1998 in country music
This is a list of notable events in country music that took place in the year 1998.
Events
- January 10 — "Retro Country USA," a weekly two-hour syndicated radio program spotlighting major country hits of the 1980s, premieres. The show is initially hosted by Tampa radio personality Ken Cooper, and later "Big" Steve Kelly.
- February 25 — Johnny Cash's album, Unchained, wins a Grammy Award for Best Country Album. The album had been a critical success but was largely ignored by mainstream country radio, a fact Cash and producer Rick Rubin pick up on when they purchase a full-page advertisement in Billboard magazine. The ad, which appeared in March, featured a young Cash displaying his middle finger and sarcastically "thanking" radio for supporting the album.
- June 30 — The divorce of Vince and Janis Gill is finalized.
- December — The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts honors Willie Nelson for his lifetime contributions to the arts. Nelson is the first primarily country performer so honored.
Top hits of the year
Singles released by American artists
Singles released by Canadian artists
Top new album releases
US | CAN | Album | Artist | Record Label |
18 | Ain't It the Truth | Daryle Singletary | Giant | |
21 | The Apostle Soundtrack | Various Artists | Decca Nashville | |
9 | 14 | Back with a Heart | Olivia Newton-John | MCA Nashville |
13 | 12 | The Best of Tracy Lawrence | Tracy Lawrence | Atlantic |
22 | 31 | Big Hopes | Ty Herndon | Epic |
6 | ' | Vince Gill | MCA Nashville | |
6 | 15 | Burnin' the Roadhouse Down | Steve Wariner | Capitol Nashville |
14 | Car Wheels on a Gravel Road | Lucinda Williams | Mercury | |
3 | CMT Canada '99 | Various Artists | BMG | |
2 | Country Heat 1998 | Various Artists | Ariola | |
22 | A Country Superstar Christmas | Various Artists | Hip-O | |
16 | Did I Shave My Back for This? | Cledus T. Judd | Razor & Tie | |
16 | Dorkfish | Bill Engvall | Warner Bros. | |
1 | 1 | Double Live | Garth Brooks | Capitol Nashville |
6 | 11 | Everything's Gonna Be Alright | Deana Carter | Capitol Nashville |
2 | 1 | Faith | Faith Hill | Warner Bros. |
22 | Famous First Words | Gil Grand | Monument | |
39 | 17 | Farmers in a Changing World | The Tractors | Arista Nashville |
2 | 4 | For the Record | Alabama | RCA Nashville |
21 | Greatest Hits | Joe Diffie | Epic | |
9 | 18 | Greatest Hits | Clay Walker | Giant |
5 | Greatest Hits Volume One | Toby Keith | Mercury Nashville | |
1 | 1 | High Mileage | Alan Jackson | Arista Nashville |
1 | 3 | Hope Floats Soundtrack | Various Artists | Capitol Nashville |
13 | 20 | The Horse Whisperer Soundtrack | Various Artists | MCA Nashville |
19 | How Big a Boy Are Ya? Volume 4 | Roy D. Mercer | Capitol Nashville | |
10 | 4 | How I Feel | Terri Clark | Mercury Nashville |
23 | Hungry Again | Dolly Parton | Decca Nashville | |
5 | 5 | I'm Alright | Jo Dee Messina | Curb |
8 | 9 | I'm from the Country | Tracy Byrd | MCA Nashville |
13 | If I Never Stop Loving You | David Kersh | Curb | |
4 | 7 | If You See Her | Brooks & Dunn | Arista Nashville |
2 | 7 | If You See Him | Reba McEntire | MCA Nashville |
37 | 15 | It Don't Get Any Better Than This | George Jones | MCA Nashville |
21 | It Would Be You | Gary Allan | Decca Nashville | |
3 | It's Now! It's Live! | The Mavericks | MCA Nashville | |
1 | 2 | The Key | Vince Gill | MCA Nashville |
15 | 26 | Leave a Mark | John Michael Montgomery | Atlantic |
1 | 1 | The Limited Series | Garth Brooks | Capitol Nashville |
11 | 12 | A Long Way Home | Dwight Yoakam | Reprise |
3 | ' | Reba McEntire | MCA Nashville | |
2 | New Country 5 | Various Artists | Warner | |
15 | No More Looking over My Shoulder | Travis Tritt | Warner Bros. | |
11 | 4 | No Place That Far | Sara Evans | RCA Nashville |
16 | 4 | Nothing but Love | The Wilkinsons | Giant |
6 | Of Your Son | Bruce Guthro | EMI | |
24 | One Road Man | Chris LeDoux | Capitol Nashville | |
1 | 3 | One Step at a Time | George Strait | MCA Nashville |
8 | 6 | The Prince of Egypt | Various Artists | DreamWorks Nashville |
32 | 9 | Shot Full of Love | Billy Ray Cyrus | Monument |
2 | 2 | Sittin' on Top of the World | LeAnn Rimes | Curb |
25 | 11 | The Sky's the Limit | BlackHawk | Arista Nashville |
20 | Some Things I Know | Lee Ann Womack | Decca Nashville | |
9 | Step Inside This House | Lyle Lovett | MCA Nashville | |
18 | 1 | Tammy Wynette Remembered | Various Artists | Asylum |
17 | 15 | Teatro | Willie Nelson | Island |
3 | 4 | ' | Various Artists | Epic |
8 | 21 | Totally Committed | Jeff Foxworthy | Warner Bros. |
9 | 3 | Trampoline | The Mavericks | MCA Nashville |
36 | 18 | Tribute to Tradition | Various Artists | Columbia |
12 | Ultimate Country Party | Various Artists | Arista Nashville | |
9 | 2 | Unbelievable | Diamond Rio | Arista Nashville |
25 | ' | Johnny Cash & Willie Nelson | Columbia | |
8 | 13 | The Walls Came Down | Collin Raye | Epic |
11 | What Is This Country? | Prairie Oyster | ViK. | |
23 | What This Country Needs | Aaron Tippin | Lyric Street | |
9 | 22 | When the Wrong One Loves You Right | Wade Hayes | Columbia |
21 | When You Get to Be You | Lisa Brokop | Columbia | |
3 | 2 | Where Your Road Leads | Trisha Yearwood | MCA Nashville |
9 | White Christmas | Martina McBride | RCA Nashville | |
1 | 1 | Wide Open Spaces | Dixie Chicks | Monument |
47 | 19 | Wine Into Water | T. Graham Brown | Intersound |
8 | Wish You Were Here | Mark Wills | Mercury Nashville | |
7 | You and You Alone | Randy Travis | DreamWorks Nashville |
Other top albums
Deaths
- January 7 — Owen Bradley, 82, legendary record producer for top artists.
