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Ranking every Best Country Album Grammy winner
GABRIEL BOUYS/AFP via Getty Images

Ranking every Best Country Album Grammy winner

In 1995, the Grammy Awards introduced the long-awaited Best Country Album category after literal decades without awarding a winner for it. Since then, though, the category has been fiercely competitive, with five of the genre's biggest releases going head-to-head for the title each year.

Throughout the award's history, the Best Country Album winner at the Grammy Awards has represented some of the genre's finest work, with legendary artists like Johnny Cash, Loretta Lynn and Miranda Lambert taking home the trophy over the past 15 years. Flip through the slideshow for a definitive ranking of all 25 Best Country Album winners, along with a few predictions about who will take home the award in 2020. 

The 62nd annual Grammy Awards will air at 7 p.m. on CBS on Jan. 26. 

 
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1995: The Best Country Album category is introduced

1995: The Best Country Album category is introduced
GAB Archives

Previously, the Best Country Album category at the Grammy Awards was known as Best Country & Western Album. Roger Miller won the inaugural trophy in 1966, and the category existed for only two years before it was discontinued by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. 

 
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No. 25: Lady Antebellum, "Own The Night," 2012

No. 25: Lady Antebellum, "Own The Night," 2012
Mark Davis/Getty Images

Lady A repeated its Best Country Album success in 2012 with a win for its third studio album, "Own the Night." Despite mixed reactions from country music critics, the album’s singles “We Owned the Night” and “Wanted You More” really resonated with fans. 

 
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No. 24: Zac Brown Band, "Uncaged," 2013

No. 24: Zac Brown Band, "Uncaged," 2013
Tim Mosenfelder/Getty Images

Already a major success by 2013, the Zac Brown Band was rewarded for its sonic experimentation on "Uncaged" with the Best Country Album Grammy that year. Blending country, Southern rock, reggae and jam band influence, the record debuted at No. 1 on the all-genre Billboard 200 and earned near-universal critical acclaim. 

 
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No. 23: Lady Antebellum, "Need You Now," 2011

No. 23: Lady Antebellum, "Need You Now," 2011
Tim Mosenfelder/Corbis via Getty Images

Country trio Lady Antebellum’s 2010 album "Need You Know" was a major crossover success, thanks in large part to its smash-hit title track. The song “Need You Now” was somehow even more successful, winning four Grammy Awards including Song of the Year and Record of the Year. 

 
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No. 22: Chris Stapleton, "From A Room: Volume 1," 2018

No. 22: Chris Stapleton, "From A Room: Volume 1," 2018
Jason Kempin/Getty Images

After scoring a Best Country Album win for 2016’s "Traveller," Chris Stapleton did it again in 2018 with "From A Room: Volume 1." Bolstered by popular singles like “Broken Halos” and “Second One To Know,” the album also won CMA and ACM awards for Album of the Year. 

 
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No. 21: Faith Hill, Breathe, 2001

No. 21: Faith Hill, Breathe, 2001
HECTOR MATA/AFP via Getty Images

Pop-country’s takeover of the genre was official in 2001 when Faith Hill’s Breathe took home Best Country Album against more traditional contenders like Vince Gill, Alan Jackson and Lee Ann Womack. The record’s title track and lead single was a No. 1 hit on both the country and pop charts. 

 
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No. 20: "Livin’, Lovin’ Losin’: Songs of the Louvin Brothers," 2004

No. 20: "Livin’, Lovin’ Losin’: Songs of the Louvin Brothers," 2004
Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic

Produced by country legend Carl Jackson, "Livin’, Lovin’ Losin’: Songs of the Louvin Brothers," is a gorgeous tribute to one of the genre’s most formative duos and boasts contributions from Merle Haggard, Linda Ronstadt, Dolly Parton and more. The duo’s iconic song, “How’s The World Treating You,” recorded by Robert Plant and Alison Krauss, also brought home a Grammy for Best Country Collaboration with Vocals that year. 

 
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No. 19: Dixie Chicks, "Fly," 2000

No. 19: Dixie Chicks, "Fly," 2000
Paul Skipper/Fotos International/Getty Images

The Chicks repeated their Best Country Album success in 2000 with "Fly," which debuted at No. 1 when it was released in June of that year. Even though it didn’t win, Fly was also nominated for the all-genre Album of the Year trophy at the 2000 Grammys. 

