Showing posts with label American Music Award. Show all posts
Showing posts with label American Music Award. Show all posts

Sunday, February 2, 2025

Country Music: Albums of the Year

Country Music:

Albums of the Year

Since 1967, both the Academy of Country Music and the Country Music Association have handed out awards for Album of the Year. The Grammys gave a country album award in 1965 and 1966, but then discontinued it until 1995. The American Music Awards have given out a Country Album of the Year award since 1974. Billboard magazine has acknowledged the country album of the year since 1990. Finally, Dave’s Music Database has acknowledged the best country album of the year since 1965. This page will show which albums won for any of the four awards each year.

Check out other album of the year awards here.


2024:
  • DMDB: Beyoncé Cowboy Carter
  • Grammy: Beyoncé Cowboy Carter

2023:
  • ACM: Chris Stapleton Higher
  • CMA: Cody Johnson Leather
  • DMDB: Morgan Wallen One Thing at a Time
  • Grammy: Lainey Wilson Bell Bottom Country

2022:
  • ACM: Lainey Wilson Bell Bottom Country
  • AMA: Taylor Swift Red (Taylor’s Version)
  • Billboard: Taylor Swift Red (Taylor’s Version)
  • CMA: Lainey Wilson Bell Bottom Country
  • DMDB: Zach Bryan American Heartbreak
  • Grammy: Willie Nelson A Beautiful Time

2021:
2020:
  • ACM: Chris Stapleton Starting Over
  • AMA: Blake Shelton Fully Loaded: God’s Country
  • Billboard: Luke Combs What You See Is What You Get
  • CMA: Chris Stapleton Starting Over
  • DMDB: Chris Stapleton Starting Over
  • Grammy: Miranda Lambert Wildcard

2019:
  • ACM: Luke Combs What You See Is What You Get
  • AMA: Carrie Underwood Cry Pretty
  • Billboard: Luke Combs This One’s for You
  • CMA: Maren Morris Girl
  • DMDB: Various Artists Country Music (box set: 1928-2002)
  • Grammy: Tanya Tucker While I’m Living

2018:
2017:
  • ACM: Chris Stapleton From a Room: Volume 1
  • AMA: Keith Urban Ripcord
  • Billboard: Chris Stapleton Traveller
  • CMA: Chris Stapleton From a Room: Volume 1
  • DMDB: Luke Combs This One’s for You
  • Grammy: Chris Stapleton From a Room: Volume 1

2016:
2015:
  • ACM: Chris Stapleton Traveller
  • AMA: Florida Georgia Line Anything Goes
  • Billboard: Jason Aldean Old Boots, New Dirt
  • CMA: Chris Stapleton Traveller
  • DMDB: Chris Stapleton Traveller
  • Grammy: Chris Stapleton Traveller

2014:
  • ACM: Miranda Lambert Platinum
  • AMA: Brantley Gilbert Just As I Am
  • Billboard: Luke Bryan Crash My Party
  • CMA: Miranda Lambert Platinum
  • DMDB: Miranda Lambert Platinum
  • Grammy: Miranda Lambert Platinum

2013:
  • ACM: Kacey Musgraves Same Trailer, Different Park
  • AMA: Taylor Swift Red
  • Billboard: Taylor Swift Red
  • CMA: Blake Shelton Based on a True Story
  • DMDB: Kacey Musgraves Same Trailer, Different Park
  • Grammy: Kacey Musgraves Same Trailer, Different Park

2012:
  • ACM: Eric Church Chief
  • AMA: Carrie Underwood Blown Away
  • Billboard: Jason Aldean My Kinda Party
  • CMA: Eric Church Chief
  • DMDB: Taylor Swift Red
  • Grammy: Zac Brown Band Uncaged

2011:
  • ACM: Miranda Lambert For the Record
  • AMA: Taylor Swift Speak Now
  • Billboard: Taylor Swift Speak Now
  • CMA: Jason Aldean My Kind of Party
  • DMDB: Jason Aldean My Kind of Party
  • Grammy: Lady Antebellum Own the Night

