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    related to: billboard top 100 country songs of all time

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  1. The Greatest of All-Time Top Country Artists, Songs and Albums rankings are based on weekly performance on Hot Country Songs (from its Oct. 20, 1958 inception through June 4, 2016) and...

    • Kelsey Weekman
    • 'Cruise' by Florida Georgia Line. - Artist: Florida Georgia Line. - Billboard rank: #1. The duo's 2012 single set an all-time record of 56 weeks on the country charts, tying Taylor Swift's record.
    • 'Walk On By' by Leroy Van Dyke. - Artist: Leroy Van Dyke. - Billboard rank: #2. Leroy Van Dyke's most successful song spent 37 weeks on the country chart in 1961, with a record-breaking 19 in the #1 spot.
    • 'Wanted' by Hunter Hayes. - Artist: Hunter Hayes. - Billboard rank: #3. Hunter Hayes broke a record held since 1973 as the youngest male artist to reach #1 when "Wanted" topped the Hot Country Songs chart.
    • 'Take Your Time' by Sam Hunt. - Artist: Sam Hunt. - Billboard rank: #4. This 2014 recording became Hunt's second consecutive single to reach #1 on the country charts.
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    • Rolling Stone
    • Brad Paisley, ‘Welcome to the Future’ (2009) Mainstream country's most prominent liberal ambitiously overloads this nearly six-minute single from 2009's American Saturday Night, explaining that he wanted "to serve up a little multigenerational truth with a strong sense of hope and possibility."
    • Harry Choates, ‘Jole Blon’ (1946) One of Bruce Springsteen's lesser-known influences is the late, hard-drinkin' Texas fiddle player Harry Choates. After playing for spare change as a teenager in the Thirties, Choates started making records by his early Twenties, and his aching 1946 reworking of the so-called "Cajun National Anthem" hit Number Four on the Billboard charts.
    • C.W. McCall, ‘Convoy’ (1975) This loving, jargon-filled novelty song took the insular world of trucker culture to the tops of both the country and pop charts in 1976.
    • Gretchen Wilson, ‘Redneck Woman’ (2004) Originally a collective of Nashville outcasts and outsiders known for their open-minded open mic night, the MuzikMafia went mainstream with the twin successes of Big & Rich's "Save a Horse (Ride a Cowboy)" and Gretchen Wilson's "Redneck Woman."
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    • ‘Good Hearted Woman’ by Waylon Jennings & Willie Nelson
    • ‘This Is It’ by Jim Reeves
    • ‘Thinkin’ of A Rendezvous’ by Johnny Duncan
    • ‘You Look So Good in Love’ by George Strait
    • ‘Breathe’ by Faith Hill
    • ‘Why Not Me’ by The Judds
    • ‘Mind Your Own Business’ by Hank Williams Jr.
    • ‘Cry Myself to Sleep’ by The Judds
    • ‘If You Leave Me Tonight I’ll Cry’ by Jerry Wallace
    Artist: Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson
    Billboard rank: #100
    Artist: Jim Reeves
    Billboard rank: #99
    Artist: Johnny Duncan
    Billboard rank: #98
    Artist: George Strait
    Billboard rank: #96
    Artist: Faith Hill
    Billboard rank: #95
    Artist: The Judds
    Billboard rank: #94
    Artist: Hank Williams Jr.
    Billboard rank: #93
    Artist: The Judds
    Billboard rank: #92
    Artist: Jerry Wallace
    Billboard rank: #91
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  3. Apr 16, 2021 · From old-school honky-tonk to modern country pop, this list covers the biggest hits in Billboard history. #100. ‘Good Hearted Woman’ by Waylon Jennings & Willie Nelson | Artist: Waylon...

    • Kelsey Weekman
  4. Aug 25, 2019 · Every era is reflected here, from the Carter Family and Jimmie Rodgers' historic recordings to the reign of the "Nashville Sound," outlaws, singing cowboys and pop crossovers.

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