Carrie Underwood reaches a historic RIAA milestone — and an older Kelly Clarkson cover suddenly has fresh momentum

OPINION: This article may contain commentary which reflects the author's opinion.

Carrie Underwood has set a new high-water mark in country music history.

The Recording Industry Association of America recently confirmed that Underwood is now the most RIAA-certified female country artist of all time — with more than 95 million certified units across albums, singles, and track-equivalents. Her catalog includes modern standards that have shaped 21st-century country-pop, and this recognition formalizes what many radio programmers have been saying for years: she has become one of the format’s defining artists since her 2005 debut.

A chart milestone — and a parallel viral moment

At the same time as Underwood’s new certification milestone went public, a different moment is trending among music fans — due to a clip that is several years old.

A Kelly Clarkson “Kellyoke” segment from The Kelly Clarkson Show — her 2019 live cover of “Before He Cheats” — is circulating again across social feeds.

The performance is not new, but it’s being treated as if newly discovered because — after circulating again this autumn — it is gathering new views, commentary, and reaction videos.

Clarkson’s interpretation is built on live band arrangement, dynamic phrasing, and a vocal build that moves from low-volume focus to intense belt. It shows her familiar skill: taking a well-known song and placing her own interpretive imprint on it — not by theatrical reinvention, but by vocal precision and stage presence.

Two American Idol winners — two different success lanes — same era

The renewed attention has produced a side-by-side cultural moment:

  • Underwood is being saluted for two decades of sustained chart results.
  • Clarkson is being saluted for the versatility she has demonstrated on daytime television.

Both artists came from the same talent-show pipeline — and both used the opportunity to build very different creative identities.

Why fans are reacting strongly now

The online reaction is not about rivalry — it is about a shared moment in modern country-pop memory:

  • Underwood’s milestone is a reminder of how far that genre lane has expanded.
  • Clarkson’s cover is a reminder of how durable Underwood’s songwriting storytelling has proven to be — and how re-interpretation keeps songs alive.

The core takeaway: music does not stay in one lane. It travels — through radio, through covers, through streaming rediscoveries — and this October brought an example of how one iconic hit can anchor two completely different headlines at the same time.

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