"Drunk on Your Love" by Brett Eldredge 50. "Let Me See Ya Girl" by Cole Swindell 41. "Hell Raisin' Heat Of The Summer" by Florida Georgia Line 38. "Dayum, Baby" by Florida Georgia Line 37. "Sippin' On Fire" by Florida Georgia Line 33. "Anything Goes" by Florida Georgia Line 32. "Every Storm Runs Out Of Rain" by Gary Allan 31. "Came Here to Forget" by Blake Shelton 29. "Break Up In A Small Town" by Sam Hunt 27. "Think of You" by Chris Young and Cassadee Pope 24."Leave The Night On" by Sam Hunt 25. "Stay A Little Longer" by brothers Osborne 22. "Highway Don't Care" by Tim McGraw, Taylor Swift, and Keith Urban 21. "Get Your Shine On" by Florida Georgia Line 19. "Gonna Know We Were Here" by Jason Aldean 17. "I Like The Sound Of That" by Rascal Flatts 12. "A Little More Summertime" by Jason Aldean 10. "Bar at the End of the World" by Kenny Chesney 5. "Huntin', Fishin' And Lovin' Every Day" by Luke Bryan 3. If Winter has you feeling down and wishing for better weather, then here are 137 awesome country songs that will take you back to those lazy beach days in the sun. 14 - more to do with radio tastes than the song.Winter is in full swing now and Summer feels further away than ever. Still, the slower tempo of the song brought his chart average down a bit, peaking at No. The lyrics, about a man who realizes that he can’t bring the relationship back - were some of Corbin’s best, and his delivery was immaculate. 1 singles to kick off his career, Corbin issued this song as his third single in November 2010. Easton Corbin – “I Can’t Love You Back”īallads are usually a tough sell at country radio, but after two straight No. 1 hit for Joey+Rory’s Rory Lee Feek, who co-wrote the song.ġ. By April of 2010, the single finally arrived at the apex of the Country Songs chart, earning a No. Easton Corbin – “A Little More Country Than That”Ĭorbin released this track in the late summer of 2009, and watched as the record - a tip of the hat to his small-town roots, and being enamored with simple-life activities like trout fishing and listening to George Strait - slowly inched its way up the charts. Jim Collins and Brett James contributed this offering to the Easton Corbin song catalog with this warm and inviting mid-tempo number that became the biggest hit single from About To Get Real, peaking at No. The cut remained in album-cut purgatory until a remix from Belgian DJ Lost Frequencies unexpectedly became a major worldwide hit, topping charts in Europe, Germany, and Poland, among many other countries.ģ. Corbin released this achingly poignant ballad in 2012 as a track from About To Get Real. You never know where a hit single is going to come from. With this song, he did just that.Īgain, Corbin knows that the simplest point from the artist to a listener is a direct straight emotional line, and this follow-up to his debut single was hardly the heaviest of lyric - about a man and his other heading to the beach - but radio quickly grabbed onto the track, becoming the artist’s second straight song to go all the way to the top of the Country Songs chart. The first single from his second album, the Florida native was itching to prove that he wasn’t simply a one-hit wonder. It wasn’t brain science or calculus, but this 2012 performance was simple and to the point. The flirtatious moment may not have got him off with the policeman who pulled him over, but the fun lyrics helped to make the title track of his sophomore album a fan favorite. This 2013 Corbin song was about a man who was caught driving under the influence - but with nary a beer or whiskey bottle in sight. His earnest vocal on the song remains one of his best non-single moments - and truth be told, as good as most of the singles. Paul Franklin’s always dependable steel playing helped to set a moody effect for this 2014 single, which was one of the most effective attempts in an Easton Corbin song to blend his traditional country stylings, yet also be contemporary and fresh at the same time.Īnother winning performance from Corbin’s debut album featured the singer being surprised by a phone call from out of the blue from an ex that he wasn’t counting on to call. Sanders and Carson Chamberlain, with the latter handling production duties for the record - which remains his biggest seller. The singer wrote this pain-drenched ballad with Mark D. Easton Corbin –“This Far From Memphis”Ĭorbin’s 2010 self-titled debut album was packed with as many great songs that the average fan isn’t familiar with as the ones that made it onto the airwaves.
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