2010:
2009:
  • ACM: Miranda Lambert Revolution
  • AMA: Taylor Swift Fearless
  • CMA: Taylor Swift Fearless
  • DMDB: Miranda Lambert Revolution
  • Grammy: Taylor Swift Fearless

2008:
  • ACM: Taylor Swift Fearless
  • AMA: Carrie Underwood Carnival Ride
  • CMA: George Strait Troubadour
  • DMDB: Taylor Swift Fearless
  • Grammy: George Strait Troubadour

2007:
  • ACM: Miranda Lambert Crazy Ex-Girlfriend
  • AMA: Carrie Underwood Some Hearts
  • CMA: George Strait It Just Comes Natural
  • DMDB: Miranda Lambert Crazy Ex-Girlfriend
  • Grammy: Vince Gill These Days

2006:
2005:
  • ACM: Brad Paisey Time Well Wasted
  • AMA: Tim McGraw Live Like You Were Dying
  • CMA: Lee Ann Womack There’s More Where That Came From
  • DMDB: Carrie Underwood Some Hearts
  • Grammy: Alison Krauss & Union Station Lonely Runs Both Ways

2004:
  • ACM: Keith Urban Be Here
  • AMA: Toby Keith Shock’n Y’All
  • CMA: Kenny Chesney When the Sun Goes Down
  • DMDB: Loretta Lynn Van Lear Rose
  • Grammy: Loretta Lynn Van Lear Rose

2003:
  • ACM: Toby Keith Shock’n Y’All
  • AMA: Dixie Chicks Home
  • AMA: Toby Keith Unleashed
  • Billboard: Shania Twain Up!
  • CMA: Johnny Cash American IV: The Man Comes Around
  • DMDB: Toby Keith Shock’n Y’All
  • Grammy: Various Artists Livin', Lovin', Losin': Songs of the Louvin Brothers

2002:
  • ACM: Alan Jackson Drive
  • AMA: Tim McGraw Set This Circus Down
  • CMA: Alan Jackson Drive
  • DMDB: Dixie Chicks Home
  • Grammy: Dixie Chicks Home

2001:
2000:
1999:
  • ACM: Dixie Chicks Fly
  • AMA: Garth Brooks Sevens
  • CMA: Tim McGraw A Place in the Sun
  • DMDB: Dixie Chicks Fly
  • Grammy: Dixie Chicks Fly

1998:
1997:
  • ACM: George Strait Carrying Your Love with Me
  • AMA: George Strait Blue Clear Sky
  • CMA: George Strait Carrying Your Love with Me
  • DMDB: Shania Twain Come on Over
  • Grammy: Johnny Cash American II: Unchained

1996:
  • ACM: George Strait Blue Clear Sky
  • AMA: Garth Brooks The Hits
  • CMA: George Strait Blue Clear Sky
  • DMDB: LeAnn Rimes Blue
  • Grammy: Lyle Lovett The Road to Ensenada

1995:
1994:
  • ACM: Tim McGraw Not a Moment Too Soon
  • AMA: Alan Jackson A Lot About Livin’ and a Little ‘Bout Love
  • CMA: Various Artists Common Thread: The Songs of the Eagles
  • DMDB: Johnny Cash American Recordings
  • Grammy: Mary Chapin Carpenter
  • Stones in the Road

1993:
  • ACM: Alan Jackson A Lot About Livin’ and a Little ‘Bout Love
  • AMA: Reba McEntire For My Broken Heart
  • CMA: Vince Gill I Still Believe in You
  • DMDB: Garth Brooks In Pieces

1992:
1991:
  • ACM: Alan Jackson Don’t Rock the Jukebox
  • AMA: Reba McEntire Reba Live (live)
  • Billboard: Garth Brooks No Fences
  • CMA: Garth Brooks No Fences
  • DMDB: Garth Brooks Ropin’ the Wind

1990:
  • ACM: Garth Brooks No Fences
  • AMA: Randy Travis Old 8 x 10
  • Billboard: Clint Black Killin’ Time
  • CMA: Kentucky Headhunters Pickin’ on Nashville
  • DMDB: Garth Brooks No Fences

