Kenny Chesney is 14 albums into his career as a country musician, and with the success he has had, it’d be hard to tell him to shake it up.

For the most part, Chesney opts to stick with the topics that have made him platinum 17-times over on his new album, “Hemingway’s Whiskey.”

“You and Tequila” dwells on the artist’s favorite liquor, much like his previous song “Tequila Loves Me.” “Coastal” explains his predilection for deep-sea fishing and other shore-side activities, just as “When the Sun Goes Down,” “No Shoes, No Shirt, No Problem,” and metaphorical hundreds of songs that have done before.

What the title of the album refers to is anyone’s guess. Hemingway and Chesney both have well-known attractions to the beach, but that’s about it. Chesney needs to work on both his songwriting and his beard-growing if he is looking to make a comparison to the classic author.

Chesney takes one of his common themes, memories of better days, and spins it so that it comes across as fresh for his first single.

“Boys of Fall” is a song describing the fun and camaraderie embodied by youth football, and Chesney employs the help of sound bites to make it all the more stirring. The song opens with a high school coach preparing his team for battle and invoking them to enjoy their youth. The effect is successful and makes the rest of the song much easier to digest.

Even better is the music video, which includes football icons like Peyton Manning and John Madden adding their own stories to a documentary-like portion of the video.

The moral is this: Chesney has found tremendous success doing what he does. If you’re a Chesney fan, you won’t be disappointed. But anyone looking for a new bent in country music: Look elsewhere.