Eric White’s Top Five Favorite Country Legends

Thursday afternoon at the studio, I had a conversation about some of the greatest artists in Country Music history. I think the term “Goat “ has been overused in the last ten years.

I hear people use the words King, Goat, and Legend. Yep, we use them on Freedom 95.1. Who are your top 20 artists in Country Music History?

This will be purely subjective, as most music is. If you went by number one and their longevity, I would say George Strait is number one, with records sold, Garth and Shania. Still, in my opinion, Hank Williams Jr. is number one on my list. Still, even then, I have to immediately think about Hank Williams Sr., with being his son. Would I even know who Hank Jr. is? Waylon and Willie will always have a place in my mind close to the top because Waylon and Willie, the leather texture album, was the first a young Eric White played in his room all those years ago.

At Freedom 95.1, we have a top 20. The list I present to you is not how I would rank them, but how an author ranked them using a chart-based methodology. Longevity played a huge role in his scoring system. The other footnote is we are using for the 2012 publication of this book.

  1. George Jones

  2. George Strait

  3. Johnny Cash

  4. Conway Twitty

  5. Merle Haggard

  6. Reba McEntire

  7. Dolly Parton

  8. Willie Nelson

  9. Alan Jackson

  10. Hank Williams Jr.

  11. Waylon Jennings

  12. Alabama

  13. Garth Brooks

  14. Ronnie Milsap

  15. Kenny Rogers

  16. Brooks and Dunn

  17. Clint Black

  18. Randy Travis

  19. The Judds

  20. Keith Whitley

How does our top 20 shape up against your personal Top 20? Are there artists that you feel belong in the top 20? Are there artists you disagree with in our Top 20? The next 30 artists are as follows.

  1. Tim McGraw

  2. Kenny Chesney

  3. Charley Pride

  4. Toby Keith

  5. Tammy Wynette

  6. Tanya Tucker

  7. Don Williams

  8. Glen Campbell

  9. Steve Wariner

  10. Vince Gill

  11. Barbara Mandrell

  12. Oak Ridge Boys

  13. Mickey Gilley

  14. John Anderson

  15. Travis Tritt

  16. Faith Hill

  17. Sawyer Brown

  18. Bellamy Brothers

  19. Earl Thomas Conley

  20. Patty Loveless

  21. Trisha Yearwood

  22. Gene Watson

  23. Mark Chesnutt

  24. Tracy Lawrence

  25. John Michael Montgomery

  26. Clay Walker

  27. Diamond Rio

  28. Trace Adkins

  29. Joe Diffie

  30. John Conlee

Once again, they are ranked on the list using the author’s methodology; we play one more grouping of artists on Freedom 95.1. These artists qualify as legends in our opinion because of a song or are bonafide legends just because time has kept them from staying in the “top 50”.

