Some of the best country songs came out in the 1980s, songs that went on to be big hits. These three songs all came out in 1984 and were No. 1 hits, even though most people have already forgotten about them.
âMake My Life With Youâ by the Oak Ridge Boys

The Oak Ridge Boys had a lot of hits, especially in the 1980s, including âTrying To Love Two Womenâ, âElviraâ, âAn American Familyâ, and more, so itâs understandable that some songs would be forgotten. The Oak Ridge Boys released âMake My Life With Youâ, written by Gary Burr, on their Greatest Hits 2 album.
The sweet song, about falling in love, says, âSome people say itâs a dangerous game / Iâll take my chances just the same / If love is a game and you are the prize / You standing here is no surprise / And the love that comes over me / Is enough to make me stay.â
âJust Another Woman In Loveâ by Anne Murray

âJust Another Woman In Loveâ by Anne Murray came out when Murray was having a string of hits. Murray was at her prime when the song, written by Wanda Mallette and Patti Ryan, was released. It is included on Murrayâs A Little Good News record.
âJust Another Woman In Loveâ became a No. 1 in both Murrayâs native Canada and the United States. The song says, âIâm just another woman in love, a kid out of school / A fire out of control, just another fool / You touch me and Iâm weak, Iâm a feather in the wind / And I canât wait to feel you touching me again / With you, Iâm just another woman / Just another woman in love.â
âLong Hard Road (The Sharecropperâs Dream)â by The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band

Rodney Crowell wrote âLong Hard Road (The Sharecropperâs Dream)â for The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band. The song is on their Plain Dirt Fashion record. After releasing more than 30 singles, âLong Hard Road (The Sharecropperâs Dream)â became the groupâs first No. 1 single.
The song is from the perspective of a sharecropperâs son. He later looks back fondly on how hard he and his family worked.
âMy dad did construction work after relocating to the big city,â Crowell recalls (via Classic Country Music Stories). âBut they always spoke very vividly and longingly for the days when they lived on the farm and ran bare-footed.â
âLong Hard Road (The Sharecropperâs Dream)â says, âWhen the world was on our radio, hard work was on our minds / We lived our day-to-day in plain dirt fashion / With olâ overalls and cotton balls all strapped across your back / Man, itâs hard to make believe there ainât nothing wrong / But momma kept the Bible read and daddy kept our family fed / And somewhere in between I must have grown / âCause someday I was dreaminâ that a song that I was singinâ / Takes me down the road to where I want to go / Now I know, itâs a long hard road.â