Stepping Stone (album)

Stepping Stone
Studio album by
ReleasedJuly 28, 1998 (1998-07-28)
GenreCountry
Length44:41
LabelLyric Street
ProducerDann Huff
Lari White chronology
The Best of Lari White
(1997)
Stepping Stone
(1998)
Green Eyed Soul
(2004)
Singles from Stepping Stone
  1. "Stepping Stone"
    Released: May 4, 1998[1]
  2. "Take Me"
    Released: September 21, 1998[2]
  3. "John Wayne Walking Away"
    Released: March 29, 1999[3]

Stepping Stone is the fourth studio album by American country music artist Lari White. It was released on July 28, 1998 via Lyric Street Records, her first album for the label and the then-new label's first release officially.[4] Dann Huff produced this album. This was White's last album to primarily feature a country sound as later projects would infuse multiple different genres besides country music. Unlike her previous albums, Stepping Stone primarily features songs written by songwriters, with White only co-writing two of the album's songs.

Commercially, it was a flop, hitting number 50 on the US Top Country Albums chart. It spawned three official singles. The title track became a US top-20 hit while also becoming White's only top-ten single on the Canada RPM Country Tracks chart. "Take Me" was her final top-forty on the US Hot Country Songs chart while "John Wayne Walking Away" failed to reach the top-fifty and became her final entry on the chart. After this record, White would be freed from her label due to them not being satisfied with the material from what would become her fifth studio album Green Eyed Soul (2004).[5]

The track "Only God Could Stop Me Loving You" was originally recorded by Billy Ray Cyrus on his 1994 album Storm in the Heartland. Canadian country music band Emerson Drive would later record the song for their 2002 debut album Emerson Drive and release it as a single. "You Can't Go Home Again (Flies on the Butter)" was later recorded as "Flies on the Butter (You Can't Go Home Again)" by Wynonna and Naomi Judd on Wynonna's 2003 album What the World Needs Now Is Love, from which it was released as a single.

  1. ^ "Going for Adds: Country". Radio & Records. No. 1246. May 1, 1998. p. 69.
  2. ^ "Going for Adds: Country". Radio & Records. No. 1266. September 18, 1998. p. 65.
  3. ^ "Country Highlights: On Your Desk". Airplay Monitor. Vol. 7, no. 13. March 26, 1999. p. 1.
  4. ^ Evans Price, Deborah (December 6, 1997). "Lyric Street Looking To The Future". Billboard. Vol. 109, no. 49. Nielsen Business Media. pp. 30, 32. ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved September 27, 2024 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ Catlin, Roger (April 21, 2002). "White puts country days behind her, bares her soul". The Daily Gazette, republished from The Hartford Courant. p. G5. Retrieved September 27, 2024 – via Google Books.