Oh, yee freakin' haw, it's country music, and more specifically, John Denver, my two specialties. I'll start with country music as a whole, and then go deeper into John Denver. I can answer every single question you could possibly ever have about the man.

Oftentimes, people don't like country music because they don't understand the point behind it, which is almost completely love. That's why the #1 country song I recommend getting is "Amazed" by Lonestar. It's an incredible song, and it sprinkled into the pop charts, which is rare for a country song.

But from the looks of it, you seem to like old stuff, asking about Loretta Lynn and John Denver. Loretta Lynn's most famous song is "Coal Miner's Daughter", which tells about her life (she was forced to marry at the age of 13), and it's not very fast. That's the song she is most known for.

Just some generic OLDER country songs include Glen Campbell's "Galveston", which goes about the speed of "Country Roads", and Campbell is an incredible guitar player, and just about anything by Johnny Cash ("Ring of Fire", "I Walk the Line", and even his cover of "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down").

If you like female country artists, you have GOT to look at Patsy Cline. She tragically was killed in a plane crash at the height of her fame in the early 60's. Her essential songs are "Crazy" and "I Fall to Pieces".

Now, with more recent times, the genre of country music has combined with southern rock, in many ways. That pretty much began in 1989 with Garth Brooks. From his debut album, "The Dance" is an awesome song. I truly recommend that one.

I've never been much of a Dolly Parton fan, but you need to check out "I Will Always Love You". It was a huge hit in the mid-70's, and Whitney Houston made a cover of it, which you've probably heard. Like you said "Coat of Many Colors" is a good song, and it's autobiographical of her growing up with 12 kids in Tennessee as a kid.

List from Country Music:
"Amazed" - Lonestar
"Coal Miner's Daughter" - Loretta Lynn
"Galveston" - Glen Campbell
"Ring of Fire" - Johnny Cash
"I Walk the Line" - Johnny Cash
"The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" - Joan Baez, The Band, Johnny Cash (they all recorded it...I think Baez's is the best)
"Crazy" - Patsy Cline
"I Fall to Pieces" - Patsy Cline
"The Dance" - Garth Brooks
"I Will Always Love You" - Dolly Parton

Now...to John Denver. Wow. John Denver. I think he's the greatest artist in the world, ever. Seriously. Those who truly get to understand him and his music have a wonderful adventure with it. You categorized him as country, and that's really not very accurate - he never, ever committed himself to a single genre. If you thoroughly listen to the 23 original albums he released from 1969 to 1997, you can find folk, pop, rock, blues, easy listening, political satire (inspired from his previous work with The Chad Mitchell Trio), in addition to country, and wacky, unique combinations of all of them. In many ways, the album <i>Some Days Are Diamonds</i> is a purely country album, while one can call <i>Rhymes and Reasons</i> folk-pop. I think a good word to summarize the kind of artist that John Denver was is <i>Western</i> - he conveys the spirit of the American West, about being free and happy with your environment and with the people around you.

Anyway, if I could really recommend you John Denver songs to listen to, the list would be well over 200. So, I'll simply do about a 25-song, broad span of his entire career, and then go into the specific KIND of songs you were looking for.

"Leaving, on a Jet Plane"
"Follow Me"
"Country Roads"
"Sunshine on my Shoulders"
"Everyday"
"Rocky Mountain High"
"Goodbye Again"
"Farewell Andromeda (Welcome to my Morning)"
"Back Home Again"
"Annie's Song"
"Thank God I'm a Country Boy"
"Windsong"
"Singing Skies and Dancing Waters"
"You're so Beautiful"
"Autograph"
"Some Days are Diamonds (Some Days are Stone)"
"Perhaps Love"
"Shanghai Breezes"
"Wild Montana Skies"
"Flying for Me"
"Higher Ground"
"Whispering Jesse"
"The Flower That Shattered the Stone"
"Eagles and Horses (I'm Flying Again)"

Those songs are taken from 18 different albums. Now, you said that you wanted some not-so-fast songs. Stuff that's easy to listen to? John's got plenty of that. If you need any further help picking out stuff, just PM me or AIM me. I loooove to talk about John Denver, and would be happy to do it. I recommend the Greatest Hits recordings when I do because they were a bit slower than the originals. One of the things that I've noticed is that John rarely ever made anything that was truly FAST - "Country Roads" really doesn't have a very fast tempo or anything. Once again, feel free to contact me if you want any more.

"Leaving, on a Jet Plane" (1973 Greatest Hits recording)
"Follow Me" (" " ")
"Golden Slumbers/Sweet Sweet Life/Tremble If You Must" (yes, the former is a Beatles cover)
"Poems, Prayers, and Promises" (1973 Greatest Hits recording)
"My Sweet Lady"
"Sunshine on my Shoulders"
"Goodbye Again"
"The Season Suites (Summer, Fall, Winter, Late Winter Early Spring (When Everybody Goes to Mexico, Spring)"
"Annie's Song"
"Windsong"
"Come and Let Me Look in Your Eyes"
"Singing Skies and Dancing Waters"
"You're So Beautiful"
"In My Heart"
"Dreams"
"Perhaps Love"
"Heart to Heart"
"Love Again"
"Flying For Me"
"Whispering Jesse"

OK, so I hope this could be of some help.