1990 in country music
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
This is a list of notable events in country music that took place in the year 1990.
By location |
---|
By genre |
By topic |
| |||
---|---|---|---|
+... |
Events
[edit]- January 20 — Billboard magazine begins basing the Hot Country Singles chart entirely on radio airplay through Nielsen Broadcast Data Systems (BDS), which uses a computerized system to detect actual radio spins. The number of chart positions is reduced from 100 to 75. The new system has an immediate effect on how long the year's biggest songs stay at No. 1:
- February 3 — "Nobody’s Home" by Clint Black becomes the first three-week No. 1 since Randy Travis' "Forever and Ever, Amen" in 1987.
- April 7 — Travis' "Hard Rock Bottom of Your Heart" breaks the four-week barrier, the first since 1978's "Mamas Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys" by Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson.
- July 7 — "Love Without End, Amen" by George Strait is Billboard's first five-week No. 1 song, matching 1977's "Here You Come Again" by Dolly Parton. Incidentally, "Love Without End, Amen" is Strait's first multi-week chart-topper, after his first 18 No. 1s had spent just one week on top.
- Just 23 songs would reach the chart's summit in 1990, 13 of them multi-weekers; this was fewer than half the number that reached the top of the chart a year earlier, and the fewest since 1972.
No dates
[edit]- The Smithsonian Institution releases Classic Country Music: A Smithsonian Collection, a 100-track, four-volume set including the most important and notable songs in the genre's history, from 1924 to 1987. The set, which includes an 84-page booklet by historian Bill Malone, replaces the Smithsonian's eight-volume, 143-track set – titled The Smithsonian Collection of Classic Country Music – issued in 1981. The release of Classic Country Music: A Smithsonian Collection continues a trend towards chronicling the genre's history via compact disc during the late 1980s and early 1990s. Time-Life Music's Country USA series continued to issue new albums, while Columbia Records issues its five-volume Country Classics series during the summer. Rhino Records also releases ten volumes of Billboard Top Country Singles, each depicting the top 10 songs from the years 1959 through 1968.
Top hits of the year
[edit]Singles released by American artists
[edit]Singles released by Canadian artists
[edit]US | CAN | Single | Artist | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
— | 20 | After All | Anita Perras | |
— | 20 | Ain't No Trains to Nashville | Dick Damron | |
— | 9 | Always Hum a Song in Your Soul | Morris P. Rainville | |
— | 4 | Bachelor Girl | George Fox | |
— | 12 | The Colour of Your Collar | Gary Fjellgaard | |
— | 19 | Couldn't See the Gold | Tommy Hunter with Janie Fricke | |
— | 10 | Daddy, Sing to Me | Lisa Brokop | |
— | 10 | Dreamin' Ain't Cheatin' | Carroll Baker | |
5 | 6 | Feed This Fire | Anne Murray | |
62 | 3 | Goodbye, So Long, Hello | Prairie Oyster | |
— | 9 | Here Comes My Baby | Anita Perras | |
— | 3 | How Many Times | Family Brown | |
— | 17 | I Broke His Heart | Jenny Lee West | |
70 | 5 | I Don't Hurt Anymore | Prairie Oyster | |
— | 9 | I Want to Fly | Errol Ranville | |
— | 9 | I'll Accept the Rose | Rita MacNeil | |
— | 10 | In My Heart | Gary Fjellgaard with Linda Kidder | |
— | 10 | Lime Rickey | George Fox | |
— | 14 | Live Fast, Love Hard, Die Young | The Good Brothers | |
— | 10 | Luck in My Eyes | k.d. lang | |
— | 16 | Never Be Sorry | Greg Paul | |
32 | 4 | New Kind of Love | Michelle Wright | |
— | 10 | No Trespassing | George Fox | |
— | 19 | Once the Magic's Gone | Cindi Cain | |
— | 13 | Pioneers | Family Brown | |
— | 8 | Quittin' Time | Michael Dee | |
— | 9 | Rosanne | Albert Hall | |
— | 17 | Rumour | Dan Rogers | |
— | 10 | She Told Me So | The Good Brothers | |
— | 17 | Since the Rain | Ian Tyson | |
— | 7 | Somewhere on the Island | Gary Fjellgaard | |
— | 6 | Start of Something New | Terry Carisse with Tracey Brown | |
— | 10 | This Time | Patricia Conroy | |
55 | 9 | Three Days | k.d. lang | |
— | 10 | Touch My Heart | Anita Perras | |
— | 17 | Why Do I Think of You Today | Rita MacNeil | |
72 | 14 | Woman's Intuition | Michelle Wright |
Top new album releases
[edit]Other top albums
[edit]On television
[edit]Regular series
[edit]- Hee Haw (1969–1993, syndicated)
Births
[edit]- January 8 – Frank Ray, singer known for his 2022 hit "Country'd Look Good on You".
