Artist - George Strait
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The Best George Strait Songs

December 18, 2020 12:15 pm GMT
Last Edited June 4, 2024 12:24 pm GMT

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When you’ve had 61 Number One hits and and 33 platinum or multi-platinum albums like George Strait has, it’s safe to assume that you’ve got more than your fair share of bangers in your back pocket.

It's no wonder they call him the ‘King of Country’.

Holler takes a look at the musical highlights from George's four decades on the country music throne in our best George Strait songs list.

25
MCA Nashville | 1984

The Cowboy Rides Away

The second single from George's Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your Mind in 1984, 'The Cowboy Rides Away' has become a Strait classic ever since.

Previously having been recorded by John Anderson on his 1982 album, Wild & Blue, it was one of the songs that made up one of George's strongest albums in his career along with the title track, 'You're Dancing This Dance All Wrong' and the sublime album closer.

24
MCA Nashville | 1984

The Fireman

Closing out George's fourth studio album, 'The Fireman' was a cheeky Western swing Bachelorette Party classic about a particularly charming man who answers the call to go around his local town calming down women after they've been left feeling hot under the collar and a little bit horny from a break up.

Who wouldn't want to be rescued by a fireman after all? Although if you did have an actual fire related emergency it's probably best not to call George.

23
MCA Records | 1999

Write This Down

Strait's 35th number one single on the US Billboard Hot Country Singles chart, 'Write This Down' also reached number 27 on the Billboard Hot 100, making it one of his most successful crossover singles.

It's a tale of too little too late, as George stops a lover just as she's leaving, suggesting she makes a written note of how much he loves her and then uses it as a bookmark or sticks it on her refrigerator door to remind her of him, even going so far as to suggest she frames the note in her new house.

22
MCA Records | 2000

Murder On Music Row

Originally performed as a duet between George and Alan Jackson at the 57th annual CMA Awards in 1999, they later recorded it for the Latest Greatest Straitest Hits album.

'Murder On Music Row' laments the rise of country pop and the accompanying decline of neo-traditional country, likening it to a murderous crime and name-checking George Jones, Merle Haggard and Hank Williams along the way. It picked up the awards for the Vocal Event of the Year and Song of the Year the following year at the CMA Awards.

21
George Strait Productions under exclusive license to UMG Recordings | 2024

MIA down in MIA

After giving seventy thousand lucky fans a sneak preview of his forthcoming studio album during the opening night of his summer stadium tour at Indianapolis' Lucas Oil Stadium with Chris Stapleton, George Strait released the first official single off Cowboys and Dreamers.

‘MIA Down in MIA' was a twangy slice of tropical country that felt inspired by the late Jimmy Buffett as George took the "A1A to where the palm trees sway" down to his private hideaway in Miami.

20
MCA Records Nashville | 1987

Second Chances

Sitting on the flip side of Ocean Front Property from 1987, 'Second Chances' recounts a time when an old flame of George's lady turned up on his doorstep and started poking about trying to relight old fires.

George has been there before of course, and while he sympathises with the surprise suitor, he has to remind him you don't get second chances when it comes to love.

19
MCA Nashville | 2009

Where Have I Been All My Life

George's twenty-sixth studio album, Twang, picked up a nomination for Best Country Album at the 2010 Grammy Awards and 'Where Have I Been All My Life' was one of it's brilliantly observed highlights.

George is sitting around eating broccoli and listening to Louis Armstrong and reflecting on a life barely lived. Wondering what exactly he's been up to all these years, he makes up his mind to be a little bit more present from now on.

18
UMG Nashville | 1981

Unwound

One of the standouts from George's seminal 1981 album Strait Country, on ' Unwound' his life is unraveling before his very eyes as his woman finds out he's been messing around and packs up and leaves him.

Nothing else for it but to head to the nearest bar to drown his sorrows in and forget all about. Maybe if he dealt with his problems in a slightly more mature way she wouldn't have left him in the first place. Something to think about.

