Lee Roy Parnell Parnell released his
self-titled debut album for
Arista Records in 1990. This album produced three chart singles in "Crocodile Tears", "Oughta Be a Law" and "Family Tree", none of which charted in the Top 40 on the
Billboard country charts. A video for "Mexican Money" was created and released, but the song was not released to radio.
Love Without Mercy Love Without Mercy was Parnell's breakthrough album, released in 1992. Although its lead-off single "The Rock" fell short of Top 40, the next three singles all reached Top Ten: "
What Kind of Fool Do You Think I Am" at No. 2, the title track at No. 8, and finally "Tender Moment" also at No. 2. These three were also Top Ten hits on the
RPM charts in Canada.
On the Road 1993's
On the Road, Parnell's third album for the Arista label, also produced two top-10 hits: the
title track and "I'm Holding My Own", at No. 6 and No. 3 respectively. The album also contained a No. 17-peaking rendition of the
Hank Williams song "Take These Chains from My Heart", which Parnell recorded as a duet with
Ronnie Dunn of
Brooks & Dunn, although Dunn was not credited on the chart. The final single from
On the Road, "The Power of Love", peaked at No. 51.
We All Get Lucky Sometimes Parnell's fourth album, 1995's
We All Get Lucky Sometimes, was also his first for Career Records, then a newly formed subsidiary of
Arista Nashville. This album's lead-off single "A Little Bit of You" was the third single of his career to reach No. 2. Following it were the No. 12 "When a Woman Loves a Man" (featuring background vocals by
Trisha Yearwood), the No. 3 "Heart's Desire" and another No. 12 in "Giving Water to a Drowning Man". The album's title track, which was its fifth single, peaked at No. 46.
''Every Night's a Saturday Night and Hits and Highways Ahead'' ''
Every Night's a Saturday Night'' was Parnell's final release for Career Records. This was his first album since his debut release that did not produce a Top Ten hit, and only three singles were released from it: "Lucky Me, Lucky You" at No. 35, "You Can't Get There From Here" at No. 39 (his final Top 40 hit), and "All That Matters Anymore" at No. 50. After Career Records was merged back into Arista Nashville, Parnell released his final album for the Arista label, 1999's
Hits and Highways Ahead. This album's only single, "She Won't Be Lonely Long", peaked at No. 57, and by the year's end, Parnell exited Arista's roster.
Tell the Truth, Back to the Well and Midnight Believer In 2000 Parnell signed to
Vanguard Records and released the album
Tell the Truth. This album's only single, "South by Southwest", failed to chart, and he soon left the label as well. Parnell's next album,
Back to the Well, came in 2006 on
Universal South Records, although it also produced only one non-charting single in "Daddies and Daughters." ==External contributions==