1. Is There Any Way (You'd Stay Forever) (2:45) - Instruments include horns. This moderate-paced tune is sung from the perspective of a woman who has high interest in the man she sings to. He seems like the kind of guy who knows where he's going and what he wants. He probably believes a romantic relationship would hinder his life, so she does all he can to persuade him to stick with her for eternity. For me, the most memorable lines in this song are: "You're a man / A woman can / Give it all to."
2. That's The Way A Cowboy Rocks And Rolls (3:21) - This song has a moderate tempo. The drums and other instruments are somewhat subdued. The lyrics profile a typical cowboy: He frequents saloons and drinks beer. He dances with women, loves them for a time, then leaves them. He roams the countryside in a pickup truck.
3. What's Happened To Blue Eyes (2:19) - This moderately slow song opens with an 11-second piano solo. The narrator searches desperately for her blue-eyed boyfriend from whom she has been separated a long time. She believes he might also be looking for her, so she hopes he has not given up on her. Jessi also recorded this song as "I'm Looking For Blue Eyes" with a few lyrical variations.
4. I Thought I Heard You Calling My Name (3:53) - This is a nice song to slow-dance to. The narrator still loves the man she sings to, even though he has left her for another woman. Despite many miles' distance between them, she can't help but hear him call her name. Once Jessi stops singing, a fiddle somberly plays lead as the song fades out.
5. I'm Not Lisa (3:20) - This slow song is Jessi's biggest hit. After a 34-second piano solo, Jessi starts singing. After the first verse, drums and other instruments enter. Jessi plays the role of a woman named Julie. The man she loves still has not fully recovered from the heartbreak he suffered years before, when his previous girlfriend Lisa left him for another man. So now Julie tells him to break the habit of saying the name "Lisa," assuring him that she (Julie) will still love him when morning comes.
6. Without You (3:56) - This fast song has a slow intro, the first 10 seconds consisting of a piano solo. Without the man she sings to, the narrator has "got no song to sing"; her reason to live will be gone. The middle instrumental, with a steel guitar on lead, sounds much like instrumentals in Waylon's songs such as "You Asked Me To."
7. Maybe You Should've Been Listening (4:35) - This song has a waltz tempo somewhat slower than moderate. Jessi portrays a woman who can't get her ex-boyfriend out of her mind. Whether he was listening or not when she told him goodbye, physical separation and purging of memories are two different things. The theme here sounds similar to Waylon's "Walk On Out Of My Mind."
8. It's Morning (And I Still Love You) (2:21) - The tempo is moderately slow. The title alone is enough to tell that the narrator wants more than a one-night stand from the man she sings to; she wants a committed relationship.
9. Hold Back The Tears (3:00) - Here's another moderately slow song. The narrator apparently sings to a man who's just a friend. She can understand that he's been through some trauma, but when his friends come to see him, he needs to overcome the urge to cry, to replace his negative feelings with positive ones.
10. Here I Am (3:43) - This song is slow simple. Besides a piano, the only instruments are orchestral strings, and then those come in during the last minute, after Jessi stops singing. She sings so softly that one needs to listen closely to make out some of the words. But I can tell that her character in the song feels lonely whenever she and her man are separated. "Here I am, here I'll stay" is her pledge of eternal love to him.