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More Than a Memory

"More Than a Memory"
More than a memory.jpg
Single by Garth Brooks
from the album The Ultimate Hits
Released August 27, 2007
Format
Genre Country
Length 3:25
Label
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s) Allen Reynolds
Garth Brooks singles chronology
"That Girl Is a Cowboy"
(2006)
"More Than a Memory"
(2007)
"Workin' for a Livin'"
(2008)
"That Girl Is a Cowboy"
(2006)
"More Than a Memory"
(2007)
"Workin' for a Livin'"
(w/ Huey Lewis)
(2008)

"More Than a Memory" is a song written by Lee Brice, Billy Montana, and Kyle Jacobs and recorded by American country music artist Garth Brooks. It was released in August 27, 2007 as his 51st single and first single from his third compilation album The Ultimate Hits. On the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Songs chart dated for September 15, 2007, it became the first song to debut at #1 in the entire history of that chart. (Seven years later, Craig Wayne Boyd's "My Baby's Got a Smile on Her Face" became the second song to debut at #1 on Hot Country Songs.) The song was also Brooks's first #1 hit since "To Make You Feel My Love" in 1998.

"More Than a Memory" is a mid-tempo ballad, featuring accompaniment primarily from piano, pedal steel guitar, and a string section. In it, the male narrator describes his attempts to forget about a lover who has left him, by destroying anything that reminds him of her and drinking heavily. Despite his attempts to forget her, he still finds himself attempting to call her on the telephone, and tries to stay awake so as not to dream of her. He states that since he still thinks of her, she is "more than a memory," even though he has been told by others that he will forget about her.

By debuting at #1 on Hot Country Songs, "More Than a Memory" set a new record for the highest debut on that chart, beating the previous record set only one week earlier by Kenny Chesney's "Don't Blink", which debuted at #16. Its chart debut was described by Billboard as "almost impossible", since most #1 debuts on other singles charts (such as the Billboard Hot 100) are tabulated by sales, and not on radio airplay alone. Since airplay usually builds at a more gradual rate than record sales do, very high debuts are less likely to occur on airplay-only charts such as Hot Country Songs.


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