Three songs --
"Welcome to the Club," "Memory Lane," and
"Two Steppin' Mind" -- appeared on the bottom half of the
Billboard singles chart, which suggested that
Tim McGraw had some talent but wasn't anything special...yet. In a year that introduced
Clay Walker and
Doug Supernaw, hardly anybody noticed this young-hat act at the time (but they would), while his contemporaries have already become has-beens. Signed to
Curb Records,
McGraw, a Louisiana native, would quickly establish himself, becoming a superstar and a modern-day legend of
contemporary country music who has yet to rest on his laurels. Produced by
Byron Gallimore, this debut is memorable if only for those three singles, and the trademark voice that harked back to the tradition begat by
Merle Haggard and
George Jones, though
McGraw is also deeply stylistically indebted to singers like
Randy Travis and
George Strait. And even though
McGraw's sound at the time was a bit generic, he would soon delve deeply -- with his own crack band,
the Dancehall Doctors -- into
country-rock,
blues, and even
hip-hop for inspiration. Not only would he find them, he would turn the
country world on its ear in doing so. Of all his peers,
McGraw is the real thing, and the roots of that individuality are heard on this set; it contains the grain of that now instantly identifiable voice. ~ Brian Mansfield & Thom Jurek