1989:
  • ACM: Clint Black Killin’ Time
  • AMA: Randy Travis Always and Forever
  • CMA: Nitty Gritty Dirt Band Will the Circle Be Unbroken Vol. 2
  • DMDB: Clint Black Killin’ Time

1988:
  • ACM: K.T. Oslin This Woman
  • AMA: Randy Travis Always and Forever
  • CMA: Hank Williams Jr. Born to Boogie
  • DMDB: Lyle Lovett Pontiac

1987:
  • ACM: Dolly Parton with Linda Ronstadt & Emmylou Harris Trio
  • AMA: Alabama Greatest Hits (compilation: 1980-86, released 1986)
  • CMA: Randy Travis Always and Forever
  • DMDB: Randy Travis Always and Forever

1986:
  • ACM: Randy Travis Storms of Life
  • AMA: Alabama 40 Hour Week
  • CMA: Ronnie Milsap Lost in the Fifties Tonight
  • DMDB: Steve Earle Guitar Town

1985:
  • ACM: George Strait Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your Mind?
  • AMA: Kenny Rogers Eyes That See in the Dark
  • CMA: George Strait Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your Mind?
  • DMDB: Alabama 40 Hour Week

1984:
  • ACM: Alabama Roll On
  • AMA: Alabama The Closer You Get
  • CMA: Anne Murray A Little Good News
  • DMDB: Alabama Roll On

1983:
  • ACM: Alabama The Closer You Get
  • AMA: Willie Nelson Always on My Mind
  • CMA: Alabama The Closer You Get
  • DMDB: Alabama The Closer You Get

1982:
1981:
  • ACM: Alabama Feels So Right
  • AMA: Kenny Rogers The Gambler
  • CMA: Don Williams I Believe in You
  • DMDB: Alabama Feels So Right

1980:
  • ACM: Urban Cowboy soundtrack
  • AMA: Kenny Rogers The Gambler
  • CMA: Loretta Lynn Coal Miner’s Daughter soundtrack
  • DMDB: Loretta Lynn Coal Miner’s Daughter soundtrack

1979:
  • ACM: Larry Gatlin Straight Ahead
  • AMA: Kenny Rogers Ten Years of Gold (compilation: 1967-77, released 1978)
  • CMA: Kenny Rogers The Gambler
  • DMDB: Kenny Rogers Kenny

1978:
  • ACM: The Oak Ridge Boys Y’All Come Back Saloon
  • AMA: Dolly Parton New Harvest…First Gathering
  • CMA: Ronnie Milsap It Was Almost Like a Song
  • DMDB: Kenny Rogers The Gambler

1977:
  • ACM: Kenny Rogers Kenny Rogers
  • AMA: Glen Campbell Rhinestone Cowboy
  • CMA: Ronnie Milsap Live
  • DMDB: Elvis Presley Moody Blue

1976:
  • ACM: Mickey Gilley Gilley’s Smoking
  • AMA: John Denver Back Home Again
  • CMA: Waylon Jennings with Willie Nelson, Tompall Glaser, & Jessi Colter Wanted! The Outlaws
  • DMDB: Waylon Jennings with Willie Nelson, Tompall Glaser, & Jessi Colter Wanted! The Outlaws

1975:
  • ACM: Conway Twitty & Loretta Lynn Feelins’
  • AMA: Olivia Newton-John Let Me Be There
  • CMA: Ronnie Milsap A Legend in My Time
  • DMDB: Willie Nelson Red-Headed Stranger

1974:
  • ACM: John Denver Back Home Again
  • AMA: Charley Pride A Sunshiny Day with Charley Pride
  • CMA: Charlie Rich Very Special Love Songs
  • DMDB: Gram Parsons Grievous Angel

1973:
  • ACM: Charlie Rich Behind Closed Doors
  • CMA: Charlie Rich Behind Closed Doors
  • DMDB: Gram Parsons G.P.