 
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No. 18: "Troubadour," George Strait, 2009

No. 18: "Troubadour," George Strait, 2009
Rob Hill/WireImage

It’s almost surprising that it took George Strait until 2009 to take home his first Grammy Award, considering that he’d been racking up Country Music Association and Academy of Country Music Awards since the 1980s. With 2008’s Troubadour, Strait proved that he was still the King of Country Music with hits like “I Saw God Today” and the record’s title track. 

 
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No. 17: Kacey Musgraves, "Golden Hour," 2019

No. 17: Kacey Musgraves, "Golden Hour," 2019
Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for The Recording Academy

A genre-bending record that really pushes the definition of “country” while staying fiercely true to its traditional roots, Kacey Musgraves’s "Golden Hour" scored a Grammy for Best Country Album and Album of the Year at the CMA Awards. 

 
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No. 16: Taylor Swift, "Fearless," 2010

No. 16: Taylor Swift, "Fearless," 2010
Dan MacMedan/WireImage

With her sophomore album, "Fearless," Taylor Swift became the youngest artist in history to win Best Country Album in 2010. Including the tracks “Love Story” and “Fifteen,” the album is still the most-awarded record in country music history, also taking home the ACM and CMA Award for the year’s best country album. 

 
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No. 15: Dixie Chicks, "Home," 2003

No. 15: Dixie Chicks, "Home," 2003
R. Diamond/WireImage

Marking the Dixie Chicks’s third Best Country Album win, the trio kind of surprised everyone when they took home the trophy for "Home" in 2003. It’s a great (and commercially successful) album, to be sure, but it was released right around the time that frontwoman Natalie Maines’ comments criticizing President George W. Bush thrust the band into a controversy that still keeps their songs off the radio today. 

 
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No. 14: Miranda Lambert, "Platinum," 2015

No. 14: Miranda Lambert, "Platinum," 2015
Michael Tran/FilmMagic

The much-anticipated follow-up to 2011’s "Four The Record"'," Miranda Lambert scored her first all-genre No. 1 and Best Country Album Grammy Award with 2014’s "Platinum." Fittingly, the album has since been certified Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America while earning acclaim from fans and critics alike. 

 
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No. 13: Alison Krauss & Union Station, "Lonely Runs Both Ways," 2006

No. 13: Alison Krauss & Union Station, "Lonely Runs Both Ways," 2006
M. Caulfield/WireImage for The Recording Academy

Bridging the gap between country and bluegrass, Alison Krauss & Union Station’s "Lonely Runs Both Ways" won big at the 2006 Grammy Awards. In addition to the Best Country Album trophy, the album’s single “Restless” won Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal, and “Unionhouse Branch” scored the Best Country Instrumental Performance trophy. 

 
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No. 12: "Timeless: A Hank Williams Tribute," 2002

No. 12: "Timeless: A Hank Williams Tribute," 2002
Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

A truly stunning compilation album worthy of a Best Country Album win, "Timeless: A Hank Williams Tribute" features legendary artists like Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, Keith Richards and Lucinda Williams covering Hank Sr.’s most beloved classics. 

 
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No. 11: Lyle Lovett, "The Road to Ensenada," 1997

No. 11: Lyle Lovett, "The Road to Ensenada," 1997
KMazur/WireImage

Lyle Lovett took home his first Best Country Album Grammy in 1997 with “The Road to Ensenada,” a record that’s still beloved by country music purists. The album stays true to Lovett’s traditional sonic ethos while blending elements of Western swing, country, folk and rock. 

 
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No. 10: Dixie Chicks, "Wide Open Spaces," 1999

No. 10: Dixie Chicks, "Wide Open Spaces," 1999
Frank Micelotta/ImageDirect

The Dixie Chicks won their first of a record four Best Country Album Grammy awards, in 1999 with "Wide Open Spaces," the band’s fourth full-length record and the album that launched them to mainstream country success. The album, which includes Chicks hits like “There’s Your Trouble” and “Ready to Run,” has since moved more than 14 million units. 

 
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No. 9: Sturgill Simpson, "A Sailor's Guide to Earth," 2017

No. 9: Sturgill Simpson, "A Sailor's Guide to Earth," 2017
Kevin Winter/Getty Images for NARAS

There’s plenty of debate in country music circles over whether Sturgill Simpson’s 2017 stunner, "A Sailor’s Guide to Earth" is exclusively a country album, but there’s no denying that it’s one of the best albums of the past decade in any genre. Produced by Simpson himself, the album is an instructional love letter to the artist’s young son and includes a cover of Nirvana’s “In Bloom,” which will go down as one of the best covers in music history. 