  1. Ray Price

  2. Buck Owens

  3. Marty Robbins

  4. Loretta Lynn

  5. Faron Young

  6. Mel Tillis

  7. Kitty Wells

  8. Staler Brothers

  9. Crystal Gayle

  10. Hank Williams

  11. Jerry Lee Lewis

  12. Martina McBride

  13. Bobby Bare

  14. Lynn Anderson

  15. Rascal Flatts

  16. Brad Paosley

  17. Eddie Rabbit

  18. Anne Murray

  19. Joe Stampley

  20. Dottie West

  21. Emmylou Harris

  22. G. Sheppard

  23. Keith Urban

  24. Moe Bandy

  25. Tom T. Hall

  26. Johnny Paycheck

  27. Jerry Reed

  28. Charlie Rich

  29. Lonestar

  30. Larry Gatlin

  31. Janie Fricke

  32. Ricky Skaggs

  33. Vern Gosdin

  34. Collin Raye

  35. Eddy Raven

  36. Lee Greenwood

  37. Kathy Mattea

  38. Lorrie Morgan

  39. Dwight Yoakam

  40. Carrie Underwood

  41. Shania Twain

  42. Roger Miller

  43. Charly McClain

  44. Blake Shelton

  45. Montgomery Gentry

  46. Ronnie McDowell

  47. Ricky Van Shelton

  48. Tracy Byrd

  49. Mel McDaniel

  50. Dan Seals

  51. Gary Allan

  52. Jason Aldean

  53. Roseanne Cash

  54. Sammy Kershaw

  55. Nitty Gritty Dirt Band

  56. Aaron Tippin

  57. Restless Heart

  58. Sara Evans

  59. Dierks Bentley

  60. Shenandoah

  61. Johnny Lee

  62. Gary Morris

  63. Jo Dee Messina

  64. Wynonna

  65. Pam Tillis

  66. Neal McCoy

  67. Ed Bruce

  68. Exile

  69. Mary Chapin Carpenter

  70. Michael Martin Murphy

  71. Razzy Bailey

  72. Doug Stone

  73. Lee Ann Womack

  74. Terri Clark

  75. Marty Stuart

  76. Billy Dean

  77. Phil Vassar

  78. Craig Morgan

  79. Cal Smith

  80. Lacy J Dalton

  81. Mark Wills

  82. Rodney Atkins

  83. Mac Davis

  84. Rodney Crowell

  85. Graham Brown

  86. Charlie Daniels Band

  87. Sylvia

  88. David Frizell

  89. John Denver

  90. Highway 101

  91. Darryl Worley

  92. Little Texas

  93. Holly Dunn

  94. Gary Stewart

  95. Mel Street

  96. Patsy Cline

  97. Josh Turner

  98. Gretchen Wilson

  99. Tompall Glaser

  100. Shelly West

  101. David Allan Coe

  102. John Schneider

  103. Paul Overstreet

  104. T. Oslin

  105. Bryan White

  106. Hal Ketchum

  107. Billy Joe Royal

  108. BJ Thomas

  109. Rhett Akins

  110. David Ball

  111. Deborah Allen

  112. Jeff Bates

  113. Lionel Cartwright

  114. Terri Gibbs

  115. Jamey Johnson

  116. Kevin Sharp

  117. Daryle Singletary

  118. Jo-el Sonnier

  119. Doug Supernauw

  120. Van Zant

  121. Chris Young

Now, I will reveal my top five artists of all time. Once again, this is Eric White’s opinion and mine alone, based on my thirty-plus years of experience in radio and my fifty, almost fifty-five years of listening to country music.

Eric White’s Top Five Artists of all time:

  1. Hank Williams Jr.

  2. Waylon Jennings

  3. Merle Haggard

  4. Alan Jackson

  5. Neal McCoy

My top five can be explained by my experience listening to country music,

Hank Williams Jr.: I have probably listened to Hank Jr music in my lifetime more than any other music, whether in that room at home at night growing up, on the radio, or mixtapes I would make using my albums. I primarily listened to his albums from 1982-1987. When I was at home, I listened to my stereo and my albums, especially after 1985 when Pop music was not to my liking; I would still listen to Hank when the eraser came out in 1991 and tried to erase the rich history of country music.

Waylon Jennings: Well, ole Waylon is tied to one of the most incredible nights of my life. My dad came home with a new stereo for his and Mama’s room, and I got their old Craig all-in-one stereo. The hours spent making mixtapes in that room, well, he gave me three of his albums that night: Waylon and Willie, Waylon Greatest Hits, and the Outlaws. How can I not put Waylon at the top of my list?

Merle Haggard: Ole Merle is probably one of the reasons I see bands as much as I did, especially Jeff Dugan. One of the first nights that I saw Jeff, he played a Merle tune, “Misery and Gin,” the song had been on the soundtrack for the “Bronco Billy” Soundtrack, and I had that album growing up, but as CD’s came out it was one of the most challenging songs to find at the store, but good ole Jeff would play the song every time I would see him. Merle’s music was full of great orchestration, and his words rang true, especially “If We Make It Through December”

Alan Jackson: he makes a list because he has always released songs that reach out and grab me. In 1991, he went number one for the first time with “I’d Love You All Over Again.” The night of Mrs. Pam’s tenth wedding anniversary, we stopped in at Cowboy’s to see the band, and my friend Aaron Lane was the DJ that night. I asked him to play that song for me and Pam to dance to. Afterward, he was like; Alan had recorded that song for you that night. Alan had written that song for his wife Denise; I just borrowed it because it was perfect. Over the years, Toby Keith may have caught my feelings in song after 9/11, but Alan Jackson captured how a nation felt after 9/11. Alan’s song “Small Town Southern Man” conjures up images of people I have known in my lifetime. His song “The Older I Get” released in 2021, shortly after Covid and when I turned fifty, hit me between the eyes and made me think and contemplate many things. Because of this fact, Alan Jackson edges out George Strait in my top five. George is in everyone else’s top five he is the chart king of country music, he gets the love and respect of all country fans, but Alan Jackson has since 1989 been right there, George had a ten year headstart on Alan.

The number five on my list is there simply because although I usually attend concerts to work, I get tickets because of work. I have paid for more tickets to see the gentleman at number five on my list than any other artist. When I joke and say that I saw his show over 50 times, all the way back to Cowboy’s in 1990, I am serious; I have sat there and watched him sing to tracks in his truck and cranked up the speakers at home that made my neighbors thing there was Mercredi at Pelican Park. Neal McCoy is an entertainer, singer, and, I will say, an all-around nice fellow. One of my bucket lists in life is to go to Longview and volunteer and or participate in the East Texas Angel Network Fundraiser Neal puts on each year.

I would love to see your top five artists of all time, and it would be cool if you would explain why. I love why people feel that way. Thank you to Barry Premeaux for having that conversation with me. My son Chris also had a conversation with me on Saturday night that inspired my Top five on paper.

Thank you for listening to the Country Legends on Freedom 95.1 and the Freedom 95.1 App. We appreciate your time and hope we can do it for years to come.

Eric White – Country Music Fan

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