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I Can’t Help Singing Along to These 7 Classic 1970s Country Songs (And Neither Can You)

I can sit through most country music from the 1970s and have a generally pleasant experience just by listening. But other songs affect meโ€ฆdifferently.

The melodies are so deeply ingrained in my bones that I canโ€™t help but sing alongโ€”itโ€™s almost an out-of-body experience, really.

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And yes, this absolutely pertains to background vocals, too.

โ€œJoleneโ€ by Dolly Parton

From the bouncy, catchy guitar riff to the expert backing vocals to Dolly Partonโ€™s signature, warbly singing style, this 1970s country classic is an absolute must-sing when it comes on the radio. I donโ€™t make the rules. If itโ€™s in your range, I canโ€™t recommend the slowed-down version of โ€œJoleneโ€ enough for an even sultrier singalong experience.

โ€œLuckenbach, Texas (Back To The Basics Of Love)โ€ by Waylon Jennings

If the opening lines, โ€œThe only two things in life that make it worth livinโ€™ is guitars that tune good and firm feelinโ€™ women,โ€ donโ€™t make your ears perk up, then Iโ€™m not really sure what will. This Waylon Jennings cut from 1977 comes from his 24th studio album, Olโ€™ Waylon. Jennings is at his peak outlaw-country phase here, and, quite frankly, Iโ€™m on board.

โ€œShotgun Willieโ€ by Willie Nelson

Living in the Ohio River Valley all my life, I do have some kind of weird Midwestern-Southern accent hybrid thing going on. But I definitely donโ€™t have the Texas drawl of Willie Nelson. However, whenever โ€œShotgun Willieโ€ starts playing, I have a brief chance to pretend like Iโ€™m the kind of gal who says โ€œwearโ€ in a way that rhymes with โ€œfarโ€ and โ€œbiteโ€ with โ€œcat.โ€

โ€œLesson In Leavingโ€ by Dottie West

The best singalong songs are ones with plenty of big vocal features, and Dottie Westโ€™s โ€œLesson In Leavingโ€ is full of them. The chorus is the kind that just begs the listener to sing along. Although West wasnโ€™t necessarily the most ubiquitous name in 1970s country, she left us with some great songs for singing on long road trips, that much is for sure.

โ€œDelta Dawnโ€ by Tanya Tucker

The first key change is an invitation to join in. The second key change practically demands it. Indeed, how does one resist the urge to sing along to Tanya Tuckerโ€™s full-belting, key-changing hit single, โ€œDelta Dawnโ€? No, really. I havenโ€™t found a way yet. Iโ€™m not entirely convinced one even exists.

โ€œSouthern Nightsโ€ by Glen Campbell

Both the original Allen Toussaint and Glen Campbellโ€™s subsequent version of โ€œSouthern Nightsโ€ are great, but since this is a list of 1970s country songs I love to sing along to, Iโ€™m going with Campbell this time around. Maybe itโ€™s because I have such a soft spot for Kentucky summers. But thereโ€™s something about this buoyant melody that makes me sing along every time.

โ€œThank God Iโ€™m A Country Boyโ€ by John Denver

I am a woman and have only ever lived in the suburbs (not including a roughly six-month stint in a rental out in the county). Yet, John Denverโ€™s 1974 track, โ€œThank God Iโ€™m A Country Boyโ€, makes me feel like Iโ€™m the person whoโ€™s waking up at 4 am to feed chickens and bale hay. Or, you know, whatever is a usual 4 am activity on a farm.

Photo by Jorgen Angel/Redferns