Big Backyard Beat Show is the second album by the American band BR5-49, released in 1998.[1][2] It peaked at No. 38 on Billboard's Top Country Albums chart and at No. 7 on the UK Country Artists Album chart.[3][4] The first single was "Wild One", a cover of the Johnny O'Keefe song; it was nominated for a Grammy Award for "Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal".[5][6][7] The band supported the album with North American and UK tours.[8][9]
The Baltimore Sun concluded that, "as clever as the lyrics sometimes are, the album's real allure is its blend of boogie piano, blues guitar, honky tonk twang, and Tex-Mex exuberance."[22] The Lincoln Journal Star wrote that "Chuck Mead and Gary Bennett are both solid writers—Mead's work tends toward the rock end of things while Bennett recycles the old country feel in his hurtin' songs."[23]USA Today noted that the originals "tend toward the dark or humorous, though guitarist Gary Bennett's 'Storybook Endings (If You Stop Believin')' has both a lyric and a meter that Roger Miller would've appreciated."[25]The Ottawa Citizen stated that "rockabilly, one of modern country music's principal roots, is a key element in the group's recipe."[24]The Scotsman considered the music to be "fired by a raw-edged punk sensibility and mellowed with authentic back-porch charm."[27]
The Washington Post said that Mead "has a dark, humorous streak, as heard in the paean to road rage, '18 Wheels and a Crowbar', and in 'Goodbye, Maria', a tale of suicide set to the happy-sad strains of a polka."[28]The Atlanta Journal-Constitution opined: "Like the Stray Cats or Big Bad Voodoo Daddy, BR5-49 has plopped down in a musical era—in this case, 1950s big-twang, cigarettes-and-ashtrays country—which it excavates like an obsessed college kid in a vintage clothing store."[21] The Los Angeles Times determined that Mead and Bennett "lack the vocal depth and character to make BR5-49 more than a particularly skilled bar band with a well-developed playful streak."[14]The Boston Globe wrote that "BR5-49 owe a great deal of their success to a flat refusal to distill the genre for the sake of accessibility."[16]