guitar
  • Paul Slivka – bass
  • Stephony Smith – composer, producer, background vocals
  • Kenny Vaughan – electric guitar
  • Wanda Vick – fiddle, acoustic guitar

Notes and references

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  1. ^ In a June 2004 article, The Tennessean's Peter Cooper said the album was already available.[25]

Sources

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