Table of Contents
When did what hurts the most come out?
2008
What Hurts The Most/Released
Who wrote the Rascal Flatts song what hurts the most?
Jeffrey Steele
Steve Robson
What Hurts The Most/Composers
What hurts the most original artist?
Cascada
What Hurts The Most/Artists
Who originally recorded what hurts the most?
Mark Wills
“What Hurts the Most” is a song written by American songwriter Jeffrey Steele and English songwriter Steve Robson. Initially recorded by country music artist Mark Wills in 2003 on his album And the Crowd Goes Wild, it was covered by Bellefire a year later.
Why did the Rascal Flatts break up?
When they first announced the split, the band mates presented a united front, saying that all three of them — Gary, Jay DeMarcus and Joe Don Rooney — mutually agreed that it was time to pursue separate endeavors. Now, Gary reveals, things weren’t quite that simple. “I wasn’t happy that Joe Don quit,” he states.
Who was the first artist to cover what hurts the most?
What Hurts the Most. Initially recorded by country music artist Mark Wills in 2003 on his album And the Crowd Goes Wild, it was covered by Bellefire a year later. The first version to be released as a single was by pop singer Jo O’Meara in 2005, from the album Relentless. Later that year, country band Rascal Flatts covered the song as well,…
When did what hurts the most by Rascal Flatts come out?
In 2006 Rascal Flatts took this song to the top of the Country and Adult Contemporary charts and #6 on The Billboard Hot 100. Meanwhile in the UK this song first became a hit when the former S Club 7 member Jo O’Meara covered this for her debut solo release, reaching #13.
What is the story of what hurts the most?
In the music video for What Hurts The Most, the music video provides a small story for a girl who suffers the loss of her boyfriend. Her anger in the video is expressed for her father who she blames for making her boyfriend leave, resulting in his demise in a fatal car accident.
When did Wills version of what hurts the most come out?
Wills’ rendition of the song, though never a single, peaked at number 51 on the U.S. Hot Digital Songs charts in 2006 in the wake of Rascal Flatts’ success with it.