On This Day in 1990, Garth Brooks Entered the ‘Billboard’ 200 With One of the Biggest Country Albums of All Time

On this day (Sep­tem­ber 22) in 1990, Garth Brooks appeared on the Bill­board 300 albums chart with No Fences. More than a year lat­er, it peaked at No. 3 on the all-genre tal­ly. It reached No. 1 on the Top Coun­try Albums chart and stayed there for 41 weeks. Today, it is one of the best-sell­ing coun­try albums of all time.

Brooks saw suc­cess with his self-titled debut album in 1989. It peaked at No. 2 on the coun­try chart and No. 13 on the all-genre chart. How­ev­er, that was just a hint of what was to come. No Fences was his first album to be released in Europe. As a result, it was the release that made him an inter­na­tion­al super­star. The album impact­ed more than Brooks’ career, though. It helped estab­lish the are­na-friend­ly sound that would per­me­ate coun­try music through­out the decade.

No Fences wasn’t just an era-defin­ing chart suc­cess. It also made Brooks one of the best-sell­ing coun­try artists of all time. To date, the LP has been cer­ti­fied 18x Plat­inum by the RIAA for sales of 18 mil­lion copies. It has sold a fur­ther 845,000 copies inter­na­tion­al­ly, earn­ing Plat­inum or mul­ti-Plat­inum cer­ti­fi­ca­tions in Aus­tralia, Cana­da (7x Plat­inum), and Ire­land (5x Plat­inum).

Garth Brooks Packed No Fences with Classics

In ret­ro­spect, it is easy to see why No Fences sold so well. Some of Garth Brooks’ most pop­u­lar songs and biggest hits appeared on its track­list.

Brooks released four sin­gles from the album, and all of them topped the coun­try chart. “Friends and Low Places” was at No. 1 for the entire month of Octo­ber in 1990. “Unan­swered Prayers” spent two weeks atop the chart in Jan­u­ary 1991. “Two of a Kind Workin’ on a Full House” topped the Hot Coun­try Songs chart dat­ed April 6. “The Thun­der Rolls” took Brooks back to the top for two weeks in June.

All of those songs con­tin­ue to be favorites for fans of Garth Brooks in par­tic­u­lar and ’90s coun­try in gen­er­al. How­ev­er, “Friends in Low Places” is the clear stand­out among them. It became his sig­na­ture song and the name of his Nashville bar.