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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rflatts.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:Left to right: Joe Don Rooney, Jay [=DeMarcus=], and Gary [=LeVox=]]]
3->''Life is a highway,\
4I wanna ride it all night long,\
5If you're going my way,\
6I wanna drive it all night long.''
7-->"Life Is a Highway"
8
9A prominent CountryMusic band known for its slick country-pop production. It was founded in 1999 by lead singer Gary [=LeVox=], his second cousin Jay [=DeMarcus=] (bass guitar, piano, keyboards), and Joe Don Rooney (guitar). [=DeMarcus=] and [=LeVox=] first made themselves known as members of Music/ChelyWright's road band, meeting Rooney after another musician in the band didn't show up.
10
11Rascal Flatts signed with Disney's then newly-formed country music label, Lyric Street Records (a division of Creator/HollywoodRecords), in 1999. The band led off its career with a highly successful album that produced four Top 10 hits. Next in the series came ''Melt'', which produced their first Number One hit, "These Days." The band's momentum has continued through six studio albums and one GreatestHitsAlbum for Lyric Street. Following the 2010 closure of Lyric Street, the band was to have transferred to another Disney label, but instead went with the independent Creator/BigMachineRecords.
12
13The band's sound is quite divisive in country music: although it was always much closer to pop than most mainstream country, they were generally met with positive reception on their first albums. Starting with ''Me and My Gang,'' the band's sound has become much more processed and reliant on bombastic guitar and strings, after changing {{Record Producer}}s from Mark Bright to Dann Huff. With the switch to Big Machine, their sound once again mellowed somewhat, culminating in their abandonment of Huff (except for one track) on 2014's ''Rewind''. Starting in 2018, the band announced that it would be releasing standalone singles instead of full albums... followed in 2020 by the announcement of their retirement. However, their farewell tour was delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. After Joe Don Rooney's summer 2021 arrest for a DUI, he formally quit the band and Rascal Flatts quietly disbanded.
14
15Rascal Flatts was initially known for a breezy country-pop sound indebted to the then-contemporary BoyBand movement, but gradually shifted toward a more PowerBallad-driven sound on later albums. Many of their songs feature three-part vocal harmony arrangements fronted by [=LeVox's=] distinct nasal tenor voice.
16
17!!Albums:
18* ''Rascal Flatts'' (2000)
19* ''Melt'' (2002)
20* ''Feels Like Today'' (2004)
21* ''Me and My Gang'' (2006)
22* ''Still Feels Good'' (2007)
23* ''Greatest Hits Volume 1'' (2008)
24* ''Unstoppable'' (2009)
25* ''Nothing Like This'' (2010) First album for Big Machine.
26* ''Changed'' (2012)
27* ''Rewind'' (2014)
28* ''Back to Us'' (2017)
29
30!!Tropes present:
31* AsHimself: The band appeared as themselves in an episode of ''{{Series/CSI}}'' which centered around [=DeMarcus=] suffering amnesia after getting shocked by his bass.
32* BandOfRelatives: [=LeVox=] and [=DeMarcus=] are second cousins.
33* BoyBand: The first album tried to cast them in this image: none of them played any instruments on it, and the songs were very lightweight and hooky. The harmonies stayed, but Rooney and [=DeMarcus=] began playing instruments on the second album.
34* CarefulWithThatAxe: The TitleScream of "[[LyricalColdOpen BOB! THAT! HEAD!]]" It got to the point that some stations actually cut out the intro...however, there's a second title scream near the end...
35* CensorshipBySpelling: Used in "Backwards":
36--> We sat there and shot the bull about how it would be
37-->If we could turn it all around and change this C-R-A-P
38* CommonTime: A surprising number of aversions: "I'm Movin' On," "Feels Like Today," "Skin (Sarabeth)", "Every Day", "Easy" (a duet with Music/NatashaBedingfield), "Come Wake Me Up", and "Back to Life" are all in 3/4 or 6/8.
39* CoverVersion: “Life Is a Highway” by Tom Cochrane.
40* DeclarationOfProtection: "I Won't Let Go" certainly has shades of this.
41-->I will stand by you\
42I will help you through\
43When you've done all you can do\
44And you can't cope\
45I will dry your eyes\
46I will fight your fight\
47I will hold you tight and I won't let go
48* DepartmentOfRedundancyDepartment: The liner notes to ''Rewind'' credit the production to "Rascal Flatts and Jay [=DeMarcus=]".
49* {{Determinator}}: The subject of "Stand" is one of these, overcoming an undefined life obstacle and described in open-ended metaphors such as "a picture with a broken frame".
50* DistinctDoubleAlbum: ''Greatest Hits'' came with a bonus EP of ChristmasSongs to coincide with its late-year release.
51* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: Their first three albums are more lighthearted feel-good country pop, with the first in particular pushing a more BoyBand image (lightweight hooky songs, none of the band members playing their own instruments). This stands in contrast to the heavier, more PowerBallad-driven sound of "What Hurts the Most" onward.
52* FakeShemp: When on tour with Music/SaraEvans in 2012, they often had her sing Natasha Bedingfield's part on "Easy".
53* FanFlattering: "Here's to You":
54-->It's the girls in the front row singin'\
55It's the boys with the wheels that bring them\
56Its lighters in the air and you guys up there\
57You're the heart and soul and the reason we do what we do\
58Here's to you
59* GriefSong: "Why" ponders the [[DrivenToSuicide suicide of a loved one]].
