Carrie Underwood keeps the country hits coming

CARRIE UNDERWOOD “Carnival Ride” (Arista) Grade: B Carrie Underwood is a pretty girl with a pretty voice, singing pretty songs about, presumably, pretty people. And that makes the whole package - including her new album “Carnival Ride,” like the multi-platinum, award-winning smash before it “Some Hearts” - all kinda nice, if predictable. Unlike her fellow “American Idol” winners, Underwood feels no need to break away from the hit-making fold. In fact, she embraces it.

That means “Carnival Ride” goes down extraordinarily easy - lots of lush, inspirational ballads that make the most of her gorgeous voice and a handful of rock-tinged up-tempo numbers about getting out of town or following your dreams, where she channels the Dixie Chicks, without all that, you know, messy political stuff. “Carnival Ride” sticks incredibly close to the formula of “Some Hearts,” which is the second-biggest selling album of the past two years.

The glorious first single “So Small” could be “Jesus Take the Wheel (Part Deux)” - the installment where the once-desperate girl has learned her lessons and can now offer advice, including, “Sometimes that mountain you’ve been climbing is just a grain of sand.” The fact that “So Small” takes so similar a path - from the tempo to the phrasing to the swell of strings - seems like a minor quibble, considering the stirring results.

However, after it happens time and time again, “Carnival Ride” starts to pick up an assembly-line feel that is only staved off by Underwood’s standout delivery. She angles for a “Before He Cheats”-type pop crossover with “Last Name,” right down to the plodding guitar.

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