CBS This Morning." "A nation watches you grow up, right?" said Garth, 58. "So you're gonna make decisions that you go, 'Man, I wish I could take that one back.' But the truth is now … If changing anything then meant any part of now would change, no, thank you."For Garth, "then" was an early entry into Nashville, where he was — and still is — met with critical acclaim and massive sales.
His eponymous first album, released in 1989, hit No. 2 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart. Things intensified from there, and by 1999, he'd sold over 100 million albums, according to CBS.That same year, his mother died of cancer.
Read more on wonderwall.com