1972:
  • ACM: Donna Fargo The Happiest Girl in the Whole U.S.A.
  • CMA: Merle Haggard Let Me Tell You About a Song
  • DMDB: Nitty Gritty Dirt Band Will the Circle Be Unbroken

1971:
  • ACM: Freddie Hart Easy Loving
  • CMA: Ray Price I Won’t Mention It Again
  • DMDB: Dolly Parton Coat of Many Colors

1970:
  • ACM: Ray Price For the Good Times
  • CMA: Merle Haggard Okie from Muskogee
  • DMDB: Kris Kristofferson Kristofferson (aka “Me and Bobby McGee”)

1969:
1968:
1967:
  • ACM: Glen Campbell Gentle on My Mind
  • CMA: Jack Greene There Goes My Everything
  • DMDB: Glen Campbell By the Time I Get to Phoenix

1966:
  • DMDB: Buck Owens Carnegie Hall Concert
  • Grammy: Roger Miller The Return of Roger Miller

1965:
  • DMDB: Eddy Arnold My World
  • Grammy: Roger Miller Dang Me/Chug-A-Lug

Resources and Related Links:


First posted 9/16/2020; last updated 2/2/2025.

Sunday, February 4, 2024

R&B: Albums of the Year

R&B:

Albums of the Year

This page consolidates the R&B Album of the Year awards as given by the American Music Awards (1974-present), Billboard (1990-present with some years where award wasn’t given), the Grammys (1995-present), and Soul Train (1997-2004, 2009-present). The Grammys also had a Best Contemporary R&B Album category (2003-2011) and Best Progressive R&B Award (2013-present). Also included is the album each year from 1967 to present which rates highest in Dave’s Music Database.

Check out other album of the year awards here.


2024:
  • Grammy: Victoria Monét Jaguar II

2023:
  • Billboard: SZA SOS
  • Grammy: Robert Glasper Black Radio III
  • Soul Train: SZA SOS

2022:
  • AMA: Beyoncé Renaissance
  • Billboard: The Weeknd The Highlights
  • DMDB: Beyoncé Renaissance
  • Grammy: Jazmine Sullivan Heaux Tales
  • Soul Train: Beyoncé Renaissance

2021:
  • AMA: Doja Cat Planet Her
  • Billboard: Doja Cat Planet Her
  • DMDB: Doja Cat Planet Her
  • Grammy: John Legend Bigger Love
  • Soul Train: Jazmine Sullivan Heaux Tales

2020:
  • AMA: The Weeknd After Hours
  • Billboard: The Weeknd After Hours
  • DMDB: The Weeknd After Hours
  • Grammy: Anderson.Paak Ventura
  • Grammy – Progressive: Lizzo Cuz I Love You
  • Soul Train: Summer Walker Over It

2019:
  • AMA: Khalid Free Spirit
  • Billboard: Khalid Free Spirit
  • DMDB: Lizzo Cuz I Love You
  • Grammy: H.E.R. H.E.R.
  • Grammy – Progressive: The Carters (Jay-Z & Beyoncé) Everything Is Love
  • Soul Train: Lizzo Cuz I Love You

2018:
  • AMA: XXXTentacion 17
  • Billboard: XXXTentacion 17
  • DMDB: Janelle Monáe Dirty Computer
  • Grammy: Bruno Mars 24K Magic
  • Grammy – Progressive: The Weeknd Starboy
  • Soul Train: H.E.R. H.E.R.

2017:
  • AMA: Bruno Mars 24K Magic
  • Billboard: Bruno Mars 24K Magic
  • DMDB: Kendrick Lamar Damn.
  • Grammy: Lalah Hathaway Lalah Hathaway Live
  • Grammy – Progressive: Beyoncé Lemonade
  • Soul Train: Bruno Mars 24K Magic

2016:
  • AMA: Rihanna Anti
  • Billboard: Beyoncé Lemonade
  • DMDB: Beyoncé Lemonade
  • Grammy: D’Angelo & the Vanguard Black Messiah
  • Grammy – Progressive: The Weeknd Beauty Behind the Madness
  • Soul Train: Beyoncé Lemonade

2015:
  • AMA: The Weeknd Beauty Behind the Madness
  • Billboard: The Weeknd Beauty Behind the Madness
  • DMDB: Kendrick Lamar To Pimp a Butterfly
  • Grammy: Toni Braxton & Babyface Love, Marriage & Divorce
  • Grammy – Progressive: Pharrell Williams GIRL
  • Soul Train: The Weeknd Beauty Behind the Madness

