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Listen to the best country songs about sons relatable for moms and dads. This playlist includes artists like Reba McEntire, Chris Stapleton, and Kenny Chesney. These Iconic Country Songs About ...
Country music has a way of making even the most mundane things in life seem incredibly beautiful. So, when it comes to something as big as the relationship between a parent and their daughter(s ...
"Homesick" is a song co-written and recorded by American country music singer Kane Brown. It was released as the third single to his second album, Experiment , on August 5, 2019. [ 1 ] Brown wrote the song with Brock Berryhill, Matt McGinn , and Taylor Phillips, and it was produced by Dann Huff .
That same year, Woodlawn Memorial Park Cemetery (referred to as "Cemetery of Country Stars") created "The Lynn Anderson Rose Garden", consisting of 200 Lynn Anderson Hybrid Rose Bushes (named for the singer by the National Rose Society of America), as a place of reflection and meditation, in honor of Anderson's signature song.
Willie Nelson sets a new record as the oldest artist to achieve a number one country song at age 70. [69] 2004: 2005: The chart's name changes to Hot Country Songs. Josh Gracin becomes the first American Idol finalist to achieve a country number one. [2] [70] [71] 2006: George Strait achieves his 41st number one, breaking Conway Twitty's record.
From country to R&B, we've rounded up 50 of our favorite songs about home by Taylor Swift, Blake Shelton, Dua Lipa, and more that celebrate where you're from.
"Home Ain't Where His Heart Is (Anymore)" is a song co-written and recorded by Canadian country music artist Shania Twain. It was released on July 24, 1996 as the seventh single from her second studio album The Woman in Me. It was written by Twain and her then-husband Robert John "Mutt" Lange. It also serves as the opening track to The Woman in Me.
The song speaks of the narrator's wish that she could have known more about her father, a traveling salesman who met her mother and quickly married her (the lyrics indicate that the quick marriage was more of an elopement than a shotgun marriage, since "Grandma Kate" – the narrator's grandmother who raised her mother to be a proper lady – likely would not have approved of the relationship).