17
MCA Records | 1983

Easy Come, Easy Go

On the breezy title track to his 1993 album, George is in a surprisingly carefree mood as he takes his time saying "Goodbye, farewell, so long, vaya con dios" and see you later to his loved one.

Written by Aaron Barker and Dean Dillon, 'Easy Come, Easy Go' spent two spent two weeks at Number One on Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart.

16
MCA Nashville | 1990

Love Without End, Amen

George gets sent home from school for fighting, expecting his dad to give him a bloody good wigging, but instead his dad just reacts by telling him he loves him no matter what in this sentimental slow burner off 1990's Livin It Up.

15
MCA Nashville | 2011

Check Yes Or No

A cute tale of third grade romance, ‘Check Yes Or No’ tells the story of a young girl called Emmylou Hayes chasing the object of her affections around the playground and kissing him on the school bus, before a note she passes to him in class gets intercepted by the teacher, who reads its contents out to the class.

In the letter, Emmylou tells the boy to reveal his true feelings for her by ticking the box either labelled “yes” or “no”. Luckily he felt the same, and 20 years later they’re a married couple with two kids riding around in a limousine together.

14
MCA Records | 1997

Carrying Your Love With Me

"Baby all I got is this beat up leather bag, and everything I own don't fill up half", croons George on the mid-tempo title track from his 1997 album, as he travels around the country, keeping his loved one in his thoughts wherever he goes from “West Virginia down to Tennessee”, looking forward to when they’re finally reunited.

13
MCA Nashville | 2011

I Hate Everything

George pulls up a barstool next to a down-on-his-luck drinker drowning his sorrows and “throwing doubles down” one evening.

After listening to the man listing off all the things in his life he’s taken a dislike to – the bar, his job, his apartment, all the seasons and weirdly, most of the colours of the rainbow – George decides he should probably call his wife and patch things up with her before he ends up like this cautionary tale.

He pays for the man’s drinks before he heads home as way of thanks.

12
MCA Nashville | 2006

Give It Away

For over 20 years, Conway Twitty had held the record for the most no.1 singles on the Hot Country Charts, but in 2006 George smashed that record into smithereens with this funky chunk of talking blues - his 41st no.1.

Written by country legend Bill Anderson with Jamey Johnson, it finds our hopeless hero sitting amongst the framed photos and furniture from his broken marriage, still unable to move on, long after his wife has left. It won Song of the Year at the ACM awards and the CMA Awards the following year.

11
MCA Records Nashville | 1987

Ocean Front Property

One of George Strait’s funniest songs and an absolute punchline country classic, this title track to his seventh studio album saw him telling his lover he wasn’t going to miss her when she was gone and that he wouldn’t ever want to take her back or even be haunted by her memory.

But it turns out that he’s talking absolute BS, when he likens the probability of him not doing all those things to having an “ocean front property” in landlocked Arizona.

10
MCA Records | 1982

Fool Hearted Memory

The very first of George’s 61 no.1 singles, ‘Fool Hearted Memory’ featured on the film The Soldier, which George even made a cameo in.

Written by Byron Hill and Blake Mevis, George stamped his trademark warm twang delivery on this hit, a weeping fiddle riff dancing delightfully around him.

9
MCA Nashville | 2008

Troubador

“I still feel 25 most of the time / I still raise a little cain with the boys / Honky tonks and pretty women / Lord I'm still right there with them singing above the crowd and the noise”, George sings, his voice a little rougher and his outlook a little more philosophical.

In one of his more personal moments, George looked into the mirror and reflected nostalgically on all his years as a singer: “I was a young troubadour when I rode in on a song, and I'll be an old troubadour when I'm gone”.

8
MCA Nashville | 1983

You Look So Good In Love

George looks on helplessly as his ex-lover falls in love with someone else, but can’t help noticing how much happier she looks now that she’s found someone who truly makes her happy, only wishing he’d been able to do the same.

The lead single from his 1983 album Right Or Wrong, it set the bar for singers like Garth Brooks and Keith Whitley in the late 80s.

