Now That's What I Call Country Volume 5

Now That's What I Call Country Volume 5 is an album from the Now! series released in the United States on June 12, 2012.[1]

Now That's What I Call Country Volume 5
Compilation album by
Various artists
ReleasedJune 12, 2012
GenreCountry
Length66:13
LabelUniversal Music
Series chronology
Now That's What I Call Classic Rock Hits
(2012)
Now That's What I Call Country Volume 5
(2012)
Now That's What I Call British
(2012)
Country series chronology
Now That's What I Call Country Ballads
(2012)
Now That's What I Call Country Volume 5
(2012)
Now That's What I Call a Country Party
(2013)

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[2]

Steve Leggett of Allmusic says the fifth installment in the Now That's What I Call Country series "provides a pretty accurate template of contemporary country music on the airwaves a decade and some change into the 21st century."[2]

Track listing

No.TitleArtistLength
1."Red Solo Cup"Toby Keith3:43
2."Drink in My Hand"Eric Church3:11
3."I Don't Want This Night to End"Luke Bryan3:39
4."Alone with You"Jake Owen3:02
5."God Gave Me You"Blake Shelton3:49
6."Hello"Lionel Richie with Jennifer Nettles4:29
7."Just a Kiss"Lady Antebellum3:38
8."Crazy Girl"Eli Young Band3:26
9."Sparks Fly"Taylor Swift4:21
10."Baggage Claim"Miranda Lambert3:16
11."Banjo"Rascal Flatts3:44
12."You Gonna Fly"Keith Urban3:35
13."All Your Life"The Band Perry3:50
14."Old Alabama"Brad Paisley featuring Alabama4:12
15."Country Must Be Country Wide"Brantley Gilbert3:34
16."Let It Rain"David Nail3:42
17."You"Chris Young2:43
18."Home"Dierks Bentley3:58
Total length:66:13

Chart positions

Chart (2012) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Top Country Albums 4
U.S. Billboard 200 13
gollark: It's entry 2.93e36 on my "should probably do but don't" list.
gollark: Because the second one is apparently pretty practical with a cheap SDR and some antennas, I believe some people on here do it.
gollark: Do you mean actually meddle with them or just receive them?
gollark: Weird.
gollark: Nowadays, if someone came up with the idea of sending privileged system messages down something the user could easily read/write to, they would probably not be taken seriously, but it seems like they just... didn't think of the security implications? Or thought doing it differently would be too costly maybe.

References

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