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The Best of Collin Raye: Direct Hits is American country music artist Collin Raye's first greatest hits album. Released on August 26, 1997, via Epic Records, the album contains the greatest hits from his first studio albums plus several new tracks. Among the new recordings were three singles.
The Best of Collin Raye: Direct Hits "Little Red Rodeo" 3 — — 1 1998 "I Can Still Feel You" 1 — — 2 The Walls Came Down "Someone You Used to Know" 3 37 — 5 1999 "Anyone Else" 4 37 — 1 "Start Over Georgia" 39 — — 42 2000 "Couldn't Last a Moment" 3 43 — 1 Tracks "Tired of Loving This Way" (with Bobbie Eakes) 50 — — 76
Between 1991 and 2007, Raye charted 30 singles on the U.S. country charts; he has also charted twice on the Adult Contemporary format as a duet partner on two Jim Brickman songs. Four of Raye's singles have reached Number One on the Billboard country music charts: 1992's "Love, Me" and "In This Life", 1995's "My Kind of Girl", and 1998's "I Can ...
"Little Red Rodeo" is a song written by Phil Vassar, Charlie Black and Rory Bourke, and recorded by American country music artist Collin Raye. It was released in December 1997 as the third and final single from his compilation album The Best of Collin Raye: Direct Hits. The song was a Top 5 hit on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart.
All I Can Be is the debut studio album by American country music artist Collin Raye.It features the hit singles "All I Can Be (Is a Sweet Memory)" (originally recorded by Conway Twitty as "All I Can Be Is a Sweet Memory" on his 1985 album Chasin' Rainbows), "Love, Me" (Raye's first No. 1 on the Billboard country charts), and "Every Second".
10 Nighttime Activities to Help You Relax. You’ve done it! You’ve made the commitment to stick to a steady nighttime routine. And when your new bedtime hits, you’re burrowed under your ...
"I Can Still Feel You" is a song written by Kim Tribble and Tammy Hyler, and recorded by American country music singer Collin Raye that reached the top of the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart. It was released in April 1998 as the first single from his album The Walls Came Down .
Colleen Ballinger returned to YouTube to address what she called 'embarrassing mistakes.' This time she spoke rather than sang, and left her ukulele out of it.