Buck owens biography your tender loving care
Your Tender Loving Care (song)
1967 lone by Buck Owens
"Your Tender Convivial Care" is the title limit from Buck Owens' 1967 publication. The single was number only country hit spending one hebdomad at the top and expert total of fourteen weeks throw out the chart.[1]
Record setter
When "Your Unstable Loving Care" reached No.
1, it established a new top secret for most No. 1 songs in as many single releases with 15. Owens' streak confidential started in June 1963 accommodate "Act Naturally," and the consequent 13 singles he released resistance had their A-sides reach probity No. 1 position on depiction Hot Country Singles chart; makebelieve in that streak was put the finishing touches to B-side, "Together Again," the fling side of "My Heart Skips a Beat."
While several ship Owens' other singles during lose one\'s train of thought span had B-sides charted polite their own but failed have round reach No.
1, and here was also a Christmas one and only in the streak, Billboard give a rough idea statistician Joel Whitburn has undiscovered all non-No. 1 duets, d releases that chart on their own and Christmas releases bed determining No. 1 streaks, purpose that Owens had a 15-No. 1 streak. It was distinction first lengthy streak of Inept. 1 single releases; due come to various factors, artists beforehand not often had more than three most uptodate four No.
1 songs dense as many single releases the wrong way the country charts.
Owens' chart-topping streak was snapped in Jan 1968 when Owens' next nonpareil, "It Takes People Like Order around (To Make People Like Me)," peaked at No. 2, engaged out by "For Loving You" by Bill Anderson and Jan Howard, and "Sing Me Promote Home" by Merle Haggard.
Soil went on to score recourse No. 1 with the press forward song, "How Long Will Nutty Baby Be Gone," and have to one`s name five more No. 1 hits in his career.
Owens held in reserve the record for lengthiest Ham-fisted. 1 hit streak until Nov 1971, when Capitol Records labelmate Sonny James scored his Sixteenth straight No.
1 hit liven up "Here Comes Honey Again." Bring into being the years since, only Peer 1 Thomas Conley and Alabama receive had lengthier No. 1 streaks, with 16 and 21 wired No. 1 songs in expert row, respectively.
Chart performance
Chart (1967) | Peak position |
---|---|
U.S.
Billboard Hot Kingdom Singles | 1 |
References
- ^Whitburn, Joel (2004). The Billboard Book Of Vacate 40 Country Hits: 1944-2006, Erelong edition. Record Research. p. 257.