1987 in country music
This is a list of notable events in country music that took place in the year 1987.
Events
- June 13 — Randy Travis' "Forever and Ever, Amen" spends three weeks at No. 1 of the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart. It is the first multi-week chart-topping song since "Lost in the Fifties Tonight " by Ronnie Milsap spent two weeks atop the chart in September 1985; in that time span, 85 songs would rotate in and out of the chart's top spot. Incidentally, only three other songs during the entire 1980s decade — all of them in 1980 — would spend more than two weeks at No. 1, owing much to how Billboard compiled the chart data at the time.
- September — Dolly Parton's much anticipated TV variety series, Dolly, premieres on ABC in September. Despite a promising start, the show was panned by critics and its audience began to lose interest. After a continual decline on viewership, the series was cancelled at the end of the 1987–1988 season.
No dates
- 46-year-old singer-songwriter K.T. Oslin becomes the success story of the year with her hit "80s Ladies," a Grammy Award-winner which told the story of three friends from childhood who stayed together through an era of social change. The song spawned an award-winning video as well and despite only reaching No. 7 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart, was one of the most played songs of the year. Oslin's rise to fame in her mid-40s came at a time when mainstream country radio was beginning to shun older female artists in lieu of younger, more attractive stars.
Top hits of the year
Singles released by American artists
Singles released by Canadian artists
Top new album releases
US | Album | Artist | Record Label |
16 | 10 | Asleep at the Wheel | Epic |
14 | 20 Greatest Hits | Don Williams | MCA |
1 | 80's Ladies | K. T. Oslin | RCA |
18 | After All This Time | Charley Pride | 16th Avenue |
1 | Always & Forever | Randy Travis | Warner Bros. |
23 | Angel Band | Emmylou Harris | Warner Bros. |
7 | The Best | Dan Seals | Capitol |
25 | Borderline | Conway Twitty | MCA |
1 | Born to Boogie | Hank Williams, Jr. | Curb/Warner Bros. |
23 | Brilliant Conversationalist | T. Graham Brown | Capitol |
8 | Chill Factor | Merle Haggard | Epic |
17 | Come On Joe | Jo-El Sonnier | RCA |
22 | Cornerstone | Holly Dunn | MTM |
21 | Country Rap | The Bellamy Brothers | Curb/MCA |
25 | Crackin' Up | Ray Stevens | MCA |
24 | The Desert Rose Band | The Desert Rose Band | Curb/MCA |
15 | Exit 0 | Steve Earle & The Dukes | MCA |
2 | Greatest Hits | Reba McEntire | MCA |
22 | Greatest Hits | John Schneider | MCA |
25 | Greatest Hits | Steve Wariner | MCA |
1 | Greatest Hits Volume Two | George Strait | MCA |
19 | Hangin' Tough | Waylon Jennings | MCA |
1 | Hank Live | Hank Williams, Jr. | Curb/Warner Bros. |
9 | Harmony | Anne Murray | Capitol |
13 | Heart & Soul | Ronnie Milsap | RCA |
20 | Heartbeat | The Oak Ridge Boys | MCA |
1 | Heartland | The Judds | Curb/RCA |
7 | Highway 101 | Highway 101 | Warner Bros. |
1 | Hillbilly Deluxe | Dwight Yoakam | Reprise |
24 | Hits | Gary Morris | Warner Bros. |
14 | Hold On | Nitty Gritty Dirt Band | Warner Bros. |
18 | I Prefer the Moonlight | Kenny Rogers | RCA |
14 | Island in the Sea | Willie Nelson | Columbia |
1 | Just Us | Alabama | RCA |
6 | King's Record Shop | Rosanne Cash | Columbia |
3 | The Last One to Know | Reba McEntire | MCA |
23 | Lone Star State of Mind | Nanci Griffith | MCA |
10 | Love Me Like You Used To | Tanya Tucker | Capitol |
22 | A Man Called Hoss | Waylon Jennings | MCA |
9 | Maple Street Memories | The Statler Brothers | Mercury |
1 | Ocean Front Property | George Strait | MCA |
18 | Rainbow | Dolly Parton | Columbia |
18 | Right Hand Man | Eddy Raven | RCA |
5 | The Royal Treatment | Billy Joe Royal | Atlantic |
13 | Shelter from the Night | Exile | Epic |
16 | Somewhere in the Night | Sawyer Brown | Capitol/Curb |
24 | Sure Feels Good | Barbara Mandrell | EMI America |
14 | Too Wild Too Long | George Jones | Epic |
1 | Trio | Dolly Parton, Linda Ronstadt & Emmylou Harris | Warner Bros. |
11 | Untasted Honey | Kathy Mattea | Mercury |
13 | The Way Back Home | Vince Gill | RCA |
25 | What If We Fall in Love? | Crystal Gayle & Gary Morris | Warner Bros. |
14 | Where the Fast Lane Ends | The Oak Ridge Boys | MCA |
1 | Wild-Eyed Dream | Ricky Van Shelton | Columbia |
13 | You Again | The Forester Sisters | Warner Bros. |
10 | You Haven't Heard the Last of Me | Moe Bandy | Curb |
Other top albums
On television
Regular series
- Dolly
- Hee Haw
Specials
Births
- January 31 – Tyler Hubbard, member of Florida Georgia Line, a duo of the 2010s.
- May 7 – Russell Dickerson, country performer of the 2010s onward.
- August 16 – Dan Smyers, member of Dan + Shay, a rising duo of the 2010s.
- September 25 — Greg Bates, up-and-coming country singer of the early 2010s.
Deaths
- June 25 – Boudleaux Bryant, 67, songwriter of many 1950s and 1960s hits.
Hall of Fame inductees
Country Music Hall of Fame inductees
- Rod Brasfield
Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame inductees
- Lucille Starr
Major awards
Grammy Awards
- Best Female Country Vocal Performance — "80's Ladies", K. T. Oslin
- Best Male Country Vocal Performance — Always & Forever, Randy Travis
- Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal — Trio, Dolly Parton, Linda Ronstadt and Emmylou Harris
- Best Country Collaboration with Vocals — "Make No Mistake, She's Mine," Ronnie Milsap and Kenny Rogers
- Best Country Instrumental Performance — "String of Pars," Asleep at the Wheel
- Best Country Song — "Forever and Ever, Amen," Paul Overstreet and Don Schlitz
Juno Awards
- Country Male Vocalist of the Year — Ian Tyson
- Country Female Vocalist of the Year — k.d. lang
- Country Group or Duo of the Year — Prairie Oyster
Academy of Country Music
- Entertainer of the Year — Hank Williams, Jr.
- Song of the Year — "Forever and Ever, Amen," Paul Overstreet and Don Schlitz
- Single of the Year — "Forever and Ever, Amen," Randy Travis
- Album of the Year — Trio, Emmylou Harris, Dolly Parton, and Linda Ronstadt
- Top Male Vocalist — Randy Travis
- Top Female Vocalist — Reba McEntire
- Top Vocal Duo — The Judds
- Top Vocal Group — Highway 101
- Top New Male Vocalist — Ricky Van Shelton
- Top New Female Vocalist — K. T. Oslin
- Video of the Year — "80's Ladies", K. T. Oslin
ARIA Awards