Streets of Heaven (song) explained

Streets of Heaven
Cover:Sherrié Austin - Streets of Heaven single.jpg
Alt:This is the cover art to Sherrié Austin's "Streets of Heaven", released in 2003 under Broken Bow Records
Type:single
Artist:Sherrié Austin
Album:Streets of Heaven
Released:[1]
Genre:Country
Length:4:29
Label:Broken Bow
Prev Title:In the Meantime
Prev Year:2002
Next Title:Drivin' into the Sun
Next Year:2004

"Streets of Heaven" is a song by Australian country music artist Sherrié Austin. The track was penned by Austin, Paul Duncan, and Al Kasha and produced by Jeff Balding and Dann Huff. The song was released on June 2, 2003, as the lead single to Austin's fourth studio album of the same name via Broken Bow Records, her first single release under the label.

Content

The song relates the latest in a mother's series of 2 AM hospital room prayers for her seriously ill and dying seven-year-old daughter. The title refers to the last line in each chorus, as well as the end of the song, wherein she makes the request, "So if you take her with you today, will you make sure she looks both ways, And would you hold her hand when she crosses the streets of Heaven."

Critical reception

The song received a favorable review from Ray Waddell of Billboard, who wrote that it is "the kind of tear-jerker that a country audience would absolutely embrace if given half a chance."[2]

Commercial performance

"Streets of Heaven" debuted at number 54 on the US Billboard Hot Country Songs chart on June 14, 2003.[3] The track entered the top-forty of the chart the week of July 19, 2003, at number 37, becoming Austin's first top-forty charting single since "Never Been Kissed" reached number 29 back in 1999. In its 11th week on the chart, it rose to number 28, surpassing "Never Been Kissed" to become her highest charting single to date. On November 8, 2003, it cracked the top-20, becoming her first entry.[4] The track reached its peak position of number 18 on November 29, 2003.[5] It spent 26 weeks in total. On Radio & Records's Country chart, the song reached number 15 and number 11 on the Country Indicator chart.[6]

Music video

A music video was filmed for the song. It exclusively debuted to Great American Country on August 17, 2003.[7]

Charts

Year-end charts

Year-end chart performance for "Streets of Heaven"!Chart (2003)!Position
US Country Songs (Billboard)[9] 62
US Country (Radio & Records)[10] 68

Notes and References

  1. Going for Adds: Country. Radio & Records. 24. May 30, 2003. 1506.
  2. News: Waddell. Ray. Billboard Picks. June 4, 2012. Billboard. August 23, 2003.
  3. News: Shelburne. Craig. Keith's Dream Comes True: "Horses" Gallops to No. 1. https://web.archive.org/web/20090305134310/http://www.cmt.com/news/country-music/1472387/keiths-dream-comes-true-horses-gallops-to-no-1.jhtml. dead. March 5, 2009. June 4, 2012. Country Music Television. June 6, 2003.
  4. News: Bronson. Fred. Stewart, Cher Cast Chart Spell. June 4, 2012. Billboard. November 8, 2003.
  5. Book: Whitburn, Joel . Hot Country Songs 1944 to 2008 . Record Research, Inc . 2008 . 978-0-89820-177-2 . 36.
  6. News: November 21, 2003 . R&R Country Top 50 Indicator . . 45 . 1531.
  7. News: August 30, 2003 . Video Monitor: New Ons . August 21, 2024 . . . 54 . . 115 . 35 . 0006-2510.
  8. R&R Country Top 50. Radio & Records. 47. November 14, 2003. 1530.
  9. News: December 19, 2003 . The Year in Charts 2003: Most-Played Country Songs . . 38 . 11 . 51.
  10. News: December 12, 2003 . R&R Most Heard 2003: Country . . 41 . 1534.