Roughstock.com

Jack Ingram - Big Dreams & High Hopes

By: Matt Bjorke

Last Updated: August 25, 2009 4:08 PM

It’s easy to dismiss Jack Ingram’s latest albums as anything but selling-out his hard-earned road-dog Texas indie spirt for the sake of radio hits but to do such a thing would be selling Jack Ingram short.  Sure some of the songs he sings are a little ‘glossier’ than the stuff he recorded over the course of his 15 years in the business but like fellow Texas artists who’ve crossed-over into the mainstream, Jack Ingram is firmly in control of the music he makes.

Big Dreams & High Hopes is an album that marries both his Texas-country rockin’ past with his mainstream country-rockin’ present.  With soft acoustic guitars leading the way, there is a reflective mood to the beautiful  ballad “Seeing Stars.”  The lyrics are truly poetic as Jack and co-writer Chris Thompkins remind us to keep dreaming and hoping for the best, even if things aren’t happening as fast or the way we want them to. Patty Griffin provides some angelic harmony vocals on the track too.  This one could really be a big hit this winter if Jack and Big Machine decide to release a more reflective single as the follow-up to rockin’ hit singles “Barefoot and Crazy” and “That’s A Man.”  While the former has been the bigger hit, it is the latter song that manages to showcase a little message in the confines of a song with a killer, albeit familiar melodic hook (which recalls Lee Roy Parnell’s “On The Road”).

Long-time Jack Ingram fans will recall that he recorded “Barbie Doll” on his “Hey You” album from the year 2000.  While the song is the same, he has slightly changed up the roadhouse rocker.  Now Dierks Bentley duets with Jack on the track while a bunch of artist friends make up the “Little Big Lost Beat Up Ford Funky Times Freedom Choir.”  Some of the artists in that group are Little Big Town, Randy Houser, the Lost Trailers, James Otto, Blu Sanders, Jedd Hughes and studio cats who were in the studio during the recording of the track.  The title track, co-written with Gary Burr, certainly feels like an anthem ready to break Jack Ingram open to more than just the country music audience as it would really fit both Triple A Adult Rock and Adult Pop radio formats.  The song is soft and acoustic but that chorus of “Big Dreams high hopes, they have led me through the hard times like a north star shining showing me where to go, they’re what got the whole thing started and they’re what keep this cowboy riding down the road, big dreams, high hopes”  really sets up the song to be the centerpiece that it is on this album. 

Jack Ingram has always had a Petty-like vibe to some of his songs and that vibe is really evident on the Radney Foster-co-produced and written “Heartache” and “Man In Your Life” while the slow-burning “In The Corner” shelps end this superbly creative and country rockin’ record on a high note.  The self-written, Doug Lancio-produced song finds Jack Ingram looking inside and singing a song that feels like we’re listening into a man’s most inner thoughts. 

Big Dreams & High Hopes may not be the record that long time fans were looking for but it doesn’t exactly include any rock-remakes this time around either.  It feels like the work of a man with a deep understanding of where he is and where he wants to go.  Jack Ingram may now be “mainstream” and grown up but he is very much  still the young boy with the wide eyed Big Dreams & High Hopes.

You can support Jack Ingram by purchasing this album at iTunes icon| Amazon.

Click here to get daily updates from Roughstock.

Email It | Print It | Post A Comment | Bookmark and Share

READER'S COMMENTS

Jaydubs says:

Posted: Wednesday, September 2, 2009

I think lioness might have suffered a brain or ear injury if she thinks JI sounds like KU. JI had "the hair" way before any of the Nashville newsmakers started rocking it. But he looks great with it buzz cut too - which is my favorite style he's sported over the years. His voice is original and fantastic. While his songs may not climb to the top of the charts, I can definitely say I've never heard one of your records even get radio play. So shut your overly critical mouth. JI's a hardworker. He's a great showman. He's a fantastic songwriter. He's a super nice guy. He's a wonderful family man. He's got a killer voice. And when the rest of the world finally catches on, he's going to be an even bigger success than he already is. Everything good that happens to him, he has more than earned and deserves. I wish him the best. And I'm so tired of reading garbage from people who just like to run a good man down for doing what he loves. There are more people who love JI than there are those who don't. Everyone's got an opinion; some people should just not share theirs. Negativity is so '96 Teen Angst it makes me want to puke.

lioness says:

Posted: Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Says, that is your opinion. I had already thought he was trying hard to copy Keith before I read it from a reviewer. He seems to try and copy Keith's style,hair, and dress. The first time I saw Jack, he didn't look like he does now. Also I read in an interview that he admired Keith a lot. His voice may work for him, but not for me and obviously a lot of other people too. He doesn't get very far up the charts on most of his songs. Two of his songs Measure of a Man and That's A Man sound almost a like. I would think having a strong voice would be what a vocalist would need. He ruined the remake of that pop song Lips of An Angel. To each their own. Glad you like him, but I don't.

says:

Posted: Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Lioness, Jack's VERY FAR from a "KU wanna be." He also has a voice that works for him. Is it as strong as some other male voices? No but it doesn't need to be.

lioness says:

Posted: Wednesday, August 26, 2009

I think this guy has a not so good voice and he seems to trying to be like Keith Urban and that ain't gonna ever happen. I saw a review of a show where he was the opening act and the reviewer said he was just a Keith Urban wanna be!

LEAVE A COMMENT