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Ella Langley’s “Choosin’ Texas” soared to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 dated Feb. 14, making her the first solo woman to lead the all-genre ranking, Hot Country Songs (likewise a multimetric chart) and Country Airplay simultaneously. In the same week, the single completed a 16-week climb to No. 1 on Country Airplay — the quickest for a solo woman without any co-billed acts since 2016 — after needing just six weeks to reach the top of Hot Country Songs, where it extended its reign to 11 weeks.
Behind the milestone was unusually swift movement at radio. Programmers across major groups, markets and formats say they identified early signals, elevated the record quickly and saw fast affirmation in research and listener response, momentum that helped turn a strong start into a historic week.
Early Signals
“We’re not any more cautious these days than in the past. In fact, we have more resources than ever to identify big hits quickly,” Rod Phillips, evp of programming for iHeartCountry, tells Billboard. “In this case, it was impossible not to notice the fan engagement at every level.”
Phillips says the first signs about the potential for the song, released Oct. 17, 2025, came provincially. “This really started from our local program directors responding to the music not only as a personal favorite but also via airplay on their stations,” he notes. “Add to that the impressive consumption story, and you now have one of the fasting chart-climbing songs of the last year or more.”
The signals weren’t isolated, Phillips adds. “It wasn’t one thing we were noticing. It was, in fact, everything.”
From Add to Power
In Houston, that alignment translated into immediate movement. “Early indications from the audience were over the top,” says Bruce Logan, vp of programming for Audacy’s portfolio in the market, which includes country station KILT. “We added in sub-power and took it to power five days later. The research showed it was a hit within two weeks of starting to play it.”
Houston’s five-day leap to full power rotation (around 70 plays a week for KILT) wasn’t an outlier; it reflected how the record moved in several key markets. Rather than building gradually through lower rotations, “Choosin’ Texas” advanced in visible jumps once early listener signals registered, which shortened the traditional airplay curve. Over the last decade, Country Airplay leaders have typically required around 30 weeks to reach No. 1; Langley’s took 16.
Organic Reaction
For Christi Brooks, director of branding and programming for Cox Media Group’s KCYY-FM and KKYX-AM in San Antonio, Texas, the song’s appeal surfaced before formal research entered the equation.
“Honestly, it was my 16-year-old daughter,” Brooks tells Billboard. “She’s my music lover, and of all kinds of music, not just country. The song came out, and she knew every word less than 24 hours later.”
The song seemed to be everywhere, she says. “Sitting in traffic coming out of someone’s car window, out shopping, even in the grocery store and nightlife ecosystem,” Brooks continues. “My afternoon jock Brody is the DJ at [one of the most popular] dancehalls in San Antonio, and he said it was packing the dancefloor every time he played it.”
Sound That Cut Through
Brooks points to both the song’s traditional lean and its emotional tone as key differentiators. “The audience has so much variety in country to choose from right now that if you sound country, you are probably going to cut through,” she explains. “And this is a heartbreak song by a female that doesn’t feel sad and she’s not angry. It’s like she’s accepting defeat gracefully.”
The regional hook was obvious in Texas, as well. “‘He always loved ‘Amarillo by Morning’/ I should have taken that as a warning’ — are you kidding me?” Brooks says. “She put George Strait in a song about Texas without saying George Strait! So good!”
Beyond Country Lanes
The song’s momentum soon extended beyond country radio. In Houston, “The CHR here has started playing it in the past seven days,” Logan notes.
Brooks’ sister station, adult pop, or hot AC, outlet KSMG, has also added the track. “I immediately thought, ‘Please don’t kill it!’” she recalls, concerned about potential burn across shared female-leaning audiences. “I’m happy to say it didn’t.”
At the format more broadly — with “Choosin’ Texas” up to No. 22 in its third week on the Adult Pop Airplay chart — genre boundaries can be secondary to performance. “We have to play hit music for women 25 to 54,” says Audacy vp of hot AC programming Steve Salhany. “And whatever genre it comes from really doesn’t matter. Early on, I could see the metrics of this record, [and it’s] definitely a smash.”
Per that reach, the song grew to 22.1 million official streams and 12,000 sold in the United States Jan. 30-Feb. 5, according to Luminate. On radio, it ran up 34.4 million all-format audience impressions in that span. (Columbia, to which Langley is signed, is promoting it to pop formats, while Triple Tigers is working country.)
Meanwhile, Salhany isn’t convinced “Choosin’ Texas” is a traditional country song at all. “I hear a pop record, no more country than [Billy Ray Cyrus’ 1992 juggernaut] ‘Achy Breaky Heart,’” he muses. “I’ve been doing hot AC since the mid-‘90s. Whether it was Faith Hill, Shania Twain, Keith Urban or Tim McGraw, when you have hit records, you have hit records.”
“Choosin’ Texas” concurrently debuted at No. 38 on the Feb. 14-dated Pop Airplay chart. On SiriusXM’s pop channel Hits 1, the evaluation was similarly driven by listener response rather than genre alignment. “Ella proved her mass appeal almost immediately through listener reaction, and that’s what matters most to us,” says the satellite broadcaster’s vp of music programming Alex Tear. “Hits 1 has always been about pop in the truest sense of the word — popular music regardless of genre.”
That approach puts Langley shoulder to shoulder with pop’s biggest stars. “We move in real time with what’s breaking culturally, while staying predictive about what’s next, and Ella fits perfectly,” Tear continues. “Playing her next to Harry Styles, Sabrina Carpenter or Bad Bunny feels exactly in step with where our listeners want to be.”
The Convergence
The six-week sprint to No. 1 on Hot Country Songs demonstrated early demand for Ella Langley’s “Choosin’ Texas.” The 16-week climb on Country Airplay showed how quickly radio responded. When those curves converged atop the Hot 100, the result was a historically standout chart triumph, and the first of its kind for a solo woman.
Radio programmers describe that culmination not as surprise, but as confirmation.