The List

3 Country Songs From 1973 That Every Small-Town Kid Still Knows by Heart

Were you born and raised in a small town, or somewhere in rural America? If you enjoyed your simple childhood during the 1970s, I bet these three small-town country songs from 1973 still sit heavy in your heart today. Some would consider them anthems. Letโ€™s take a look and get a little nostalgic, shall we?

โ€œCountry Sunshineโ€ by Dottie West from โ€˜Country Sunshineโ€™

โ€œI was raised on country sunshine, green grass beneath my feet / Runnin’ through fields of daisies a wadin’ through the creek.โ€

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Remember this little Dottie West ditty from 1973? A standout โ€œCountrypolitanโ€ tune from the early 1970s, โ€œCountry Sunshineโ€ is a song about being raised out in the country, and it was used for a series of Coca-Cola commercials back in the day. In the years since it was released, โ€œCountry Sunshineโ€ has become one of Westโ€™s signature songs. It was a hit, too, peaking at No. 2 on the Hot Country Songs chart.

โ€œI Loveโ€ by Tom T. Hall from โ€˜For The People In The Last Hard Townโ€™

โ€œI love little country streams, sleep without dreams / Sunday school in May and hay.โ€

Tom T. Hall always seems to make it to our lists of small-town anthems. He simply knew how to tug at the heartstrings of rural America, after all. He makes it to this list of small-town country songs from 1973 with the childrenโ€™s novelty tune โ€œI Loveโ€. Itโ€™s as simple as it gets, but the lyrics are clear as day to listeners of any age: things like country streams, spending time with friends, and living life slowly really are worth loving. โ€œI Loveโ€ was a successful one for Hall, peaking at No. 12 on the Billboard Hot 100. It remains his only Top 40 hit on that coveted chart.

โ€œLord, Mr. Fordโ€ by Jerry Reed from โ€˜Lord, Mr. Fordโ€™

โ€œWell, now, how I yearn for the good old days / Without that carbon dioxide haze / A-hanging over the roar of the interstate / Well, if the Lord that made the moon and the stars.โ€

This oneโ€™s a bit of a stretch, but itโ€™s funny enough to many a small-town car owner that I think it deserves to be on this list. Jerry Reedโ€™s โ€œLord, Mr. Fordโ€ pokes a lot of fun at car culture and the social and economic influence that cars had come to have in the 1970s. Reed wasnโ€™t pleased with the direction transportation had taken, as the quality of automobiles had taken a nosedive and ended up becoming more expensive than they were worth. Itโ€™s a workin’ manโ€™s theme, for sure, one that likely got a chuckle out of more than a few small-towners back in the day.

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