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Carrie Underwood

Carrie Underwood

In terms of sheer sales and fame, Carrie Underwood may be the biggest star generated by the American Idol behemoth in the 2000s. She took home the American Idol crown in the show's fourth season and, at first, she appealed primarily to the program's wide pop audience: her coronation song "Inside Your Heaven" reached number one on Billboard's Top 40 but didn't crack its country Top 40. While Underwood always retained an element of stylish showbiz appeal -- the top of the charts was never a stranger to her -- she made her mark in country music. Some Hearts, her 2005 debut, produced two number one smashes that became contemporary classics and helped establish the boundaries for her career. "Jesus, Take the Wheel" was a sentimental ballad delivered sensitively by Underwood, while "Before He Cheats" showed she possessed a country toughness. For the next decade, she consistently placed at the top of the country charts, thanks to such number one singles as "All-American Girl," "Cowboy Casanova," and "Good Girl," and she maintained a significant presence on country radio even as she incorporated pop moves on such albums as Blown Away (2012), Cry Pretty (2018), and Denim & Rhinestones (2022).

Underwood grew up in the small town of Checotah, Oklahoma, and began singing with her church at the tender age of three. She performed throughout her childhood, eventually moving on to festival gigs in several states. Along with developing her singing, she learned to play guitar and piano. She graduated from high school as her class salutatorian and majored in mass communication at Northeastern State College with an eye on a career in broadcast journalism but continued her singing career throughout her studies.

As a senior just a few credits short of her degree, Underwood heard about the auditions for the 2005 season of American Idol. She tried out for the show at the St. Louis, Missouri auditions, and her innocent charm and pure, pretty voice ended up winning her not only a place among the 12 finalists, but the title of 2005's American Idol. Her debut single, "Inside Your Heaven," was released that summer, and she finished recording her first album after completing the American Idols Live! tour. Some Hearts was released later that fall and became a smash hit, selling over 300,000 copies in its first week and eventually going platinum a whopping seven times. The album's lead single, "Jesus, Take the Wheel," was also a big success, topping Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart for six weeks.

Acclaim for the album and single spilled over into 2006, when Some Hearts re-entered Billboard's Top Ten after Underwood's appearance on the 2006 American Idol finale. Meanwhile, "Jesus, Take the Wheel" won Single Record of the Year at the Academy of Country Music Awards (where she also won Top New Female Vocalist); a Dove Award from the Gospel Music Association; and Breakthrough Video and Best Female Video at the CMT Awards, making her the only double winner at the event. Despite her hectic career as a country music star -- which included carrying her tour through the fall of 2006 -- Underwood found the time to finish her degree. "Before He Cheats" was released as her third single late in 2006, and became her third country number one and her fourth total number one hit. That December, she won five Billboard Music Awards: Album of the Year, Top 200 Female Artist of the Year, Female Country Artist, New Country Artist, and Country Album of the Year.

Early in 2007, Underwood began work on her second album, while "Wasted" became the fourth single taken from Some Hearts; she performed it on an episode of American Idol that March, and the following month it hit number one on the Hot Country Songs Chart. Underwood gathered more accolades by winning two awards at the 2007 CMT Awards -- Video of the Year and Female Video of the Year for "Before He Cheats" -- and taking home two Grammys. She also took home three 2007 ACM Awards in May, which included Album of the Year for Some Hearts and Top Female Vocalist. She made another trip to American Idol late in the month for the sixth season finale, where she sang "I'll Stand by You" to a standing ovation. During the show, Clive Davis recognized Underwood's sextuple-platinum sales; she was the first country artist to sell that many copies of a debut album since LeAnn Rimes did it in 1996. She also appeared on Brad Paisley's album 5th Gear, which was released in June 2006.

Riding on that swell of support, Underwood released her sophomore effort, Carnival Ride, in October 2007. Four of the album's tracks hit the top of the country charts, pushing the record to multi-million sales and earning her two additional Grammy Awards. Two years after the album's release, she released her third studio effort, Play On, which found her devoting more focus than ever to her songwriting abilities. She co-wrote seven of the album's tracks, including the lead single "Cowboy Casanova." Underwood's fourth studio album, Blown Away, released in the spring of 2012, was produced by her longtime collaborator Mark Bright, and driven by its hit lead single, "Good Girl," it showed her continued growth from American Idol to savvy country-pop star.

Underwood undertook her first big starring role in 2013, when she played Maria in a live televised production of The Sound of Music on NBC. Airing on December 5, 2013, the broadcast was accompanied by a studio soundtrack. 2014 was relatively quiet for her, although in September she released the single "Something in the Water," and three months later the compilation Greatest Hits: Decade #1. A heavily spiritual single with the theme of baptism, "Something in the Water" topped the country and Christian charts, and also reached the pop Top 40. Early in 2015, it earned her a Grammy for Best Country Solo Performance. In October of that year, Underwood released her fifth studio LP, Storyteller, which was preceded by the single "Smoke Break." The album generated three additional hits: the number ones "Heartbeat" and "Church Bells," plus the number two "Dirty Laundry."

Underwood departed Arista Nashville for Capitol Records Nashville in March 2017. In January 2018, she duetted with Ludacris on "The Champion," a single tied into the 2018 Super Bowl. It debuted at 47 on the Billboard Hot 100 and would later be featured on Cry Pretty, the album Underwood released in September 2018. Debuting at number one on both Billboard's Country Charts and the Top 200, the record's title track peaked at number nine on Billboard's Country Airplay chart, with "Southbound" reaching three on the charts in 2019. Underwood released My Gift, her first Christmas album, in September 2020. The Grammy-nominated My Savior, her first gospel album, followed swiftly on the heels of My Gift, appearing in March 2021; it would win the Grammy Award for Best Roots Gospel Album in 2022.

Carrie Underwood returned to secular music in 2022 with Denim & Rhinestones, a record she co-produced with David Garcia. Preceded by the singles "Ghost Story," "Denim & Rhinestones," and "Crazy Angels," the album appeared in June 2022. It reached number two on the Top Country Albums chart and four on the Billboard 200. In March 2023, Underwood marked her 40th birthday by releasing the stand-alone single "Get Out of That Truck," co-written with Garcia and Lydia Vaughan. It made the Top 40 on two Billboard charts and was later featured alongside "Give Her That" and "Take Me Out" on the deluxe edition of Denin & Rhinestones. ~ Heather Phares & Steve Leggett

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