1994 in country music
This is a list of notable events in country music that took place in the year 1994.
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Events
- January 8 — Star, Mississippi, native Faith Hill hits paydirt with her first single release, "Wild One". The song spends four weeks atop the Billboard magazine Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart, the longest for a debut release by a female artist since Connie Smith's debut "Once a Day" in 1964.
- January 30 — Clint Black, Wynonna Judd, Travis Tritt and Tanya Tucker perform the halftime show (billed as "Rockin' Country Sunday") at Super Bowl XXVIII. The finale featured a special appearance by Naomi Judd, who joined Wynonna in performing The Judds' single "Love Can Build a Bridge" (their first major appearance together since their "Farewell Tour" of 1991), to which everyone eventually joined in.
- March – Tim McGraw's first major hit, "Indian Outlaw," causes considerable controversy due to lyrics about Native Americans, and the single is boycotted at a handful of stations. Nevertheless, the song's notoriety helps spur its popularity and allows it to become just the second major crossover hit in 10 years, reaching No. 15 on the Billboard magazine Hot 100 singles chart (in addition to its No. 8 peak on the Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart); the song will also jumpstart McGraw's fledgling career, which had gotten off to a less-than-stellar start a year earlier.
- Incidentally, McGraw's first taste of success comes at approximately the same time as that of his wife-to-be — Faith Hill. At this point, their careers are on separate paths.
- April 12 — The premiere issue of Country Weekly magazine hits the store shelves. Garth Brooks graces the cover of the first issue.
- May 9 — Newcomer artist John Berry passes out during a concert and is rushed to a hospital in Atlanta, where an operation is performed to remove a cyst found in the third ventricle of his brain.[1]
- October 1 - CMT adds six new music video programs to its schedule: Big Ticket, Signature Series, Jammin' Country, Saturday Nite Dance Ranch, Delivery Room and Top 12 Countdown. All shows would be cancelled in 2001.
Top hits of the year
Singles released by American artists
Singles released by Canadian artists
US | CAN | Single | Artist | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
— | 16 | 5 Days in May | Blue Rodeo | |
— | 11 | Alcohol in the Bloodstream | Ian Tyson | |
— | 18 | Almost Like You Cared | Cassandra Vasik | |
— | 6 | Baby Don't Cry | One Horse Blue | |
— | 13 | By Heart | Joel Feeney | |
— | 18 | Circle of Love | Joan Kennedy | |
— | 10 | Country in the City | Don Neilson | |
— | 10 | Dynamite | Desert Dolphins | |
— | 14 | Everything Money Can Buy | One Horse Blue | |
— | 11 | Everything to Me | Joel Feeney | |
52 | 12 | Give Me a Ring Sometime | Lisa Brokop | |
— | 1 | Guitar Talk | Michelle Wright | |
— | 12 | Here We Go Again | Patricia Conroy | |
— | 15 | Hillbilly Jane | Straight Clean & Simple | |
— | 5 | Honest Man | George Fox | |
— | 17 | If I'm Only Good for One Thing | Larry Mercey | |
— | 1 | It Can't Happen to Me | Charlie Major | |
— | 4 | Louisiette | Prairie Oyster | |
— | 10 | Love's Looking for Me | One Horse Blue | |
— | 13 | Man of a Thousand Songs | Ron Hynes | |
— | 5 | No Hasta La Vista Tonight | George Fox | |
— | 10 | No Kathleen | Ron Hynes | |
— | 1 | Nobody Gets Too Much Love | Charlie Major | |
— | 4 | North Country | The Rankin Family | |
— | 9 | Now and Then | Michelle Wright | |
57 | 1 | One Good Man | Michelle Wright | |
— | 1 | The Other Side | Charlie Major | |
— | 9 | Red Hot Blues | Quartette | |
— | 8 | River of No Return | Terry Kelly | |
— | 19 | Rockabilly Heart | Cindy Church | |
— | 5 | Say the Word | Joel Feeney | |
— | 5 | Stolen Moments | Jim Witter | |
— | 1 | Such a Lonely One | Prairie Oyster | |
— | 1 | Somebody's Leavin' | Patricia Conroy | |
— | 6 | Sweet Sweet Poison | Jim Witter | |
— | 15 | Tell Me the Lie | Don Neilson | |
— | 10 | That's What Highways Are For | The Goods | |
— | 10 | There You Go | Prescott-Brown | |
— | 10 | Train of Dreams | Gary Fjellgaard | |
— | 17 | Way Beyond the Blue | Anita Perras | |
— | 7 | The Wayward Wind | Anne Murray | |
— | 4 | Wear and Tear on My Heart | George Fox |
Top new album releases
Other top albums
US | CAN | Album | Artist | Record Label |
---|---|---|---|---|
60 | 1994 | Merle Haggard | Curb | |
51 | The Best of Chris LeDoux | Chris LeDoux | Liberty | |
52 | Christmas Time's A-Comin' | Sammy Kershaw | Mercury/PolyGram | |
61 | Christmas with The Judds and Alabama | The Judds & Alabama | RCA Nashville | |
43 | Country 'Til I Die | John Anderson | BNA | |
56 | The Cowboy Way (soundtrack) | Various Artists | Epic | |
48 | Deep Thoughts from a Shallow Mind | Doug Supernaw | BNA | |
31 | Every Little Word | Hal Ketchum | Curb | |
29 | Greatest Hits | Billy Dean | Liberty | |
38 | Greatest Hits | Suzy Bogguss | Liberty | |
31 | In the Vicinity of the Heart | Shenandoah | Capitol Nashville | |
42 | Ken Mellons | Ken Mellons | Epic | |
62 | Love and Honor | Ricky Van Shelton | Columbia | |
51 | Men'll Be Boys | Billy Dean | Liberty | |
39 | Number One Hits | The Judds | RCA/Curb | |
66 | Reflections | The Judds | RCA/Curb | |
28 | Shoot for the Moon | Linda Davis | Arista Nashville | |
55 | Simpatico | Suzy Bogguss & Chet Atkins | Liberty | |
35 | Super Hits | Charlie Daniels | Epic | |
65 | Super Hits | Shenandoah | Columbia | |
71 | Super Hits | Conway Twitty | Epic | |
50 | Today's Greatest Country | Various Artists | K-Tel | |
52 | Today's New Country | Various Artists | K-Tel | |
56 | Today's Number One Country | Various Artists | K-Tel | |
63 | Waymore's Blues (Part II) | Waylon Jennings | RCA Nashville |
Births
- May 4 – RaeLynn, country music star of the 2010s, best known for "God Made Girls."
