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Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your Mind

George Strait  Main Performer

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1 Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your Mind Shafer/Shafer 3:15
2 Any Old Time Nicoll/Nicoll/Dayto 2:03
3 I Need Someone Like Me Shafer 2:46
4 You're Dancin' This Dance All Wrong Moore/McMears/McMea 3:57
5 Honky Tonk Saturday Night Shafer 2:29
6 I Should Have Watched That First Step Kemp 2:57
7 Love Comes from the Other Side of Town Freiling 2:17
8 The Cowboy Rides Away Throckmorton/Kelly 3:21
9 What Did You Expect Me to Do Shafer 2:38
10 The Fireman Kemp/Vickery 2:34
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Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your Mind

Audio Compact Disc

Label: MCA

Style: Contemporary Country

Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your Mind

UPC: 076743103223

Release Date: 09/23/2003

Original Release Date: 09/23/2003

Number of Discs: 1

Tracks: [Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your Mind, Any Old Time, I Need Someone Like Me, You're Dancin' This Dance All Wrong, Honky Tonk Saturday Night, I Should Have Watched That First Step, Love Comes from the Other Side of Town, The Cowboy Rides Away, What Did You Expect Me to Do, The Fireman]
Contributors:

Thom Jurek

Two years after his breakthrough album, Strait From the Heart, George Strait was riding the charts again with perhaps his finest recorded moment. Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your Mind, both the album and the song, were, along with Dwight Yoakam's Guitars, Cadillacs, Etc., Etc., the only real traditional country records on the radio in 1984. And Strait is not a "new traditionalist." He came out of Texas a country singer, and album after album he proved that he was a traditional country singer. The title cut, written by Sanger and Darlene Shafer is one of four they placed on the album, and another, "Honky Tonk Saturday Night," charted as the disc's second single. Jimmy Bowen staggered the tunes here to reflect all of Strait's considerable strengths -- there are hot and jumpy Western swing numbers such as "Any Old Time" and ballads like "You're Dancin' This Dance All Wrong," along with honky tonk weepers such as "I Should Have Watched That First Step." But there are a few barroom ravers as well as the swinging honky tonk of "Love Comes From the Other Side of Town" and the smoking closer "The Fireman." This is the tightest selection of tracks, perfectly sequenced and gorgeously sung by an earthy country singer who was at the very top of his powers. Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your Mind is an enduring classic two decades later and is timeless in its appeal. ~ Thom Jurek, Rovi