2014:
  • AMA: Beyoncé Beyoncé
  • Billboard: Pharrell Williams Girl
  • DMDB: D’Angelo & the Vanguard Black Messiah
  • Grammy: Alicia Keys Girl on Fire
  • Grammy – Progressive: Rihanna Unapologetic
  • Soul Train: Beyoncé Beyoncé

2013:
  • AMA: Justin Timberlake The 20/20 Experience
  • Billboard: Justin Timberlake The 20/20 Experience
  • DMDB: Beyoncé Beyoncé
  • Grammy: Robert Glasper Experiment Black Radio
  • Grammy – Progressive: Frank Ocean Channel Orange
  • Soul Train: Kendrick Lamar Good Kid m.A.A.d. City

2012:
  • AMA: Rihanna Talk That Talk
  • Billboard: Rihanna Unapologetic
  • DMDB: Frank Ocean Channel Orange
  • Grammy: Chris Brown F.A.M.E.
  • Soul Train: Frank Ocean Channel Orange

2011:
  • AMA: Rihanna Loud
  • Billboard: Beyoncé 4
  • DMDB: Beyoncé 4
  • Grammy: John Legend & the Roots Wake Up!
  • Grammy – Contemporary: Usher Raymond v. Raymond
  • Soul Train: Chris Brown F.A.M.E.

2010:
  • AMA: Usher Raymond v. Raymond
  • Billboard: Usher Raymond v. Raymond
  • DMDB: Bruno Mars Doo Wops & Hooligans
  • Grammy: Maxwell Black Summer’s Night
  • Grammy – Contemporary: Beyoncé I Am…Sasha Fierce
  • Soul Train: Usher Raymond v. Raymond

2009:
  • AMA: Michael Jackson Number Ones
  • DMDB: Maxwell Black Summer’s Night
  • Grammy: Jennifer Hudson Jennifer Hudson
  • Grammy – Contemporary: Mary J. Blige Growing Pains
  • Soul Train: Beyoncé I Am…Sasha Fierce

2008:
  • AMA: Alicia Keys As I Am
  • DMDB: Beyoncé I Am…Sasha Fierce
  • Grammy: Chaka Khan Funk This
  • Grammy – Contemporary: Ne-Yo Because of You

2007:
2006:
2005:
2004:
2003:
2002:
2001:
  • AMA: Toni Braxton The Heat
  • Billboard: R.Kelly TP-2.com
  • DMDB: Alicia Keys Songs in A Minor
  • Grammy: D’Angelo Voodoo
  • Soul Train: Dr. Dre 2001

2000:
1999:
1998:
1997:
1996:
1995:
1994:
  • AMA: Various Artists (Whitney Houston et al) The Bodyguard (soundtrack)
  • DMDB: Boyz II Men II

1993:
1992:
  • AMA: Luther Vandross Power of Love
  • Billboard: Various Artists (Whitney Houston et al) The Bodyguard (soundtrack)
  • DMDB: Various Artists (Whitney Houston et al) The Bodyguard (soundtrack)

1991:
1990:
1989:
1988:
1987:
1986:
  • AMA: Kool & the Gang Emergency
  • DMDB: Janet Jackson Control

1985:
1984:
1983:
1982:
  • AMA: Rick James Street Songs
  • DMDB: Michael Jackson Thriller

1981:
1980:
1979:
1978:
1977:
1976:
1975:
1974:
1973:
1972:
1971:
1970:
1969:
  • DMDB: Sly & the Family Stone Stand!

1968:
1967:

Resources and Related Links:


First posted 11/30/2020; last updated 2/4/2024.

Saturday, February 20, 2016

Rihanna hit #1 with Anti

Anti

Rihanna


Released: January 27, 2016


Peak: 12 US, 14 RB, 7 UK, 11 CN, 5 AU


Sales (in millions): 3.0 US, 0.3 UK, 3.75 world (includes US and UK)


Genre: pop


Tracks:

Song Title (date of single release, chart peaks) Click for codes to singles charts.