- November 8 – Lauren Alaina, runner-up of the 10th season of American Idol, with follow-up successes including "Like My Mother Does."
Hall of Fame inductees
Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame inductees
Country Music Hall of Fame inductees
- Merle Haggard (1937–2016)
Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame inductees
Major awards
Grammy Awards
- Best Female Country Vocal Performance — "Shut Up and Kiss Me", Mary Chapin Carpenter
- Best Male Country Vocal Performance — "When Love Finds You", Vince Gill
- Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal — "Blues for Dixie", Asleep at the Wheel and Lyle Lovett
- Best Country Collaboration with Vocals — "I Fall to Pieces", Aaron Neville and Trisha Yearwood
- Best Country Instrumental Performance — "Young Thing", Chet Atkins
- Best Country Song — "I Swear", Gary Baker (songwriter), Frank J. Myers (Performer: John Michael Montgomery)
- Best Country Album — Stones in the Road, Mary Chapin Carpenter
- Best Bluegrass Album — The Great Dobro Sessions, Various Artists (Producers: Jerry Douglas and Tut Taylor)
Juno Awards
- Country Male Vocalist of the Year — Charlie Major
- Country Female Vocalist of the Year — Michelle Wright
- Country Group or Duo of the Year — Prairie Oyster
Academy of Country Music
- Entertainer of the Year — Reba McEntire
- Song of the Year — "I Swear", Gary Baker, Frank J. Myers (Performer: John Michael Montgomery)
- Single of the Year — "I Swear", John Michael Montgomery
- Album of the Year — Not a Moment Too Soon, Tim McGraw
- Top Male Vocalist — Alan Jackson
- Top Female Vocalist — Reba McEntire
- Top Vocal Duo — Brooks & Dunn
- Top Vocal Group — The Mavericks
- Top New Male Vocalist — Tim McGraw
- Top New Female Vocalist — Chely Wright
- Top New Vocal Duo or Group — The Mavericks
- Video of the Year — "The Red Strokes" – Garth Brooks (Director: Jon Small)
ARIA Awards
(presented in Sydney on March 30, 1994)
Canadian Country Music Association
- Bud Country Fans' Choice Award — Prairie Oyster
- Male Artist of the Year — Charlie Major
- Female Artist of the Year — Patricia Conroy
- Group or Duo of the Year — Prairie Oyster
- SOCAN Song of the Year — "I'm Gonna Drive You Out of My Mind", Charlie Major, Barry Brown
- Single of the Year — "I'm Gonna Drive You Out of My Mind", Charlie Major
- Album of the Year — The Other Side, Charlie Major
- Top Selling Album — In Pieces, Garth Brooks
- Video of the Year — "Stolen Moments", Jim Witter
- Vista Rising Star Award — Susan Aglukark
- Vocal Collaboration of the Year — Quartette
Country Music Association
- Entertainer of the Year — Vince Gill
- Song of the Year — "Chattahoochee", Alan Jackson and Jim McBride (Performer: Alan Jackson)
- Single of the Year — "I Swear", John Michael Montgomery
- Album of the Year — Common Thread: The Songs of the Eagles, Various Artists
- Male Vocalist of the Year — Vince Gill
- Female Vocalist of the Year — Pam Tillis
- Vocal Duo of the Year — Brooks & Dunn
- Vocal Group of the Year — Diamond Rio
- Horizon Award — John Michael Montgomery
- Music Video of the Year — "Independence Day", Martina McBride (Directors: Robert Deaton and George J. Flanigen IV)
- Vocal Event of the Year — "Does He Love You", Reba McEntire and Linda Davis
- Musician of the Year — Mark O'Connor
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
- Whitburn, Joel, "Top Country Songs 1944–2005 – 6th Edition." 2005.
References
External links
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