Blackhawk is the debut studio album by the American
country music group
of the same name. Released in 1994 on
Arista Nashville, it was certified 2× Platinum by the
RIAA for shipping two million copies. The album produced the singles "Goodbye Says It All", "Every Once in a While", "I Sure Can Smell the Rain", "Down in Flames", and "That's Just About Right".
Contents
Five singles were released from the album, four of which were top ten hits on the Billboard charts. The lead-off single "Goodbye Says It All" reached number 11.
"Goodbye Says It All", "Every Once in a While", "I Sure Can Smell the Rain" and "That's Just About Right" all had accompanying music videos. "Love Like This" was later recorded by
Carlene Carter and released as the first single from her 1995 album Little Acts of Treason.
Critical reception
CMT would later reflect that the album "unleash[ed] an electrifying three-part harmony with its luring
grunge edge." The network also lauded the songwriting skills displayed and the "scorching rock-belted instrumentation."[1]
Blackhawk is the debut studio album by the American
country music group
of the same name. Released in 1994 on
Arista Nashville, it was certified 2× Platinum by the
RIAA for shipping two million copies. The album produced the singles "Goodbye Says It All", "Every Once in a While", "I Sure Can Smell the Rain", "Down in Flames", and "That's Just About Right".
Contents
Five singles were released from the album, four of which were top ten hits on the Billboard charts. The lead-off single "Goodbye Says It All" reached number 11.
"Goodbye Says It All", "Every Once in a While", "I Sure Can Smell the Rain" and "That's Just About Right" all had accompanying music videos. "Love Like This" was later recorded by
Carlene Carter and released as the first single from her 1995 album Little Acts of Treason.
Critical reception
CMT would later reflect that the album "unleash[ed] an electrifying three-part harmony with its luring
grunge edge." The network also lauded the songwriting skills displayed and the "scorching rock-belted instrumentation."[1]