  1. Consideration (with SZA) (2/20/16, 38 RB, 88 UK)
  2. James Joint
  3. Kiss It Better (2/20/16, 62 US, 21 RB, 46 UK, 48 AU)
  4. Work (with Drake) (1/27/16, 1 US, 9 RR, 1 RB, 2 UK, 1 CN, 5 AU)
  5. Desperado (2/27/16, 36 RB)
  6. Woo
  7. Needed Me (2/20/16, 7 US, 1 RB, 38 UK, 25 CN, 44 AU)
  8. Yeah, I Said It (2/27/16, 41 RB)
  9. Same Ol’ Mistakes
  10. Never Ending
  11. Love on the Brain (6/11/16, 5 US, 9 AC, 7 A40, 3 RB, 22 CN)
  12. Higher


Total Running Time: 43:36

Rating:

3.572 out of 5.00 (average of 31 ratings)


Awards: (Click on award to learn more).

About the Album:

Anti “began in the autumn of 2014 and proceeded in semi-public, progress being measured in Instagram posts and tweets, along with intermittent singles, each released to white-hot anticipation but none metamorphosing into massive hits.” AMG However, when the album was released, it didn’t have any of the singles released from 2015, which included “Four Five Seconds” with Kanye West and Paul McCartney and “Bitch Better Have My Money.”

Neither “functioned as appropriate anchors for the album,” AMG which would be Rihanna’s first release “to feel constructed as a front-to-back album.” AMG After predecessors “where album cuts often felt like afterthoughts” AMG this made Anti “an ambitious album-statement” RS’20 “whose heart lies within its deep cuts.” RS’20

“On Anti, she recast pop as her own hazy playground, referencing Dido and hair metal, covering Tame Impala, and merging dancehall and torch ballads.” RS’20 “Mood matters more than either hooks or rhythm: it’s a subdued, simmering affair,” AMG “brilliantly sustaining the tipsy two-in-the-morning vibe of this moody midcareer reinvention.” RS’20 Rihanna said, “I just gravitated toward the songs that were … the things I want to listen to…The things that I want to smoke to.” RS’20

The songs are “subtly shaded yet interlocked to create a vibe caught halfway between heartbreak and ennui. The latter has always been a specialty of Rihanna – her distance from her material was at once appealing and alienating – so hearing her lean into Love on the Brain and Higher is something of a revelation: her voice is hoarse and ravaged, yet she’s also controlled and precise, knowing how to hone these imperfections so her performance echoes classic soul while feeling fresh.” AMG

“These songs come at the end of the album, after a series of songs that drift and wonder, the sound of an artist trying to figure out not only what her album is but who she is. By the end of Anti, Rihanna may not arrive at any definitive conclusions about her art but she’s allowed herself to be unguarded and anti-commercial, resulting in her most compelling record to date.” AMG


Notes: “Goodnight Gotham,” “Pose,” and “Sex with Me” were added to the deluxe edition.

Resources and Related Links:


Other Related DMDB Pages:


First posted 4/23/2022.

Saturday, May 30, 1992

Billy Ray Cyrus’ “Achy Breaky Heart” topped country chart

Achy Breaky Heart

Billy Ray Cyrus

Writer(s): Don Von Tress (see lyrics here)


Released: March 23, 1992


First Charted: April 4, 1992


Peak: 4 US, 4 CB, 27 RR, 23 AC, 15 CW, 3 UK, 4 CN, 17 AU, 6 DF (Click for codes to singles charts.)


Sales (in millions): 1.0 US, 0.2 UK, 1.41 world (includes US + UK)


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): 1.0 radio, 110.33 video, 102.37 streaming

Awards:

Click on award for more details.

About the Song:

Don Von Tress wrote a song called “Don’t Tell My Heart” in 1990. The Oak Ridge Boys considered recording it, but lead singer Duane Allen didn’t like the words “achy breaky.” WK It was recorded in 1991 by the Marcy Brothers, but failed to chart. It took off when Billy Ray Cyrus recorded it in 1992 as “Achy Breaky Heart.” It was a crossover hit in the United States, peaking at #1 on the country charts and #4 on the Billboard Hot 100. It was the first country song since Kenny Rogers & Dolly Parton’s 1983 hit “Islands in the Stream” to achieve platinum status. WK The song propelled Cyrus’ album, Some Gave All to 17 weeks atop the Billboard album chart and nine million in sales.

