While rock and pop are known for their virtually endless subgenres, country music doesnโt get enough love for its subgenres that may be relatively unknown to casual listeners. There are actually quite a few excellent country subgenres out there, and the following three songs either helped create those subgenres or had a heavy hand in popularizing them. Letโs look at a few classics, shall we?
โTake It Easyโ by Eagles (1972)
In the early 1970s, bands were beginning to blend elements of country music and hard rock. Eagles took the country rock subgenre to the mainstream with their hit song, โTake It Easyโ. A classic rock staple today, this track has a bit of country twang mixed with Eaglesโ classic hard rock sound. Itโs no surprise it was a hit, and itโs also no surprise that it popularized country rock for the rest of the decade. โTake It Easyโ was a No. 12 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 and also did fairly well in Canada.
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โMan! I Feel Like A Womanโ by Shania Twain (1999)
Alright, Shania Twain didnโt invent country pop. That particular subgenre had been around for a minute. However, country pop experienced an enormous boom in the late 1990s that lasted through the 2000s, and we can thank Shania Twain for making the subgenre so popular. Even people who donโt like country or pop know this ultra-catchy tune very well.
โMan! I Feel Like A Womanโ was a massive international hit (among several others from her album Come On Over), one that peaked at No. 23 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 4 on the Hot Country Songs chart.
โLadies Love Outlawsโ by Waylon Jennings (1972)
Thereโs no way Iโd put together a list of songs that popularized country subgenres without bringing up outlaw country. In the late 20th century, outlaw country was basically the punk rock movement of country music. Instead of the shiny and clean Nashville sound, a ragtag group of cowboys decided to go in a very different, harder-edged direction, effectively launching the outlaw country movement.
It’s difficult to pinpoint who did it โfirst.โ But one canโt deny that Waylon Jenningsโ self-referential โLadies Love Outlawsโ helped kickstart the movement in the early 1970s. The album of the same name was a No. 11 hit on the Top Country Albums chart.
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(Original Caption) Charlie Daniels (3rd from left), the entertainer who dedicated his last album to "gun-rotting whiskey and hellatious fights" says he will not play gentle music just to please "damn Yankees drinking martinis" 1/20 at Jimmy Carter's inaugural reception. Daniels said he plans to play the same brand of foot-stomping Southern music he and his band have always produced. They are (from left), Charlie Hayward, Tom Crain, Daniels, Joel Digregorio, Don Murray and Fred Edwards.