 
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No 8: Vince Gill, "These Days," 2008

No 8: Vince Gill, "These Days," 2008
ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images

A truly massive work that encompasses 43 tracks across four individual albums, Vince Gill’s "These Days" is a stunning study in the musical influences of one of country’s most prolific and talented artists. 

 
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No. 7: Mary Chapin Carpenter, "Stones in the Road," 1995

No. 7: Mary Chapin Carpenter, "Stones in the Road," 1995
Philippe AIMAR/AFP via Getty Images

The first winner of the newly created Best Country Album category in 1995, the success of Mary Chapin Carpenter’s “Stones in the Road” can be attributed in large part to the incredible success of “Shut Up and Kiss Me,” Carpenter’s lone No. 1 hit on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart. 

 
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No. 6: Chris Stapleton, "Traveller," 2016

No. 6: Chris Stapleton, "Traveller," 2016
David J. Griffin/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

A successful songwriter before beginning his solo career, Chris Stapleton’s "Traveller" was an unexpected surprise hit that thrust one of the genre’s most talented artists into the mainstream. Alongside Stapleton-penned hits like “Fire Away” and “Traveller,” the record also includes a cover of George Jones’ “Tennessee Whiskey,” which became a crossover favorite after Stapleton covered the song on the CMA Awards alongside Justin Timberlake

 
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No. 5: Kacey Musgraves, "Same Trailer Different Park," 2007

No. 5: Kacey Musgraves, "Same Trailer Different Park," 2007
Rusty Russell/Getty Images

Now one of the biggest names in country music, Kacey Musgraves stormed onto the scene in 2014 with "Same Trailer Different Park." Truly the best album of that year, every track on the album was co-written by Musgraves and its most successful single, “Follow Your Arrow.” 

 
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No. 4: Dixie Chicks, "Taking The Long Way," 2007

No. 4: Dixie Chicks, "Taking The Long Way," 2007
Randall Michelson/WireImage

In 2007, the Dixie Chicks became the winningest act in the Best Country Album category, with four wins to date. "Taking The Long Way" marked the band’s comeback after the fallout following Natalie Maines’ statements critical of President George W. Bush at a London concert, and the Chicks came out swinging with tracks like “Not Ready to Make Nice,” which won three Grammy Awards that year. 

 
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No. 3: Loretta Lynn's "Van Lear Rose," 2005

No. 3: Loretta Lynn's "Van Lear Rose," 2005
M. Caulfield/WireImage for The Recording Academy

Teaming up with The White Stripes’ Jack White to produce "Van Lear Rose," Loretta Lynn proved that she was as creatively and vocally sharp as ever with 2005’s Van Lear Rose. Bringing together two of music’s brightest talents, the album is arguably the best crossover record of all time. 

 
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No. 2: Shania Twain's The Woman In Me, 1996

No. 2: Shania Twain's The Woman In Me, 1996
JEFF HAYNES/AFP via Getty Images

Now certified as one of the best-selling albums of all time, Shania Twain’s 1995 album, “The Woman in Me,” has sold more than 20 million copies across the globe. It also included smash-hits like “Whose Bed Have Your Boots Been Under” and “Any Man of Mine” and was mostly co-written by the artist. 

 
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No. 1: Johnny Cash's "Unchained," 1998

No. 1: Johnny Cash's "Unchained," 1998
R. Diamond/WireImage

The second of Johnny Cash’s American Recordings series produced by Rick Rubin, "Unchained" is a gorgeous retrospective of one of country music's most legendary careers. It features songs written by everyone from Beck to Tom Petty, alongside Cash classics like “I’ve Been Everywhere” and “Country Boy.” The Chris Cornell-penned track, “Rusty Cage,” scored Cash another Grammy nod in 1998 for Best Male Country Vocal Performance. 

 
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Who will win in 2020?

Who will win in 2020?
Paul Natkin/Getty Images

Back in November, the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences introduced the nominees for the 62nd annual Grammy Awards, and Tanya Tucker, Reba McEntire, Eric Church, Thomas Rhett, and the Pistol Annies are nominated. Our money's on Tucker, whose 2019 album, "While I'm Livin'," was a major critical success. 

Amy McCarthy is a Texas-based journalist. Follow her on twitter at @aemccarthy

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