Guided by her guitar playing father, Rimes started singing and tap dancing at the age of two. At age six, LeAnn Rimes Nashville, TN Tickets Schermerhorn Symphony Center her family moved to Garland, Texas, and she would later sing "The Star-Spangled Banner" at Dallas Cowboys LeAnn Rimes Nashville, TN Tickets Schermerhorn Symphony Center games and at the National Cutting Horse Championships in Fort Worth. By the age of eleven, she recorded All That at Norman Petty's studio in Clovis, New Mexico.
Later that year, Dallas disc jockey Bill Mack met Rimes and promoted her for a re-release of "Blue", a song LeAnn Rimes Nashville, TN Tickets Schermerhorn Symphony Center he originally wrote in the 1960s. The song was a hit, and at the age of 14, LeAnn Rimes became the youngest LeAnn Rimes Nashville, TN Tickets Schermerhorn Symphony Center person to ever win a Grammy, claiming both Best New Artist and Best Female Country Vocal Performance both LeAnn Rimes Nashville, TN Tickets Schermerhorn Symphony Center in 1997. Her album, Blue, sold more than 8 million copies.
She recorded "How Do I Live" for the 1997 film Con Air. Though her version was rejected by producers in LeAnn Rimes Nashville, TN Tickets Schermerhorn Symphony Center favor of Trisha Yearwood's rendition, it became the first certified multi-platinum country single and holds LeAnn Rimes Nashville, TN Tickets Schermerhorn Symphony Center the record for most weeks spent on the Billboard U.S. Hot 100.
Her third full-length studio project, You Light Up My Life: Inspirational Songs debuted at #1 LeAnn Rimes Nashville, TN Tickets Schermerhorn Symphony Center simultaneously on the Billboard 200, Top Country Albums, and Christan Albums charts. This was followed by LeAnn Rimes Nashville, TN Tickets Schermerhorn Symphony Center several soundtracks singles, including "Can't Fight the Moonlight" for Coyote Ugly, and other recordings LeAnn Rimes Nashville, TN Tickets Schermerhorn Symphony Center for the movies Driven, View from the Top and Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde.
Notable career setbacks began in the year 2000, when she sued her father for misappropriating more than $7 LeAnn Rimes Nashville, TN Tickets Schermerhorn Symphony Center million of her earnings. In 2002, she publicly denounced the album I Need You, which her record label had assembled from studio outtakes.
Prior to her 21st birthday, Rimes released a 'Greatest Hits' album.
On January 25, 2005, Rimes released This Woman. With sales over 600,000, it was her best-selling album in LeAnn Rimes Nashville, TN Tickets Schermerhorn Symphony Center over five years, with "Nothin' 'Bout Love Makes Sense", "Probably Wouldn't Be This Way", and "Something's LeAnn Rimes Nashville, TN Tickets Schermerhorn Symphony Center Gotta Give" all achieving the top 5 on the country charts. "Something's Gotta Give" earned LeAnn her third Grammy nomination for Female Country Vocal Performance.
On June 6, 2006, Rimes released a new pop album in Europe called Whatever We Wanna, led by the single "And LeAnn Rimes Nashville, TN Tickets Schermerhorn Symphony Center It Feels Like". Rimes co-wrote 10 out of the 15 songs on the album. She will be releasing a new Country LeAnn Rimes Nashville, TN Tickets Schermerhorn Symphony Center album to the US in the Spring of 2007 entitled Family.