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       DAVE'S 
        DIARY - 16 JULY 2013 - RADNEY FOSTER CD REVIEW 
       2006 
        CD REVIEW  
        RADNEY FOSTER  
        THIS WORLD WE LIVE IN (DUALTONE-SHOCK)  
       
        RADNEY FOSTER HOOKS HITS  
      "He 
        was nervous and excited when he walked in/ she poured him a drink/ and 
        they discussed the price of sin." - The Kindness Of Strangers 
        - Radney Foster 
      
      Acclaimed 
        Texan troubadour Radney Foster chanced his soul to road test a new song 
        about a man and a hooker. 
         
        He burned a copy for his second wife - journalist Cyndi Hoelzle - and 
        was stunned by the result. 
         
        "I gave it to my wife and said, "honey, when you're running 
        errands today listen to this thing and see what you think," Foster, 
        then 46, revealed of The Kindness Of Strangers. 
         
        "And she called me a couple of hours later and was crying. And I 
        was like, "honey, are you okay?" And she said, "Yes, I'm 
        okay. I'm sitting here crying and have no idea who I'm crying for - the 
        guy or the prostitute. I'm just unbelievably moved it." And I thought, 
        "Okay, I did my job." 
         
        So what happened? 
         
        Well, the heartbroken male paid for aural therapy - not oral pleasure 
        - and his subject prayed for him after he paid for her.  
         
        Not stereotypical twang but a highlight of Foster's seventh solo disc 
        This World We Live In. 
         
        It's more credible than corporate radio bullfrogs whose minions select 
        samples from narrow parameters and play them down the phone to a chosen 
        demographic. 
         
        Foster cut three wondrous discs with Bill Lloyd as Foster & Lloyd 
        from 1987 and has penned enough chart toppers to keep him from diluting 
        his soulful albums that began with Del Rio, Texas, 1959, in 1992. 
         
        Godspeed, inspired by his former wife of 12 years decamping to 
        France in 1994 with their son Julien, now 21, was one of three to grace 
        huge selling Dixie Chicks albums. 
         
        Recent hits include expatriate Australasian superstar Keith Urban's Raining 
        On Sunday, and smashes for Darius Rucker, Kenny Chesney and Brooks 
        & Dunn. 
         
        He also wrote A Real Fine Place To Start - an historic hit for 
        twice wed Missouri born star Sara Evans, making her first Australian tour 
        in September with Georgian superstar Alan Jackson. 
         
        Radney can afford to foster new Texas stars diverse as frequent Aussie 
        tourist Jack Ingram, Pat Green, Cory Morrow and Randy Rogers in the same 
        way his mentors inspired him. 
       JACK 
        INGRAM  
      "I believe 
        in leather saddles/ old Camaros and picking your battles/ the way Waylon 
        used to tear up a country song/ I believe love is hard to handle." 
        - Prove Me Right - Radney Foster-Stephanie Delray. 
         
      
         
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          "I 
            think it's a generational thing," says Foster whose co-write 
            with Ingram on Never Gonna Fly is the finale track here. 
             
            "I cut my teeth on Guy Clark and Rodney Crowell and Willie & 
            Waylon. Wherever they lived, it was always this independently minded 
            music based on the geography of home. I think that whatever it is 
            that is geographically and culturally different about Texas has a 
            profound effect on the music that comes out of there, and continues 
            to." 
            Foster has long ascended from the depths of divorce on previous discs 
            to whimsical love songs and celebration of mentors. 
             
            He entrees with romance as the surrogate stimulant on Drunk On 
            Love - it segues into Sweet And Wild and continues in Big 
            Idea and Fools That Dream.  | 
         
       
      Foster expands 
        it in Prove Me Right and his imagery is superb in his escapist 
        New Zip Code. 
         
        "A new zip code is what I need/ any place your heartache can't find 
        me/ ain't a bar in this town where I can lose your memory/ so I'm kissing 
        this dirt goodbye."  
         
        Foster also reaches back in biographical Half Of My Mistakes. 
         
        "It's really about growing up even though love is a particular theme 
        in that," Foster says. 
         
        "It is what gets you through when you screw up, and when you don't, 
        and how you look back on it."  
      SOLO 
        DISCOGRAPHY   
      Del Rio, 
        TX 1959 - September 29, 1992 
        Labor of Love - April 11, 1995 
        See What You Want to See - May 18, 1999 
        Are You Ready for the Big Show? - June 26, 2001 
        Another Way to Go - September 10, 2002 
        And Then There's Me - (The Back Porch Sessions) - 2005 
        This World We Live In - April 4, 2006 
        Revival - August 31, 2009 
        Del Rio, TX Revisited: Unplugged & Lonesome - August 14, 2012 
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