![]() ![]() ![]() Then she matched that statement again and again, with renditions of “There’s a Place in the Whiskey,” “All Jacked Up,” and other songs about drinking, bars and parties, but she saved “Redneck Woman” for her encore.Īt the end of the song, Wilson smiled quietly and commented, “That was damn loud.”Īlternating old songs and selections from her recently released CD, “One of the Boys,” Wilson talked casually, sometimes explaining the idea behind a song, sometimes teasing the audience, and often inciting them to simply party with her. “I don’t know about you, but I’m in the mood for a little drinking music,” she told the audience, after her second selection, “Homewrecker.” Wilson, the band and her female back-up singer - all clothed in blue jeans and black T-shirts - produced a full, flawless sound. ![]() In the There Goes the Neighborhood tour, named after one of her newer songs, Wilson stressed the hard-hitting electric side of her music, playing her own guitar along with her seven-piece band. Leading off an hour-and-a-half of fun and rowdy music with “Here for the Party,” Wilson performed most of the hard-core, in-your-face songs that have made her popular, and rarely slowed down to perform slower, softer songs from her repertoire. Gretchen Wilson made that crashingly clear from the onset of her concert Friday at Feather Falls Casino. ![]()
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