2000 in country music
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See also: 1999 in country music, 2000 in music, other events of 2000, 2001 in country music, 2000s in music and the List of years in Country Music
Contents |
[edit] Events
[edit] Top hits of the year
[edit] Number one hits
(As certified by Billboard magazine)
| Date | Song Name | Artist | Wks. No. 1 | Spec. Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| February 5 | Cowboy Take Me Away | Dixie Chicks | 3 | |
| February 26 | My Best Friend | Tim McGraw | 2 | |
| March 11 | Smile | Lonestar | 1 | |
| March 18 | How Do You Like Me Now?! | Toby Keith | 5 | 1 Although he had three previous No. 1s (most notably "Should've Been a Cowboy"), some critics considered this song to be Keith's bonafide breakthrough hit. |
| April 22 | The Best Day | George Strait | 3 | Became Strait's 36th solo No. 1 hit, a Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks record for most solo No. 1 hits (breaking a tie held by Conway Twitty and Merle Haggard). |
| May 13 | Buy Me a Rose | Kenny Rogers (featuring Billy Dean and Alison Krauss) | 1 | Rogers became the oldest singer to have a No. 1 hit on the Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart, at 61 years, eight months and 22 days old breaking a 26-year record held by Hank Snow (who was 59 years and 11 months old when he scored with 1974's "Hello Love"). Rogers held the record for three years. |
| May 20 | The Way You Love Me | Faith Hill | 4 | |
| June 17 | Yes! | Chad Brock | 2 | |
| July 8 | I Hope You Dance | Lee Ann Womack (featuring Sons of the Desert) | 5 | Womack's breakthrough pop smash, which was also a major pop and adult contemporary hit for the artist who had usually released neo-traditional country. |
| August 12 | What About Now | Lonestar | 4 | |
| September 9 | It Must Be Love | Alan Jackson | 1 | Cover of the 1979 Don Williams song, which also was a No. 1 hit. |
| September 16 | That's the Way | Jo Dee Messina | 4 | |
| October 14 | Kiss This | Aaron Tippin | 2 | |
| October 28 | The Little Girl | John Michael Montgomery | 3 | |
| November 18 | Best of Intentions | Travis Tritt | 1 | |
| November 25 | Just Another Day in Paradise | Phil Vassar | 1 | |
| December 2 | We Danced | Brad Paisley | 2 | |
| December 16 | My Next Thirty Years | Tim McGraw | 5 |
- 1 - No. 1 song of the year, as determined by Billboard magazine
- 2 - Song dropped from No. 1 and later returned to top spot.
[edit] Other major hits
- "Almost Doesn't Count" — Mark Wills
- "Another Nine Minutes" — Yankee Grey
- "Back at One" — Mark Wills
- "Because You Love Me" – Jo Dee Messina
- "Been There" — Clint Black and Steve Wariner
- "Carlene" — Phil Vassar
- "The Chain of Love" — Clay Walker
- "Cold Day in July" — Dixie Chicks
- "Couldn't Last a Moment" — Collin Raye
- "Country Comes to Town" - Toby Keith
- "Daddy Won't Sell the Farm" — Montgomery Gentry
- "Do What You Gotta Do" — Garth Brooks
- "Feels Like Love" — Vince Gill
- "Flowers on the Wall" — Eric Heatherly
- "Go On" — George Strait
- "Goodbye Earl" — Dixie Chicks
- "I Need You" — LeAnn Rimes
- "I Will ... But" — SHeDaisy
- "I'll Be" — Reba McEntire
- "It Was" — Chely Wright
- "It's Always Something" — Joe Diffie
- "Lessons Learned" — Tracy Lawrence
- "Let's Make Love" – Faith Hill and Tim McGraw
- "Let's Make Sure We Kiss Goodbye" — Vince Gill
- "Love's the Only House" — Martina McBride
- "More" — Trace Adkins
- "Murder on Music Row" — George Strait and Alan Jackson
- "One Voice" — Billy Gilman
- "Praying for Daylight" — Rascal Flatts
- "Real Live Woman" — Trisha Yearwood
- "She's More" — Andy Griggs
- "Some Things Never Change" — Tim McGraw
- "There You Are" – Martina McBride
- "This Woman Needs" – SHeDAISY
- "Unconditional" — Clay Davidson
- "What I Need to Do" – Kenny Chesney
- "When You Need My Love" — Darryl Worley
- "You'll Always Be Loved By Me" – Brooks & Dunn
- "Your Everything" — Keith Urban
[edit] Top new album releases
- Blue Moon — Steve Holy (Curb)
- Brand New Me — John Michael Montgomery (Warner Bros.)
