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Tim McGraw Biography

When Tim McGraw debuted in the early '90s, few would have predicted that he would eventually take over Garth Brooks' position as the most popular male singer in country music. Yet that's exactly what he did, thanks to a string of multi-platinum albums, a high-profile marriage to fellow superstar Faith Hill, and Brooks' own inevitable decline. His sound epitomized the strain of commercial country that dominated his era: updated honky tonk and Southern-fried country-rock on the uptempo tunes, well-polished, adult contemporary-tinged pop on the ballads. Helped out early in his career by several novelty items, McGraw simply wound up cranking out hookier hits on a more consistent basis than any of his peers. By the late '90s, he was not only a superstar among country fans, but a mainstream celebrity with a large female following.

Samuel Timothy McGraw was born in Delhi, LA, on May 1, 1967. Though he didn't know it until years later, his father was baseball player Tug McGraw, a star relief pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies and New York Mets who'd had a brief affair with McGraw's mother. He was raised mostly in the small town of Start, LA, near Monroe, and grew up listening to a variety of music: country, pop, rock, and RB. He attended Northeast Louisiana University on a baseball scholarship, studying sports medicine, and it was only then that he started playing guitar to accompany his singing. He played the local club circuit and dropped out of school in 1989, heading to Nashville on the same day his hero Keith Whitley passed away. He sang in Nashville clubs for a couple of years and landed a deal with Curb in 1992. His debut single, the minor hit "Welcome to the Club," was released later that year, and his self-titled debut album appeared in 1993 but failed to even make the charts.

McGraw's fortunes changed with the lead single from his 1994 sophomore effort, Not a Moment Too Soon. "Indian Outlaw" was embraced as a light-hearted, old-fashioned novelty song by fans but was heavily criticized for what some regarded as patronizing caricatures of Native Americans. Despite some radio stations' refusal to air the song, it reached the country Top Ten and even crossed over to the pop Top 20. All the publicity helped send McGraw's next single, the ballad "Don't Take the Girl," all the way to the top of the country charts; it too made the pop Top 20. The album kept spinning off hits: "Down on the Farm" hit number two, the title track went to number one in 1995, and the novelty tune "Refried Dreams" also reached the Top Five. Not a Moment Too Soon was a genuine blockbuster hit, eventually selling over five million copies and topping both the country and pop album charts; it was also the best-selling country album of the year.

McGraw's follow-up, 1995's All I Want, immediately consolidated his stardom with the number one smash "I Like It, I Love It." The album topped the country charts, reached the pop Top Five, and sold over two million copies. Once again, it functioned as a hit factory thanks to the number two "Can't Be Really Gone," the number one "She Never Lets It Go to Her Heart," and the Top Five "All I Want Is a Life" and "Maybe We Should Just Sleep on It." Over 1996, McGraw supported the album with an extensive tour, accompanied by opening act Faith Hill. In October, after the tour was over, McGraw and Hill married, in a union of country star power that drew plenty of attention from mainstream media. It doubtlessly helped McGraw's next album, 1997's Everywhere, become another crossover smash; it topped the country charts, fell one spot short of doing the same on the pop side, and sold four million copies. The lead single was a McGraw-Hill duet called "It's Your Love," which not only hit number one country, but made the pop Top Ten. Three more singles from the album -- "Everywhere," "Where the Green Grass Grows," and "Just to See You Smile" -- hit number one, and two others -- "One of These Days" and "For a Little While" -- reached number two. Meanwhile, "Just to Hear You Say That You Love Me," another husband-and-wife duet from Hill's 1998 album Faith, climbed into the Top Five.

With the multi-platinum success of Everywhere, McGraw was poised to take over Brooks' throne as the king of contemporary country, a transition that only accelerated when Brooks confounded his fans with the Chris Gaines project. McGraw, meanwhile, just kept topping the charts. His next album, 1999's triple-platinum A Place in the Sun, hit number one country and pop, and four of its singles also hit number one: "Please Remember Me" (which featured Patty Loveless), "Something Like That," "My Best Friend," and "My Next Thirty Years." 2000 brought McGraw's first Greatest Hits compilation, a best-selling smash, and another Top Ten duet from Hill's Breathe album, "Let's Make Love." The song later won McGraw his first Grammy, for Best Country Vocal Collaboration. Also in 2000, McGraw had a brush with the law when he and tourmate Kenny Chesney got involved in a scuffle with police officers, after Chesney attempted to ride one of the officers' horses; McGraw was later cleared of assault charges and spent the rest of 2000 on a second tour with Hill.

