With numerous successful albums and many major awards under her belt, Trisha Yearwood is well established as one of country music’s most popular and appealing female vocalists. Starting with her debut release in 1991, she has amassed an enormous following of listeners who are drawn to her “everywoman” songs of fortitude and vulnerability.

Patricia Lynn Yearwood was born in Monticello on September 19, 1964, to Gwendolyn and Jack Yearwood. She grew up on a thirty-acre farm, absorbed the influence of Elvis Presley and other pop stars as a child, and sought out a broad range of popular music—from the traditional country artists in her parents’ record collection to southern-based rock and roll.

Trisha Yearwood

After graduation from high school, where she performed in musicals and choral groups, Yearwood received a two-year business degree from Young Harris College and subsequently attended the University of Georgia in Athens for one quarter. In 1985 she transferred to Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee, and graduated in 1987 with a bachelor’s degree in music business. That same year she married her first husband, Christopher Latham; the couple divorced in 1991. Yearwood began her career as an intern and as a receptionist at MTM Records and sang demo tapes, for which she was paid fifty dollars apiece.

Fellow country music performer Garth Brooks heard Yearwood and asked her to provide backup vocals on his 1990 release, No Fences. In 1991 she became his opening act—the same year she released her solo debut, Trisha Yearwood. Her first single, “She’s in Love with the Boy,” spent two weeks at the top of the country charts; it was the first of four hits from the album. The album sold two million copies and earned her the Academy of Country Music award for top new female vocalist.

From the beginning of her career, Yearwood combined the pop sensibility of one of her idols, Linda Ronstadt, with the more traditional sound of such country artists as Tammy Wynette. Her sensitive interpretive skills and strong, versatile voice have allowed her to blend pop, folk, and adult contemporary music and achieve tremendous crossover appeal.

Yearwood ranked among the most prodigious—and most successful—recording artists of the 1990s, releasing no fewer than nine full-length albums within a decade of her debut, including the critically acclaimed Hearts in Armor (1992) and the chart-topping Inside Out (2001). Her production slowed thereafter, in part because she pursued interests beyond music, though she released another five albums across the next two decades, including Jasper County (2005), a tribute to her home county.

Yearwood dabbled in acting, too, appearing in JAG, Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman, and other network dramas in the 1990s. In the 2000s she pivoted to the development of her celebrity lifestyle brand, peddling cookbooks and other wares of domesticity, including furniture (the Trisha Yearwood Home Collection), dinnerware (the Trisha Yearwood Gwendolyn Collection) and pet supplies (the Trisha Yearwood Pet Collection). Remarkably, Trisha’s Southern Kitchen aired for seventeen seasons on the Food Network.

Yearwood’s first marriage ended in divorce and her second, to musician Robert Reynolds, was also unsuccessful—an experience she mined when composing Real Life Woman (2000). But her third marriage, to country music star Garth Brooks, has endured. Together the pair have supported multiple charities, including the Georgia-based Habitat for Humanity. Yearwood’s efforts were rewarded at the CMT Music Awards in 2024, when the media outlet made her the inaugural recipient of the June Carter Cash Humanitarian Award. That same year she received the Academy of Country Music Icon Award for her contributions to country music.

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Trisha Yearwood

Trisha Yearwood

Monticello native Trisha Yearwood is well established as one of country music's most popular and appealing female vocalists. Starting with her debut release in 1991, she has amassed an enormous following of listeners who are drawn to her "everywoman" songs of fortitude and vulnerability.

Courtesy of Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library, University of Georgia Libraries, Georgia Music Hall of Fame Collection.