- Burn — Jo Dee Messina (Curb)
- George Strait — George Strait (MCA Nashville)
- Greatest Hits — Tim McGraw (Curb)
- Hard Rain Don't Last — Darryl Worley (DreamWorks Nashville)
- How Do You Like Me Now?! — Toby Keith (DreamWorks Nashville)
- I Hope You Dance — Lee Ann Womack (MCA Nashville)
- Latest Greatest Straitest Hits — George Strait (MCA Nashville)
- Lessons Learned — Tracy Lawrence (Warner Bros.)
- Let's Make Sure We Kiss Goodbye — Vince Gill (MCA Nashville)
- One More Day — Diamond Rio (Arista Nashville)
- One Voice — Billy Gilman (Epic/Sony)
- Rascal Flatts — Rascal Flatts (Lyric Street)
- Swimming in Champagne — Eric Heatherly (Mercury Nashville)
- There You Go Again - Kenny Rogers (Dreamcatcher)
- When Somebody Loves You — Alan Jackson (Arista Nashville)
[edit] Christmas Albums
- This Christmastime — Lonestar (BNA)
[edit] Births
[edit] Deaths
- March 7 - Pee Wee King, 86, singer-songwriter (heart attack)
- April 21 - Neal Matthews, Jr., 70, member of The Jordanaires (heart attack)
[edit] Country Music Hall of Fame Inductees
- Charley Pride (born 1938)
- Faron Young (1932–1996)
[edit] Major Awards
[edit] Grammy awards
[edit] Academy of Country Music
- Entertainer Of The Year -- Dixie Chicks
- Song Of The Year -- "I Hope You Dance" - Lee Ann Womack - Mark D. Sanders, Tia Sellers
- Single Of The Year -- "I Hope You Dance" - Lee Ann Womack
- Album Of The Year -- How Do You Like Me Now?! - Toby Keith
- Top Male Vocalist -- Toby Keith
- Top Female Vocalist -- Faith Hill
- Top Vocal Duo -- Brooks & Dunn
- Top Vocal Group -- Dixie Chicks
- Top New Male Vocalist -- Keith Urban
- Top New Female Vocalist -- Jamie O'Neal
- Top New Vocal Duo Or Group -- Rascal Flatts
- Video Of The Year -- "Goodbye Earl" - Dixie Chicks (Director: Evan Bernard)
- Vocal Event Of The Year -- "I Hope You Dance" - Lee Ann Womack and Sons Of The Desert
[edit] Country Music Association
[edit] Further reading
- Kingsbury, Paul, "The Grand Ole Opry: History of Country Music. 70 Years of the Songs, the Stars and the Stories," Villard Books, Random House; Opryland USA, 1995
- Kingsbury, Paul, "Vinyl Hayride: Country Music Album Covers 1947-1989," Country Music Foundation, 2003 (ISBN 0-8118-3572-3)
- Millard, Bob, "Country Music: 70 Years of America's Favorite Music," HarperCollins, New York, 1993 (ISBN 0-06-273244-7)
- Whitburn, Joel, "Top Country Songs 1944-2005 - 6th Edition." 2005.
[edit] Other links
[edit] External links