- January 17 — Cliffie Stone, 80, music executive and bassist.
- January 19 — Carl Perkins, 65, top picker and rockabilly artist.
- January 24 — Justin Tubb, 62, singer-songwriter who fused honky-tonk and rockabilly in the 1950s.
- February 19 — Grandpa Jones, 84, banjo player, old-time country/gospel singer, comedian and regular on "Hee Haw"
- February 25 — Rockin' Sidney Simien, 59, rhythm and blues, Zydeco, and soul musician best known to country audiences for his 1985 hit, "My Toot Toot."
- April 6 — Tammy Wynette, 55, top country female vocalist of the 1960s and 1970s, best known for hits "D-I-V-O-R-C-E" and "Stand By Your Man."
- April 16 — Rose Maddox, 71, female honky-tonk and rockabilly pioneer who fronted the Maddox Brothers and Rose
- May 7 — Eddie Rabbitt, 56, prolific songwriter and pop-country vocalist who once had 35 Top 10 hits in as many releases.
- May 22 – Royce Kendall, 62, sang alongside daughter, Jeannie Kendall, of The Kendalls.
- June 10 — Steve Sanders, 45, member of the Oak Ridge Boys from 1987 to 1995; replaced and succeeded by William Lee Golden.
- July 6 — Roy Rogers, 86, actor, singer and "King of the Cowboys."
- October 2 — Gene Autry, 91, actor and "The Singing Cowboy".
Hall of Fame inductees
Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame inductees
- Carlton Haney
- Chubby Wise
Country Music Hall of Fame inductees
- George Morgan
- Elvis Presley
- E.W. “Bud” Wendell
- Tammy Wynette
Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame inductees
- Ray Griff
- Bill Anderson
Major awards
Grammy Awards
- Best Female Country Vocal Performance — "You're Still the One," Shania Twain
- Best Male Country Vocal Performance — "If You Ever Have Forever in Mind", Vince Gill
- Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal — "There's Your Trouble", Dixie Chicks
- Best Country Collaboration with Vocals — "Same Old Train", Clint Black, Joe Diffie, Merle Haggard, Emmylou Harris, Alison Krauss, Patty Loveless, Earl Scruggs, Ricky Skaggs, Marty Stuart, Pam Tillis, Randy Travis, Travis Tritt and Dwight Yoakam
- Best Country Instrumental Performance — "A Soldier's Joy" Vince Gill and Randy Scruggs
- Best Country Song — "You're Still the One", Shania Twain and Robert John "Mutt" Lange
- Best Country Album — Wide Open Spaces, Dixie Chicks
- Best Bluegrass Album — Bluegrass Rules!, Ricky Skaggs & Kentucky Thunder
Juno Awards
- Best Country Male Vocalist — Paul Brandt
- Best Country Female Vocalist — Shania Twain
- Best Country Group or Duo — Leahy
Academy of Country Music
- Entertainer of the Year — Garth Brooks
- Song of the Year — "Holes in the Floor of Heaven", Steve Wariner and Billy Kirsch
- Single of the Year — "This Kiss", Faith Hill
- Album of the Year — Wide Open Spaces, Dixie Chicks
- Top Male Vocalist — Tim McGraw
- Top Female Vocalist — Faith Hill
- Top Vocal Duo or Group — Dixie Chicks
- Top New Male Vocalist — Mark Wills
- Top New Female Vocalist — Jo Dee Messina
- Top New Vocal Duo or Group — Dixie Chicks
- Video of the Year — "This Kiss", Faith Hill
- Vocal Event of the Year — "Just To Hear You Say That You Love Me", Faith Hill with Tim McGraw
ARIA Awards