2007 in country music
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of notable events in country music that took place in the year 2007.
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- January 12 – Wilma Lee Cooper Celebrates her 50th Grand Ole Opry Anniversary.
- February 11 – It was a big night for country music artists at the 49th Annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, as they swept the awards in four top categories. The Dixie Chicks won three of those awards: Record of the Year and Song of the Year (both for "Not Ready to Make Nice," the latter shared with songwriter Dan Wilson) and Album of the Year (Taking the Long Way). Carrie Underwood took the Best New Artist Award. Both Underwood and the Dixie Chicks were winners in country-specific categories. The Dixie Chicks won for Best Country Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal (for "Not Ready to Make Nice") and Best Country Album ("Taking the Long Way"). Underwood won for Best Female Country Vocal Performance for "Jesus, Take the Wheel"; the song also earned a Best Country Song award for songwriters Brett James, Hillary Lindsey and Gordie Sampson. Also, country music pioneer Bob Wills – the longtime leader of the Texas Playboys – was a posthumous recipient of a Lifetime Achievement Award. Wills was recognized 32 years after his death.
- Week of February 12 – Country music stars team with celebrities during a special celebrity week of Wheel of Fortune, which was taped in Charleston, South Carolina. During the game aired February 13, Julie Roberts and contestant partner Peter Buccellato won $124,250 after Buccallato solved the bonus round puzzle for the show's grand prize of $100,000. Roberts donated a matching amount to St. Jude's Children's Research Hospital.
- February 17 – Hank Williams Jr. filed for divorce from his fourth wife, Mary Jane, whom he married in 1990.
- February 23 – Porter Wogoner Celebrates his 50th Grand Ole Opry anniversary.
- March 19 – Days after an announcement that Lonestar had parted ways with longtime record label BNA Records, lead singer Richie McDonald announces plans to depart the group at the end of the year, in search of a solo career.[1]
- March 19 – Professional dancer and country music star-to-be Julianne Hough made her debut on Dancing with the Stars, a televised dance promotion. Teamed with Olympic gold medal-winning speed skater Apolo Anton Ohno, Hough would go on to win the championship for Season 4. Hough would return in the fall to win a second title, this time with two-time Indianapolis 500 champion Hélio Castroneves.
- April 10 – The former home of Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash is destroyed by fire.[2]
- April – Mary Chapin Carpenter is hospitalized for a pulmonary embolism, causing her to cancel all tours for the rest of the year.[3]
- May 3 – Kellie Pickler and Aaron Tippin in a country music at Carolina.
- May 10 – Country music superstar Trisha Yearwood announces she is leaving MCA Records where she had been for 16 years with over 12 million albums sold and 5 number 1 singles. She announced she was signing with Big Machine Records. Yearwood and Big Machine CEO Scott Borchetta met in her intern days at MTM records. Trisha's last top 10 hit with MCA was "I Would've Loved You Anyway" in 2001.
- July 21 – Trace Adkins quest Kellie Pickler, Jo Dee Messina and Pat Green at the Grand Ole Opry Live.
- September 4 – Sammy Kershaw enters the Louisiana lieutenant governor's race, running as a Republican.[4]
- September 15 – Garth Brooks song, "More Than a Memory" becomes the first song to debut at No. 1 on the Billboard magazine Hot Country Songs chart, since the start of the magazine's all-encompassing country chart in 1958.
- October 21 – Country music legend Porter Wagoner's publicist Darlene Bieber confirms that Wagoner had been diagnosed with lung cancer. Wagoner dies seven days later.
- October 30 – The Eagles release their studio album Long Road Out of Eden, their first compilation of all-new material in 28 years. The album sells over a million copies in its first two weeks.
- November 7 – Taylor Swift quest Brad Paisley and Kellie Pickler at the 2007 CMA Awards.
