Country music can be an isolated genre; people either love or hate it, and most country songs stay solidly in their lane. However, now and then, there comes a country song that manages to cross genre lines and gain almost universal appeal. Some do it by blending country with genres such as rock or pop; others become popular because they are just that catchy. These five country songs made waves in the 1990s, topping charts across the board and even around the world.
1. โDonโt Take The Girlโ โ Tim McGraw, 1994
Tim McGrawโs emotional ballad โDonโt Take The Girlโ made waves beyond the country genre in 1994. The song, released as a single from his second studio album, was McGrawโs first significant hit. It peaked at No. 1 on the Hot Country Songs chart and No. 17 on the Billboard Hot 100. It would later receive two platinum certifications and a legacy as one of the best country songs of the decade.
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โDonโt Take The Girlโ is a tear-jerking song about a relationship between a boy named Johnny and an unnamed girl. The story begins when they are children, and Johnny does not want to take her fishing with him. Later, as teenagers, they go on a date, are held at gunpoint, and he defends her from a mugger. Finally, when she delivers their first child and experiences complications, he prays for her to be spared.ย
2. โThis Kissโ โ Faith Hill, 1998
Faith Hillโs โThis Kissโ is so widely known that itโs easy to forget it was even a country song. The track was popular worldwide, placing in the Top 20 in Australia, Austria, Scotland, Canada, and the UK. In the United States, โThis Kissโ peaked at No. 1 on the Hot Country Songs, No. 7 on the Billboard Hot 100, and No. 3 on the Adult Contemporary Charts.ย
The track also earned Hill two Grammy nominations. Though she lost out to fellow โ90s country superstar Shania Twain, Hill earned three Grammy Awards for her album Breathe the following year. โThis Kissโ undoubtedly gave her the launchboard into her success as one of the most successful country stars of all time.ย
3. โHow Do I Liveโ โ LeAnn Rimes, 1997
When LeAnn Rimes released โHow Do I Liveโ in 1997, it broke a record on the chartsโone that wouldnโt be outdone until 11 years later. โHow Do I Liveโ spent 69 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100, only losing its spot to Jason Mrazโ โIโm Yoursโ in 2009. Its worldwide success led to the songโs classification as one of the biggest songs of the 1990s.ย
Unbelievably, Rimes was only 14 years old when she recorded โHow Do I Liveโโso young that her recording was rejected for the soundtrack of Con-Air, even though Dianne Warren had written it with her in mind. With one Grammy Award under her belt already, Rimes released her version independently and became a worldwide smash hit.ย
4. โAchy Breaky Heartโ โ Billy Ray Cyrus, 1992
โAchy Breaky Heartโ was first recorded by the Marcy Brothers in 1991. But it wasnโt until a year later, when up-and-comer Billy Ray Cyrus released it as his debut single, that it became a significant hit. Unlike many crossover hits, the track had little โgenre-bendingโ; it was a decidedly country track that led to a line-dancing craze. Despite this, it was popular across charts.
โAchy Breaky Heartโ peaked at No. 1 on the Hot Country Songs charts and No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100. The song has become a controversial legend, earning love and hate from all sides. Nevertheless, it was Cyrusโ biggest hit until 27 years later when he released โOld Town Roadโ with Lil Nas X.ย
5. โYouโre Still The Oneโ โ Shania Twain, 1997
Shania Twain was the country crossover queen of the โ90s in many ways. The decade brought her chart-topping successes such as โFrom This Moment On,โ โThat Donโt Impress Me Much,โ and โMan! I Feel Like a Woman.โ But none of these can compare to the success of her 1997 single โYouโre Still The One.โ Combining elements of both country and pop, the emotional ballad was written as a love song for Twainโs husband, Robert Lange.ย
โYouโre Still The Oneโ earned four Grammy nominations, winning two. It topped the Country Song Charts, Adult Contemporary Charts, and the Billboard Hot 100. Twain would also receive multiple platinum certifications for the song, which has been listed as one of the best songs of the 20th century.ย
Photo by Kevin Winter/ACMA2017/Getty Images for ACM
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30th January 1969: British rock group the Beatles performing their last live public concert on the rooftop of the Apple Organization building for director Michael Lindsey-Hogg's film documentary, 'Let It Be,' on Savile Row, London, England. Drummer Ringo Starr sits behind his kit. Singer/songwriters Paul McCartney and John Lennon perform at their microphones, and guitarist George Harrison (1943 – 2001) stands behind them. Lennon's wife Yoko Ono sits at right. (Photo by Express/Express/Getty Images)