Thanks to its novelty status, the song has been targeted by Blender and VH1 as one of the worst songs of all time, although VH1 also ranked at as one of the 100 greatest songs of the 1990s. WK Country singer Travis Tritt touched off controversy when he called the song “frivolous” and argued it turned country music into “an ass-wiggling contest.” TC Cyrus has defended the song, saying, “It felt like a good time for a happy song. Something simple that everyone could sing and yes, even dance to. Take your mind off all the heavy stuff for 3 minutes and 27 seconds!” TC

Audiences for “old country” artists such as Willie Nelson and George Strait were waning, but the slicker production techniques and pop melodies of “new country” revived interest in country music amongst younger listeners. “Achy Breaky Heart” was considered a pivotal song in ushering in that new era. Country purists hated it, but it led the way for success for artists such as Faith Hill and Shania Twain. SF

The video was filmed during a live performance at the Paramount Arts Center in Ashland, Kentucky. WK “The song’s insistent beat and simple two-chord structure lent themselves to line dancing, which featured heavily in the video and exploded into a crazy that swept country dance halls across the U.S. and the world.” TC


Resources:


Related Links:


First posted 11/3/2021; last updated 10/22/2022.

Thursday, May 3, 1984

Bruce Springsteen released “Dancing in the Dark”

Dancing in the Dark

Bruce Springsteen

This post has been moved here.

Saturday, August 23, 1975

Glen Campbell’s “Rhinestone Cowboy” hit #1 on country chart

Rhinestone Cowboy

Glen Campbell

Writer(s): Larry Weiss (see lyrics here)


Released: May 26, 1975


First Charted: May 31, 1975


Peak: 12 US, 11 CB, 2 GR, 11 HR, 4 RR, 11 AC, 13 CW, 4 UK, 11 CN, 5 AU, 1 DF (Click for codes to singles charts.)


Sales (in millions): 2.0 US


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): 1.0 radio, 42.5 video, 51.39 streaming

Awards:

Click on award for more details.

About the Song:

“Rhinestone Cowboy” was written by Larry Weiss, who said “the song was a cyring-out of myself…It was the spirit of a bunch of us on Broadway, where I started out…We all had dreams of making it.” TR When he heard someone use the phrase “rhinestone cowboy,” it struck him as “sort of a summation of all of my childhood cowboy movie heroes.” TR

Weiss recorded the song for his own Black and Blue Suite album and it was released as a single, reaching #24 on the adult contemporary chart. Glen Campbell heard the song on the radio in Los Angeles. He bought the album and listened to it while on tour in Australia. When Campbell returned, he said Capitol Records A&R vice president Al Coury told him, “‘You got to cut this song.’ He put on ‘Rhinestone Cowboy’ and I laughed – that was the one I had brought in for him to hear.” TR

Campbell was a noted session musician in the 1960s who’d contributed to #1 hits by the Champs (“Tequila”), the Beach Boys (“I Get Around”), and Frank Sinatra (“Strangers in the Night”). FB He also started having success on his own, reaching the pinnacle of the country charts three times that decade with “I Wanna Live,” “Wichita Lineman,” and “Galveston.” It was “Rhinestone Cowboy,” however, which gave him the biggest hit of his career, topping the country and pop charts simultaneously – the first time that had had happened since Jimmy Dean’s “Big Bad John” in November 1961. WK

The song was about “a country singer who has seen it all” SF and “the compromises musicians have to make in the record business.” AMG Campbell definitely related, calling it his “philosophy song.” TR He also said it “maybe the best song I’ve ever sung.” SF


Resources:

  • AMG All Music Guide review by Ed Hogan
  • FB Fred Bronson (2003). The Billboard Book of Number One Hits (5th edition). Billboard Books: New York, NY. Page 415.
  • TR Tom Roland (1991). The Billboard Book of Number One Country Hits. Billboard Books: New York, NY. Page 149.
  • SF Songfacts
  • WK Wikipedia


Related Links:


First posted 11/3/2021; last updated 11/28/2022.