The Billboard Top 10 Country songs list left many country music fans feeling that something had gone badly wrong with the rankings. Where were the country classics like “Your Cheatin’ Heart,” “Crazy,” “Coal-Miner’s Daughter,” and “I Walk the Line?”
The All-Time Top 10 Country Songs List
- Battle of New Orleans, by Johnny Horton, 1959
- Lady, by Kenny Rogers, 1980
- You’re Still the One, by Shania Twain, 1997
- Are You Lonesome Tonight?, by Elvis Presley with the Jordanaires, 1960
- Raindrops Keep Fallin’ On My Head, by B.J. Thomas, 1969
- Rhinestone Cowboy, by Glen Campbell, 1974
- Breathe, by Faith Hill, 1999
- Tom Dooley, by the Kingston Trio, 1958
- Big Bad John, by Jimmy Dean, 1961
- He’ll Have to Go, by Jim Reeves, 1959-60
No Hank Williams? No Patsy Cline? Top Songs Include Mostly Oldies and Crossover Artists
The Hot 100 Country Songs chart is a largely trip down memory lane, with only two contemporary country artists placing in the top 10: You’re Still the One, by Shania Twain weighed in at #3, and Faith Hill’s Breathe appears at #7.
Country legends like Hank Williams, Patsy Cline, Loretta Lynn, Johnny Cash, and George Jones are nowhere to be found. Current chart-toppers like George Strait, Kenny Chesney, Toby Keith, and Keith Urban are also missing in action.
Hot 100 Chart’s Methodology Explains the Mystery
The explanation for these seemingly strange omissions lies in the way the chart is built. The Hot 100 Country chart ranks only country songs that became hits on the pop music charts, so it includes crossover hits that became popular with pop music fans as well as die-hard country fans. Songs that appealed mainly to country music audiences didn’t necessarily rise to the top of the Hot 100 pop chart.
Over Time, Hot 100 Chart Tracking System Adapted to New Sales Channels
The formula Billboard uses to track the most popular songs is arcane and has changed many times over the last 50 years. Basically, the Hot 100 chart measures a song’s popularity using a formula based on sales and radio play. Songs were chosen for the All-Time Top 10 lists based on their stay on the chart, with weeks at No. 1 earning higher values than weeks at No. 100. The formula was also adjusted to account for new developments in the music industry, such as the rise of radio in the 1950s and the decline of singles sales in the 1990s.
Other Billboard 50th-Anniversary Lists
Billboard published a number of other Hot 100 lists to honor of its half-century of tracking the hits, including lists of the all-time top pop songs, rock songs, Latin songs, and R&B/hip-hop songs.
