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I. I Believe (George Strait song) I Can Still Make Cheyenne; I Cross My Heart; I Got a Car; I Gotta Get to You; I Hate Everything; I Just Want to Dance with You
The singles discography of American country music singer George Strait comprises 125 charted singles, starting with "Unwound" in 1981. He has 44 No. 1s on the Billboard country chart, the most of any artist. [1] Strait has also amassed 86 Top 10 hits on Billboard ' s Hot Country Songs, second only to Eddy Arnold, who had 92. [2]
The George Strait albums discography consists of 31 studio albums, three live albums, and 11 compilation albums by American country music singer George Strait. Of these albums, 36 have received a certification of at least Gold from the Recording Industry Association of America , and five reached No.1 on the Billboard 200 .
George Strait – lead vocals; Steve Nathan – acoustic piano, Wurlitzer electric piano, synthesizers, accordion; Steve Gibson – electric guitars, acoustic guitar; Brent Mason – electric guitars, acoustic guitar, gut-string guitar
George Strait performed the first of his two Fort Worth concerts Friday night at Dickies Arena. The King of Country Music played a mix of old favorites, newer songs and covers throughout the night.
50 Number Ones is the sixth compilation album by American country music singer George Strait, released on October 5, 2004.It is a 2-CD compilation of his first 50 number-one country music singles, starting with 1982's "Fool Hearted Memory" and presented in chronological order.
Easy Come Easy Go is the fourteenth studio album by American country music artist George Strait.It was released by MCA Records and it produced four singles for Strait on the Hot Country Songs charts: the title track (#1), a cover of George Jones' 1965 hit "Lovebug" (#8), "I'd Like to Have That One Back" (#3), and "The Man in Love with You" (#5).
The song debuted at number 57 on the Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart dated August 21, 1993. It charted for 20 weeks on that chart, and spent two weeks at Number One on the chart dated October 23, 1993. It also peaked at number 71 on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming Strait's first entry on that chart. [1]
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