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List of Hot Country Singles & Tracks number ones of 2001

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A fman with long blond hair playing a bass guitar
Keith Urban had his first number one in 2001.

Hot Country Songs is a chart that ranks the top-performing country music songs in the United States, published by Billboard magazine. In 2001, 22 different songs topped the chart, then published under the title Hot Country Singles & Tracks, in 52 issues of the magazine, based on weekly airplay data from country music radio stations compiled by Nielsen Broadcast Data Systems.[1]

Singer Tim McGraw's song "My Next Thirty Years" was at number one at the start of the year, having been at the top since the issue dated December 16, 2000,[2] and remained at number one until the issue dated January 20, when it was replaced by "Born to Fly" by Sara Evans.[3] McGraw also topped the chart with "Grown Men Don't Cry" in June and "Angry All the Time" in November. Toby Keith also achieved three number ones in 2001, "You Shouldn't Kiss Me Like This" in March, "I'm Just Talkin' About Tonight" in September and "I Wanna Talk About Me" in November–December, and had the most weeks at number one of any act during the year, with nine. Four acts each topped the charts with two songs, groups Lonestar and Brooks & Dunn and solo artists Jamie O'Neal and Alan Jackson, the latter of whom ended the year at the top of the chart with "Where Were You (When the World Stopped Turning)". Jackson's song, written in response to the September 11 attacks and premiered at the 2001 Country Music Association Awards,[4][5] reached the top spot after just six weeks on the chart, the fastest such rise for four years.[6] It would remain at number one until the chart dated February 2 of the following year.[7] The longest run at number one during 2001 was six weeks, achieved by two songs, "Ain't Nothing 'bout You" by Brooks & Dunn and "I'm Already There" by Lonestar. "Ain't Nothing 'bout You" was ranked number one on Billboard's year-end chart of the most popular country songs,[8] and is the longest-running of the duo's twenty number ones.[9]

Several artists achieved their first Hot Country Singles & Tracks number ones in 2001. Early in the year, two Australian singers, Jamie O'Neal and Keith Urban, achieved their first number ones in consecutive weeks with "There Is No Arizona" and "But for the Grace of God" respectively.[10][11] Teenage vocalist Jessica Andrews made her first appearance at the top of the chart in April with "Who I Am".[12] Later in the year Blake Shelton and Cyndi Thomson achieved their first chart-toppers with "Austin" and "What I Really Meant to Say" respectively.[13][14] O'Neal, Shelton and Thomson all reached the top position in 2001 with their first charting singles, in contrast to the previous year when no artist achieved this feat.[15] Shelton's five-week run at the top tied the record held by Billy Ray Cyrus for the longest spell at number one by an artist's debut single since Nielsen began compiling data for the chart in 1990.[16]

Chart history

[edit]
A bearded man wearing a grey shirt and a black cowboy hat
Toby Keith achieved three number ones in 2001.
A woman with long blonde hair wearing dark clothing and singing into a microphone
Australian singer Jamie O'Neal had her first number one in February with "There Is No Arizona" and returned to the top spot later in the year.
A dark-haired man wearing a dark shirt and singing into a microphone
Blake Shelton spent five weeks at the top of the charts with the song "Austin".
A fair-haired man wearing dark glasses and a white cowboy hat
The year-end number one was "Where Were You (When the World Stopped Turning)" by Alan Jackson, a song written in response to the September 11 attacks.
Issue date Title Artist(s) Ref.
January 6 "My Next Thirty Years" Tim McGraw [17]
January 13 [18]
January 20 "Born to Fly" Sara Evans [3]
January 27 "Without You" Dixie Chicks [19]
February 3 "Tell Her" Lonestar [20]
February 10 [21]
February 17 "There Is No Arizona" Jamie O'Neal [22]
February 24 "But for the Grace of God" Keith Urban [23]
March 3 "You Shouldn't Kiss Me Like This" Toby Keith [24]
March 10 "One More Day" Diamond Rio [25]
March 17 "You Shouldn't Kiss Me Like This" Toby Keith [26]
March 24 [27]
March 31 "One More Day" Diamond Rio [28]
April 7 "Who I Am" Jessica Andrews [29]
April 14 [30]
April 21 [31]
April 28 "Ain't Nothing 'bout You" Brooks & Dunn [32]
May 5 [33]
May 12 [34]
May 19 [35]
May 26 [36]
June 2 [37]
June 9 "Don't Happen Twice" Kenny Chesney [38]
June 16 "Grown Men Don't Cry" Tim McGraw [39]
June 23 "I'm Already There" Lonestar [40]
June 30 [41]
July 7 [42]
July 14 [43]
July 21 [44]
July 28 [45]
August 4 "When I Think About Angels" Jamie O'Neal [46]
August 11 "Austin" Blake Shelton [47]
August 18 [48]
August 25 [49]
September 1 [50]
September 8 [51]
September 15 "I'm Just Talkin' About Tonight" Toby Keith [52]
September 22 "What I Really Meant to Say" Cyndi Thomson [53]
September 29 [54]
October 6 [55]
October 13 "Where I Come From" Alan Jackson [56]
October 20 [57]
October 27 "Only in America" Brooks & Dunn [58]
November 3 "Where I Come From" Alan Jackson [59]
November 10 "Angry All the Time" Tim McGraw [60]
November 17 [61]
November 24 "I Wanna Talk About Me" Toby Keith [62]
December 1 [63]
December 8 [64]
December 15 [65]
December 22 [66]
December 29 "Where Were You (When the World Stopped Turning)" Alan Jackson [67]

See also

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References

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