7
MCA Records | 2000

The Best Day

The first song on any ‘Country Songs for Dads’ playlist, George pulls hard on the heartstrings in this single, as a father looks back chronologically on all the things he and his son have done together over the course of his life.

Loading up a station wagon with fishing rods for a weekend of camping, his son turns to him as they arrive at the campsite and says, “Dad, this could be the best day of my life / Been dreamin' day and night about the fun we'll have / Just me and you doing what I've always wanted to / I'm the luckiest boy alive / This is the best day of my life”.

If that wasn’t enough to have you already sobbing into your beer, the father takes his son out for a spin in the new car he’s given him on his fifteenth birthday, and the son is still having the best day of his life, and he’s a bloody teenager!!

The third and final verse takes place on the son's wedding day. As they stand in the church, waiting for the bride-to-be, the son turns to his dad to tell him how much he’s learned from watching his father and mother, before claiming one last time that this is actually the best day of his life.

If you’re not a blubbering mess after listening to this song, then we don’t know why you’re even listening to country music.

6
MCA Records | 1996

I Can Still Make Cheyenne

This single from his 1996 Blue Clear Sky album tells the story of a rodeo cowboy torn between the two passions in his life, calling home to apologise to his lover for always being away and prioritising the rodeo life over his love life. When he assures her that he is coming home, she tells him she’s met someone else who isn’t a rodeo cowboy and she’s thinking of leaving.

Given the ultimatum between saving his relationship and the rodeo, the cowboy decides to go on to Cheyenne to take part in one of the most prestigious rodeos in America.

Probably for the best she met someone else, to be honest.

5
MCA Records Nashville | 1998

I Just Want To Dance With You

John Prine and Roger Cook gave George his 42nd no.1 single in 1998, although Prine had recorded a version of it 12 years earlier for his own German Afternoons album. George was in a particularly playful mood here; whistling along with the guitars and twirling his dance partner around the dancefloor in this laid-back country shuffle.

4
MCA Nashville | 2011

I Cross My Heart

Taken from the Pure Country soundtrack, ‘I Cross My Heart’ is George at his most incurably romantic, delivering lines like “You will always be the miracle that makes my life complete, and as long as there's a breath in me I'll make yours just as sweet” with a profoundly endearing charm on this heartfelt ballad.

3
MCA Records Nashville | 1987

All My Exes Live in Texas

The second single from the Ocean Front Property album finds George listing off his ex-lovers – Rosanna, Elieen, Allison and even Dimples – who all reside in various places throughout the state of Texas. He longs to live there too but resigns himself to having to stay in Tennessee, just to avoid them all. Somewhat surprisingly, Drake name checks the song in his single ‘HYFR’.

2
MCA Records | 1985

The Chair

There are some songs that you could never imagine anyone but George Strait singing, and ‘The Chair’ is one of them. His smooth delivery slips in to tell his one-sided account of a Friday night in a bar, where he walks up to a woman with the famous opening line, “Well, excuse me, but I think you've got my chair”, stumbling over his words as he offers to buy her a drink.

They sit down and, after a night spent talking and possibly dancing, he ends up driving her home. Written by Hank Cochran and Dean Dillon at the end of a particularly long night, it came to them when they were “about written out", as Dillon later described it, after he strummed his guitar and sang the opening line. 20 minutes later, ‘The Chair’ was complete.

The song is included in our Holler playlist of The Best Country Songs About Furniture.

1
MCA Records | 1982

Amarillo By Morning

Written way back in 1973 by Terry Stafford and Paul Fraser, versions of this song had already been released by Stafford and by real-life rodeo champion Chris LeDoux by the time George got his hands on it.

Sung from the point of view of rodeo cowboy, this time driving through the night to a county fair in Amarillo, Texas, it recounts the difficulties that have befallen him throughout his life - broken bones, wives and girlfriends he’s lost, and ultimately poverty – but concludes that he wouldn’t have it any other way.

Despite being regularly included on lists of the best country songs of all time, it’s one of the few singles released that didn’t make it to no.1; stalling at no.4 upon its release.

~~

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Written by Jof Owen
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