Charleston, SC 1966 is the third studio album and the second country album from American recording artist Darius Rucker. It was released in the United States on October 12, 2010, through Capitol Nashville.

Background

In a CMT news-post, it was explained that the album title is derived from country music artist Radney Foster's 1992 album, Del Rio, TX 1959, which noted Foster's birthplace and birth year, as the title for this album had been for the birth year and birthplace of Rucker. Rucker said Foster's album "showed him the possibilities of country music".

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic
American Songwriter
Country Weekly
The Dallas Morning NewsB
Entertainment WeeklyB+
Los Angeles Times
Rolling Stone
Roughstock
Slant Magazine
USA Today

Upon its release, Charleston, SC 1966 received generally positive reviews from most music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 68, based on 10 reviews, which indicates "generally favorable reviews".

Jessica Phillips with Country Weekly compared it to his previous album Learn to Live, saying "[Rucker] created a successful blend of touching love ballads and positive up-tempo meditations on life with his 2008 foray into country music, Learn to Live, and he reprises that winning mix for his sophomore country solo release", and gave it four out of five stars. Matt Bjorke with Roughstock gave it a four star rating, called all of the tracks on the record "radio ready" and said "Charleston, SC 1966 may not feature many outright old school traditional tunes like Learn to Live featured but in many ways the album features quite a few songs that show off a more 'traditional' feel than most mainstream country albums do nowadays and to be perfectly honest, it’s a sound and feel that suits Darius Rucker like a glove. Sarah Rodman with The Boston Globe favored the album over its predecessor saying it "surpasses its predecessor on the strength of more vibrant and charming tunes." Brian Mansfield with USA Today called it a "fine-sounding country album" and said that with the release, "he seems to have made his primary home in country music".

Mario Tarradell with The Dallas Morning News gave it a "B" rating, calling it a "solid follow-up" to Learn to Live, and said that he "ably captures the nuances of mainstream country". Stephen Thomas Erlewine with Allmusic called it "a gleaming example of polished, pressed, modern country-pop" and gave it a three star rating. Rick Moore with American Songwriter gave it three and a half stars, saying "Charleston, SC 1966 doesn’t break any rules or new ground, and probably wasn’t meant to [...] it’s obviously calculated to appeal to the million people who bought Learn to Live, so if you’re one of them, you’ll probably like this record."

Michael McCall with the Associated Press called the tracks on the release "too radio friendly" and said that "his new focus loses the creative sweep and emotional force that made his first country album so compelling. Jonathan Keefe with Slant Magazine gave it a two and a half star rating, calling the material "banal".

Commercial performance

The album debuted at number two on the U.S. Billboard 200, and at number one on the Top Country albums chart selling 101,000 copies in its first week of release. In its second week of release, the album dropped to number ten on the Billboard 200, selling 37,000 copies. In its third week of release, the album jumped to number nine on the Billboard 200 selling 27,000 copies. As of the chart dated July 23, 2011, the album has sold 489,681 copies in the US.

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."This"Darius RuckerFrank RogersKara DioGuardi3:38
2."Come Back Song"RuckerChris StapletonCasey Beathard3:55
3."Might Get Lucky"RuckerRadney FosterJay Clementi3:45
4."Whiskey and You"RuckerRogers4:15
5."Southern State of Mind"RuckerAshley GorleyChris DuBois3:36
6."Love Will Do That"RuckerRogersDon Sampson3:24
7."The Craziest Thing"RuckerRogersMonty Criswell3:15
8."Things I'd Never Do"RuckerRogersClay Mills3:47
9."We All Fall Down"RuckerKim Tribble3:35
10."I Don't Care" (featuring Brad Paisley)RuckerPaisleyDuBois4:01
11."She's Beautiful"RuckerRogersBrett Jones4:05
12."I Got Nothin'"RuckerMills3:24
13."In a Big Way"RuckerBeathard3:52
iTunes Deluxe Edition
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
14."Let Her Cry" (from CMT Invitation Only)RuckerDean FelberJim SonefeldMark Bryan4:44
15."Family Tradition" (from CMT Invitation Only)Hank Williams, Jr.4:15

Personnel

Musicians Mike Brignardello – Bass guitar (track 10) Pat BuchananElectric guitar (all tracks except 6 & 10), Slide Guitar (track 2) Sam BushMandolin (track 6) J. T. CorenflosBaritone Guitar (track 8), Electric guitar (all tracks), Slide Guitar (track 2) John Cowan – Background Vocals (track 6) Eric DarkenPercussion (all tracks except 6) Dan DugmoreSteel Guitar (all tracks) Béla FleckBanjo (track 6) Shannon ForrestDrums (all tracks) Aubrey HaynieFiddle (tracks 1, 3, 4, 7–13), Mandolin (tracks 5, 12, 13) Wes Hightower – Background Vocals (all tracks except 6) Gordon MoteB-3 organ (tracks 4, 7), Keyboards (track 4), piano (all tracks except 2 & 3), Wurlitzer (tracks 2, 3) Brad PaisleyAcoustic Guitar (track 10), Electric guitar (track 10), Duet Vocals (track 10) Michael Rhodes – Bass guitar (all tracks except 9 & 10), Fretless Bass (track 9) Darius Rucker – Lead Vocals (all tracks) Bryan Sutton – Banjo (tracks 5, 7), Acoustic Guitar (all tracks except 10), Mandolin (track 1) Ilya Toshinsky – Banjo (tracks 1, 11), Bouzouki (track 7), Mandolin (track 2), National Steel Guitar (track 6) Chad Weaver – C-Bender Guitar (track 10)Production Brady Barnett – Digital Editing Richard Barrow – Engineer, Overdub Engineer Steve Beers – Assistant Engineer Drew Bollman – Mixing Assistant Neal Cappellino – Overdub Engineer Joanna Carter – Art Direction Michelle Hall – Producer Gina Ketchum – Make-Up, Wardrobe Tyler Moles – Digital Editing Seth Morton – Mixing Assistant John Netti – Assistant Engineer Justin Niebank – Mixing Rich Ramsey – Assistant Engineer Frank Rogers – Producer Wendy Stamberger – Design Phillip Stein – Digital Editing, Production Assistant Hank Williams – Mastering Brian David Willis – Digital Editing Jim Wright – Photography

Charts

Chart (2010–2011)Peak position
Weekly charts Chart (2010–2011) Peak position Canadian Albums (Billboard) 12 UK Country Albums (OCC) 1 US Billboard 200 2 US Top Country Albums (Billboard) 1Year-end charts Chart (2010) Position US Billboard 200 160 US Top Country Albums (Billboard) 32 Chart (2011) Position US Billboard 200 101 US Top Country Albums (Billboard) 21 Singles Year Single Peak chart positions US Country US CAN 2010 "Come Back Song" 1 37 87 "This" 1 51 84 2011 "I Got Nothin'" 17 84 — "—" denotes releases that did not chart
Canadian Albums (Billboard)12
UK Country Albums (OCC)1
US Billboard 2002
US Top Country Albums (Billboard)1
Chart (2010)Position
US Billboard 200160
US Top Country Albums (Billboard)32
Chart (2011)Position
US Billboard 200101
US Top Country Albums (Billboard)21
YearSinglePeak chart positions
US CountryUSCAN
2010"Come Back Song"13787
"This"15184
2011"I Got Nothin'"1784
"—" denotes releases that did not chart

Certifications

RegionCertificationCertified units/sales
United States (RIAA)Gold500,000^
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.