60* HeavyMeta: "Backwards" pokes fun at the {{Dead Unicorn Trope}}s of country music by using the old joke about playing a country song backwards and getting one's dog, truck, wife, etc. back.
61* HiddenTrack: "Skin (Sarabeth)" was a hidden track on ''Feels Like Today'', done as LoopholeAbuse to get around the label's limitations on how many tracks the album could have. A program director accidentally discovered the song and started playing it, causing it to get as high as #38 while then-current single "Fast Cars and Freedom" was climbing. Due to the attention it got, "Skin" was issued as a single after "Fast Cars and Freedom" had peaked, and a re-issue of the album officially added it to the track listing.
62* InTheStyleOf:
63** "Me and My Gang" is a blatant emulation of Music/BigAndRich's sound.
64** The band wrote "Winner at a Losing Game" with the intent of making a song in the style of the Music/{{Eagles}}.
65* InsomniaEpisode: "Prayin' For Daylight," about being unable to sleep in the wake of a break-up.
66* LeadBassist: Jay [=DeMarcus=] has a number of songwriting and production credits outside of the band.
67* LongRunnerLineUp: Same three guys from 1999 to 2020.
68* LoudnessWar: One criticism of Dann Huff's production style in general: he tends to layer on screaming electric guitars and strings way too heavily, causing Gary to oversing to a sometimes ear-splitting degree just to be heard over all the noise.
69* LustfulMelt: "I Melt," which is ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin.
70* LyricalDissonance: "Prayin' For Daylight" sounds very bright and upbeat despite the subject matter about someone reeling from the failure of a relationship.
71* LyricalShoehorn: "The last sacred blessing and, '''hey''' / Feels like today" in "Feels Like Today". Really? That was the best rhyme the writers could come up with?
72* LyricSwap: In "I Know You Won't", the first chorus says "You say you'll call, but I know you won't." After that the lyric is, "You say you'll ''change'', but I know you won't," showing the situation as even more hopeless.
73* LyricalTic: Gary tends to sing a lot of "yeah"s and "ooh"s between words, particularly at the end of songs. And if he's not doing that, he's drawing out the last note melismatically. [[BreadEggsBreadedEggs Or singing "yeah" or "ooh" melismatically.]]
74* MeaningfulName: Gary [=LeVox=] is a stage name, which means "The Voice." His real surname is Vernon.
75* MelismaticVocals: A common criticism of [=LeVox=] is that he ''really'' overdoes the melisma.
76* NewSoundAlbum: Their second Big Machine album, ''Changed'', seems to be hinting at this. Many fans consider the Big Machine era a return to form after the critically-derided bombast of their last few years at Lyric Street.
77** ''Rewind'' also seems to be an example, as they finally ditched Huff in favor of producing by themselves.
78* PowerBallad: "What Hurts the Most" codified Dann Huff's bombastic style for them.
79* ThePowerOfLove: "Unstoppable" has the lyric "Love is unstoppable".
80* RecordProducer: [=DeMarcus=] has produced albums by James Otto (his brother-in-law), Music/{{Chicago}}, and [[Music/BrooksAndDunn Kix Brooks]].
81* RewindGag: "Rewind" is about wanting to "rewind" a special night with a lover just to experience the feeling of doing it again. Naturally, the music video shows this happening.
82* ShoutOut: In "Rewind", there is a line that says he wishes he could "try to talk Music/GeorgeStrait into giving us an encore" — a double meaning, as this refers not only the narrator's desire to "rewind" a good night with his girl and do it all over again, but also a subtle plea for Strait to continue touring even after his last tour.
83* SingingVoiceDissonance: Gary's fairly US American speaking voice is in stark contrast to his very Canadian singing voice.
84* SignatureStyle: They have a tendency toward songs that start off soft and quiet, usually with just Gary [=LeVox's=] voice and a piano. Then a soft chorus, medium second verse and chorus where the electric guitars join in, and loud, bombastic bridge/final chorus replete with a string section and lots of MelismaticVocals. [=LeVox=] himself has a tendency to end a lot of songs with a falsetto "ooh" or "yeah".
85* StepUpToTheMicrophone: Gary lets Joe Don and Jay share the lead vocal on "Long Slow Beautiful Dance" and "A Little Home". They did likewise for two Christmas releases: a rendition of "God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen" made for a multi-artist Christmas album in 2001, and a cover of "Mary, Did You Know?" nine years later.
86* StockJoke: "Backwards" is an entire song built around the age-old joke of "What happens when you play a country song backwards?" (You get your house back, your truck back, and your wife back. The song includes those, and throws in your mind, your nerves, your first night in jail, your best friend, and your ''hair.'')
87* TruckDriversGearChange: Some of their songs use this:
88** "Summer Nights" goes up a half-step twice at the end. By the final chorus, it's too high for even Gary to sing, and he noticeably sounds strained.
89** In an odd variant, "Easy" goes up a minor third (C♯ minor to E minor) halfway through the second verse.
90* UndyingLoyalty: "I Won't Let Go".
91* VideoFullOfFilmClips: "Life Is a Highway" features several clips from ''WesternAnimation/Cars1'', on whose soundtrack it was included.
92* VocalEvolution: [=LeVox=] has always had a very high, nasal tenor voice, but for the most part he used it well. Come the Huff era, however, the production became so loud that he had to oversing just to be heard over the wall of sound — his voice would often become a grating, whiny, over-sung squeal that often went off-key. Now that the production has been dialed back down with the move to Big Machine, he's gone back to his original sound for the most part.

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