[13 September 2007]
McClatchy Newspapers (MCT)

The mortician-turned-singer struck gold in 1978 with this beautiful tear-jerker.
Listen on YouTube

Don Williams wrote this ode to dancing in the kitchen till the morning light, but McDaniel skyrocketed with it.

One of countless country songs about being with one person yet loving another. Few are as moving as this 1983 hit.

Harris has dabbled in so many genres, it’s easy to forget her honky-tonk background. This is a reminder from her incredible 1975 record, Pieces of the Sky.

Williams’ easygoing vocal style and poetic lyrics perfectly married on this 1980 hit.

Ha!—Jennings outsmarted this `70s staple by living a nice, long and extremely meaningful life.
Rodney Crowell version

If Father’s Day had an anthem, it would be Jackson’s 2002 nod to dear old dads.

This song rose only to No. 21 in 1949. Over time, artists and fans began to appreciate the strange tale of fire-breathing cattle getting chased by ghostly cowboys, and many singers covered it, including Johnny Cash, Duane Eddy and, of course, the band Riders in the Sky.
Johnny Cash with the Muppets version

This 1934 song, chugged out by the famous cowboy group that featured Roy Rogers, made such an impact that it inspired a Gene Autry movie.

One of the few black male singers in country music had his profile heightened considerably with this insanely catchy 1971 chart-topper, which won Pride the Country Music Association’s Entertainer of the Year award.
(best available video quality)

No other version of this song can match the haunting and emotionally numbing reading Cash gave it on his appropriately named 1958 album, The Fabulous Johnny Cash.

Hag’s sweetest, most melancholy song.

This was a 1967 B-side, but DJs sniffed a hit and played it, catapulting it to No. 17 on the country charts and to No. 1 on the pop charts, turning the singer into a superstar.

The Oaks’ official switch from gospel to country paid off big time with this 1977 hit.

“Golden Ring” is NOT the song you want played at your wedding, despite its optimistic title.

You can’t get grimmer than Nine Inch Nails, but Cash did in 2002, with his bare-bones reading of this NIN heartbreaker.

Not exactly one of Jackson’s more pensive moments but still a lot of fun.
Video

The Chicks have marvelous taste in covers, such as their devastatingly believable cover of this Maria McKee song.
Video of Maria McKee version

A wonderfully written ballad, with that unforgettable refrain, “watch your broken dreams dance in and out of the beams.”

This bittersweet tale of a young girl whose love is killed in Vietnam is one of the Chicks’ finest moments.
Published at: http://www.popmatters.com/pm/feature/countrys-top-100-all-time-best-songs-100-81/