Working with producer Don Cook (Brooks & Dunn, Mark Collie), Boone tried to retool his image into a tougher, leaner figure. Musically, he was fairly successful with rockers like "Call Me When the Sun Goes Down" and "I Still Got (What You Got Over)." Commerciall success was another matter: "Get in Line," the album's only charting single, peaked at 65 in Billboard. ~ Brian Mansfield, All Music Guide
This includes the singles "I Need a Miracle" and "To Be with You." ~ Brian Mansfield, All Music Guide
"Everybody Wants to Be Hank Williams," a brutal song about the price singers pay for commercial success, is the best thing Boone has recorded. It's also the closest thing to a hit this now-out-of-print album produced. ~ Brian Mansfield, All Music Guide
This album, currently out of print, contains three Top 40 hits: "I Just Called to Say Goodbye Again," "Wine Me Up" and "Fool's Paradise." ~ Brian Mansfield, All Music Guide
Boone had had a number of small hits ("Stranger Things Have Happened," "Roses in December") when his debut album came out in the wake of such country hunks as Garth Brooks and Clint Black. Boone figured to tap into that market with his muscular voice, but didn't quite make it, though this album includes his biggest hit, "Don't Give Candy to a Stranger." ~ Brian Mansfield, All Music Guide