Released in 2001, Set This Circus Down (number one country, number two pop) kept McGraw's hit streak going into the new millennium, giving him four more number ones -- "Grown Men Don't Cry," "Angry All the Time," "The Cowboy in Me," and "Unbroken" -- just like that. In 2002, his duet with protegee Jo Dee Messina, "Bring on the Rain," also went to number one. For the follow-up album, McGraw defied country convention by entering the studio not with session musicians, but with his road band, the Dancehall Doctors, a unit that had been together since 1996 (with some members around even before that). Tim McGraw was released in late 2002 and produced Top Ten hits in "Red Rag Top" and "She's My Kind of Rain"; it also featured a startlingly faithful cover of Elton John's "Tiny Dancer." McGraw kept the formula the same on 2004's chart-topping Live Like You Were Dying, utilizing his road band, as well as co-mixing/producing the record himself.

Steve Huey.
Discography

2007 - Let it Go

01. Tim McGraw - Last Dollar (Fly Away)
02. Tim McGraw - I'm Workin'
03. Tim McGraw - Let it Go
04. Tim McGraw - Whiskey & You
05. Tim McGraw - Suspicions
06. Tim McGraw - Kristofferson
07. Tim McGraw - Put Your Lovin' on Me
08. Tim McGraw - Nothin' to Die for
09. Tim McGraw - Between the River & Me
10. Tim McGraw - Train #10
11. Tim McGraw - I Need You (with Faith Hill)
12. Tim McGraw - Comin' Home
13. Tim McGraw - Shotgun Rider

2006 - Greatest Hits, Vol. 2

01. Tim McGraw - Live Like You Were Dying
02. Tim McGraw - My Old Friend
03. Tim McGraw - Like We Never Loved Before Feat. Faith Hill
04. Tim McGraw - The Cowboy In Me
05. Tim McGraw - When The Stars Go Blue
06. Tim McGraw - Real Good Man
07. Tim McGraw - She's My Kind Of Rain
08. Tim McGraw - Grown Men Don't Cry
09. Tim McGraw - Not A Moment Too Soon
10. Tim McGraw - Watch The Wind Blow By
11. Tim McGraw - Over And Over Feat. Nelly
12. Tim McGraw - Everywhere
13. Tim McGraw - Beautiful People
14. Tim McGraw - Red Ragtop
15. Tim McGraw - My Little Girl
16. Tim McGraw - I've Got Friends That Do (Bonus)

2004 - Live Like You Were Dying

01. Tim McGraw - How Bad Do You Want It
02. Tim McGraw - My Old Friend
03. Tim McGraw - Cant Tell Me Nothin
04. Tim McGraw - Old Town New
05. Tim McGraw - Live Like You Were Dying
06. Tim McGraw - Drugs Or Jesus
07. Tim McGraw - Back When
08. Tim McGraw - Somethings Broken
09. Tim McGraw - Open Season On My Heart
10. Tim McGraw - Everybody Hates Me
11. Tim McGraw - Walk Like A Man
12. Tim McGraw - Blank Sheet Of Paper
13. Tim McGraw - Just Be Your Tear
14. Tim McGraw - Do You Want Fries With That
15. Tim McGraw - Kill Myself
16. Tim McGraw - We Carry On

2001 - Set This Circus Down

01. Tim McGraw - Cowboy In Me
02. Tim McGraw - Telluride
03. Tim McGraw - You Get Used To Somebody
04. Tim McGraw - Unbroken
05. Tim McGraw - Things Change
06. Tim McGraw - Angel Boy
07. Tim McGraw - Forget About Us
08. Tim McGraw - Take Me Away From Here
09. Tim McGraw - Smilin'
10. Tim McGraw - Set This Circus Down
11. Tim McGraw - Angry All the Time
12. Tim McGraw - Let Me Love You
13. Tim McGraw - Grown Men Don't Cry
14. Tim McGraw - Why We Said Goodbye

1999 - Place in the Sun

01. Tim McGraw - The Trouble With Never
02. Tim McGraw - Seventeen
03. Tim McGraw - She'll Have You Back
04. Tim McGraw - Somebody Must Be Prayin' For Me
05. Tim McGraw - My Best Friend
06. Tim McGraw - Senorita Margarita
07. Tim McGraw - Some Things Never Change
08. Tim McGraw - You Don't Love Me Anymore
09. Tim McGraw - Something Like That
10. Tim McGraw - Please Remember Me
11. Tim McGraw - Carry On
12. Tim McGraw - My Next Thirty Years
13. Tim McGraw - Eyes Of A Woman
14. Tim McGraw - A Place In The Sun

1997 - Everywhere

01. Tim McGraw - Where the Green Grass Grows
02. Tim McGraw - For a Little While
03. Tim McGraw - It's Your Love
04. Tim McGraw - Ain't That the Way it Always Ends
05. Tim McGraw - I Do But I Don't
06. Tim McGraw - One of These Days
07. Tim McGraw - Hard On the Ticker
08. Tim McGraw - Everywhere
09. Tim McGraw - Just to See You Smile
10. Tim McGraw - You Just Get Better All the Time
11. Tim McGraw - You Turn Me On