- March 2 — Luke Combs, singer-songwriter of the 2010s.
- March 30 — Thomas Rhett, singer-songwriter, son of singer-songwriter Rhett Akins.
- April 10 — Maren Morris, musician and singer-songwriter known for her 2016 hit "My Church".
- April 24 — Carly Pearce, singer-songwriter of the 2010s.
- May 17 — Kree Harrison, singer and musician, who was the runner-up on the twelfth season of American Idol.
- May 27 — Brett Kissel, Canadian country singer of the 2010s.
- July 23 — Neil Perry, member of The Band Perry.
- July 27 — Cheyenne Kimball, member of Gloriana from 2008–2011.
- October 22 — Dylan Scott, singer known for his hits "My Girl" and "Hooked".
Deaths
[edit]- April 26 – Wesley Rose, 72, president of Acuff-Rose Music publishing.
- August 15 — Lew DeWitt, 52, tenor and founding member of the Statler Brothers (complications from Crohn's disease)
- October 31 — Carl Belew, 59, best known for writing the song "Am I That Easy to Forget" (cancer)
Hall of Fame inductees
[edit]Country Music Hall of Fame inductees
[edit]- Tennessee Ernie Ford (1919–1991)
Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame inductees
[edit]Major awards
[edit]Grammy Awards
[edit]- Best Female Country Vocal Performance — "Where've You Been", Kathy Mattea
- Best Male Country Vocal Performance — "When I Call Your Name", Vince Gill
- Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal — Pickin' on Nashville, The Kentucky Headhunters
- Best Country Collaboration with Vocals — "Poor Boy Blues", Chet Atkins and Mark Knopfler
- Best Country Instrumental Performance — "So Soft, Your Goodbye", Chet Atkins and Mark Knopfler
- Best Country Song — "Where've You Been", Don Henry and Jon Vezner
- Best Bluegrass Recording — "I've Got That Old Feeling", Alison Krauss
Juno Awards
[edit]- Country Male Vocalist of the Year — George Fox
- Country Female Vocalist of the Year — Rita MacNeil
- Country Group or Duo of the Year — Prairie Oyster
Academy of Country Music
[edit]- Entertainer of the Year — Garth Brooks
- Song of the Year — "The Dance", Tony Arata (Performer: Garth Brooks)
- Single of the Year — "Friends in Low Places", Garth Brooks
- Album of the Year — No Fences, Garth Brooks
- Top Male Vocalist — Garth Brooks
- Top Female Vocalist — Reba McEntire
- Top Vocal Duo — The Judds
- Top Vocal Group — Shenandoah
- Top New Male Vocalist — Alan Jackson
- Top New Female Vocalist — Shelby Lynne
- Top New Vocal Duo or Group — Pirates of the Mississippi
- Video of the Year — "The Dance", Garth Brooks (Director: John Lloyd Miller)
ARIA Awards
[edit](presented in Sydney on March 26, 1990)
Canadian Country Music Association
[edit]- Bud Country Fans' Choice Award — k.d. lang
- Male Artist of the Year — George Fox
- Female Artist of the Year — Michelle Wright
- Group of the Year — Prairie Oyster
- SOCAN Song of the Year — "Pioneers", Barry Brown
- Single of the Year — "Goodbye, So Long, Hello", Prairie Oyster
- Album of the Year — Absolute Torch and Twang, k.d. lang
- Top Selling Album — Rita, Rita MacNeil
- Video of the Year — "Pioneers", Family Brown
- Vista Rising Star Award — Patricia Conroy
- Duo of the Year — Gary Fjellgaard and Linda Kidder
Country Music Association
[edit]- Entertainer of the Year — George Strait
- Song of the Year — "Where've You Been", Don Henry and Jon Vezner (Performer: Kathy Mattea)
- Single of the Year — "When I Call Your Name", Vince Gill
- Album of the Year — Pickin' on Nashville, The Kentucky Headhunters
- Male Vocalist of the Year — Clint Black
- Female Vocalist of the Year — Kathy Mattea
- Vocal Duo of the Year — The Judds
- Vocal Group of the Year — The Kentucky Headhunters
- Horizon Award — Garth Brooks
- Music Video of the Year — "The Dance", Garth Brooks (Director: John Lloyd Miller)
- Vocal Event of the Year — "'Til a Tear Becomes a Rose", Lorrie Morgan and Keith Whitley
- Musician of the Year — Johnny Gimble
Further reading
[edit]- 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
- 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.