Top hits of the year
The following songs placed within the Top 20 on the Hot Country Songs or Canada Country charts in 2007:
Top new album releases
The following albums placed within the Top 50 on the Top Country Albums charts in 2007:
Other top albums
| US | Album | Artist | Record label |
|---|---|---|---|
| 16 | 15° Off Cool | Bill Engvall | Jack |
| 40 | 16 Biggest Hits | Alabama | RCA Nashville |
| 22 | 16 Biggest Hits | Alan Jackson | Arista Nashville |
| 32 | 16 Biggest Hits | Dolly Parton | RCA Nashville |
| 45 | 20th Century Masters – The Millennium Collection: The Best of Reba McEntire | Reba McEntire | MCA Nashville |
| 43 | After Hours | Raul Malo | Sanctuary |
| 30 | Beverley Mitchell | Beverley Mitchell | Daywind |
| 31 | Big Love in a Small Town | Sarah Johns | BNA |
| 48 | Big Sky | The Isaacs | Gaither |
| 28 | Black in the Saddle | Cowboy Troy | RAYBAW |
| 47 | A Blue Collar Christmas | Slidawg and the Redneck Ramblers | Madacy |
| 43 | The Bluegrass Sessions | Merle Haggard | McCoury |
| 47 | Boogity, Boogity: A Tribute to the Comedic Genius of Ray Stevens | Cledus T. Judd | Curb |
| 14 | Bring It On | Kevin Fowler | Equity |
| 34 | Cash: Ultimate Gospel | Johnny Cash | Columbia Records |
| 12 | Christmastime in Larryland | Larry the Cable Guy | Jack/Warner Bros. |
| 42 | Cole Deggs & the Lonesome | Cole Deggs & the Lonesome | Columbia Records |
| 50 | Country's Got More Heart | Various Artists | Sony BMG |
| 11 | Dwight Sings Buck | Dwight Yoakam | New West |
| 36 | Easy Money | John Anderson | RAYBAW |
| 49 | Flynnville Train | Flynnville Train | Show Dog |
| 14 | Halfway to Hazard | Halfway to Hazard | Mercury Nashville |
| 18 | Hear Something Country: Christmas | Various Artists | BNA |
| 38 | Kenny Rogers | Kenny Rogers | Madacy |
| 15 | King of the Mountains | Rodney Carrington | Capitol Nashville |
| 43 | Life's a Dance | Various Artists | Word/Curb |
| 45 | Live at the Avalon Ballroom 1969 | Gram Parsons | Amoeba |
| 37 | The Love Songs | Clint Black | Equity Music Group |
| 36 | Mary Did You Know | Various Artists | Word/Curb |
| 48 | A Redneck Christmas | Slidawg and the Redneck Ramblers | Madacy |
| 37 | Ricky Skaggs & Bruce Hornsby | Ricky Skaggs & Bruce Hornsby | Legacy |
| 41 | Right About Now | Ty Herndon | Titan Pyramid |
| 45 | Salt of the Earth | Ricky Skaggs & The Whites | Skaggs Family |
| 49 | Songbird: Rare Tracks and Forgotten Gems | Emmylou Harris | Rhino |
| 11 | Songs 4 Worship: Country | Various Artists | Time Life |
| 26 | Songs of the Season | Randy Travis | Word/Curb |
| 14 | The Taylor Swift Holiday Collection | Taylor Swift | Big Machine |
| 46 | Translated from Love | Kelly Willis | Rykodisc |
| 19 | Unglamorous | Lori McKenna | Warner Bros. Nashville |
| 49 | Upfront & Down Low | Teddy Thompson | Verve Forecast |
| 29 | The Very Best of Tracy Lawrence | Tracy Lawrence | Rhino |
| 21 | The Very Best of Travis Tritt | Travis Tritt | Rhino |
| 25 | Whiskey Falls | Whiskey Falls | Midas |
| 12 | The Wolf | Shooter Jennings | Universal South |
Births
- July 12 – Ty Myers, singer-songwriter of the 2020s ("Ends of the Earth").
Deaths
- January 1 – Del Reeves, 74, best known for his "girl-watching" novelty-type songs (e.g., "Girl on the Billboard"). (emphysema)
- January 6 – Sneaky Pete Kleinow, 72, pedal steel guitarist for the Flying Burrito Brothers. (complications from Alzheimer's disease)
- January 13 – Doyle Holly, 70, member of Buck Owens' Buckaroos; he also had a string of minor hits in the early to mid-1970s. (prostate cancer)
- February 2 – Terry McMillan, 53, veteran Nashville session harmonica player and percussionist. (natural causes)
- March 24 – Henson Cargill, 66, country performer best known for 1968 smash "Skip a Rope." (surgical complications)
- April 17 – Glenn Sutton, 69, songwriter and producer best known for the hit "(I Never Promised You a) Rose Garden"; a chief architect of the countrypolitan sound of the late 1960s/early 1970s. (heart attack)
- July 3 – Boots Randolph, 80, member of Nashville's famed "A-Team" of musicians; he was the saxophonist (subdural hematoma)
- September 26 – Patrick Bourque, 29, bass guitarist for the group Emerson Drive. (suicide)
- October 28 – Porter Wagoner, 80, rhinestone-suited country music icon, television program host of the 1960s and 1970s, duet partner of Dolly Parton. (lung cancer)[18]
- November 6 – Hank Thompson, 82, Western-swing styled artist best known for "The Wild Side of Life", 1960's "A Six Pack to Go", and others. (lung cancer)[19]
- November 18 – John Hughey, 73, steel guitarist known for his "crying steel" style of playing (Heart complications)[20]
- November 29 – Jim Nesbitt, 75, best known for the hits "Please Mr. Kennedy", "A Tiger in My Tank" and "Runnin' Bare". (Extended battle with a heart condition)
- November 30 – Ralph Ezell, 54, bass guitarist and co-founding member of the 1980s and 1990s group Shenandoah. (heart attack)
- December 16 – Dan Fogelberg, 56, Many pop hits with a few minor country hits, including "Same Old Lang Syne" (prostate cancer)
Hall of Fame inductees
Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame inductees
- Howard Watts ("Cedric Rainwater")
- Carl Story
Country Music Hall of Fame inductees
- Ralph Emery (1933-2022), disc jockey and television host from the 1960s onward.
- Vince Gill (born 1957), singer-songwriter and musician who rose to prominence in the 1980s.
- Mel Tillis (1932–2017), singer and songwriter who rose to fame in the 1950s.
Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame inductees
- John Allan Cameron
- Sheila Hamilton
- Cliff Dumas