1998 – 2004: Pop crossover
After the release of
It Matters to Me, Hill took a three-year break from recording to give herself a rest from four years of touring and to begin a family with McGraw. During her break, she joined forces with her husband for their first duet, "It's Your Love". The song stayed at Number 1 for six weeks and won awards from both the Academy of Country Music and the Country Music Association. Hill has remarked that sometimes when they perform the song together, " it [doesn't] feel like anybody else was really watching."
She reentered the music business with 1998's
Faith. The album moved her closer towards a mainstream, pop-oriented sound, although it retained some country sound. "
This Kiss" became a #1 country hit, and was the first of her singles to place on the pop charts, peaking at #7. The album sold over six million copies and delivered more hits including another duet with McGraw, "Just To Hear You Say That You Love Me", "
Let Me Let Go" and "The Secret Of Life".
To follow up this new found success Hill immediately released
Breathe, which debuted at Number 1 on the Billboard Country and all genre charts, ahead of albums by
Mariah Carey and
Savage Garden. Although the album had few overt country sounds, it "complement[ed] her vocal strengths." For the first time, the album consisted solely of songs about love and did not venture into the more somber territory that her previous albums had touched. The title track, "
Breathe", reached Number 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. "
The Way You Love Me" hit the top ten as well (#6), and became one of the longest running singles in the history of the
Billboard Hot 100 (57 weeks). The album won Hill three
Grammy Awards including
Best Country Album, Best Country Collaboration With Vocals for Let's Make Love featuring
Tim McGraw and
Best Country Female Vocal Performance for Breathe.. It also marked a step away from her girl-next-door image, as the videos and promotional pictures all portrayed a much sexier image. Breathe has sold almost 10 million copies worldwide.
Hill used her 1999 tour to support a national children's book drive. Fans who donated books at one of her concerts were entered into a drawing to meet her personally after the show. The effort resulted in the donation of 35,000 children's books, which were distributed to hospitals, schools, libraries, and daycare centers in 40 cities across the United States.
2000 was an especially busy year for Hill. Besides a successful
tour with her husband, Hill was featured in a
CBS television special,
VH1's Behind the Music,
VH1 Divas 2000, and the Lifetime cable channel's
Intimate Portraits series. She signed an endorsement deal with
CoverGirl makeup., performed at the
Academy Awards and the
Grammy Awards, appeared on the cover of numerous magazine, and performed the national anthem at the
Super Bowl. Hill was also named to Mr. Blackwell's 10-best dressed women of 2000, the only singer listed among actresses and other celebrities. Hill and McGraw also embarked on their first Soul2Soul tour the "Soul2Soul Tour 2000".
Musically, in 2000 Hill recorded a song for the movie
Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas The song also appeared on the pop and country charts. Hill's success on the pop charts disturbed some country music insiders, who questioned whether she was trying to dismiss her country roots and move into the pop genre. Despite the grumbling, Hill won the CMA Female Vocalist of The Year Award, and in her acceptance speech announced, "I love this business and I love this industry...and my heart is here."
In 2001, Hill recorded a song for the
Pearl Harbor soundtrack. "
There You'll Be" also appeared on the album
There You'll Be: The Best Of Faith Hill, an international greatest hits album. The album featured some dance mixes of "Piece Of My Heart," "Let Me Let Go," "The Way You Love Me" and "Breathe."
In 2002, Hill released her new album with a more pop-oriented sound,
Cry. The album "spotlight[ed] her impressive set of pipes", but also marked the completion of her "transformation into a pop diva", containing few nods to her country roots. Though the album debuted at #1 on
Billboard magazine's pop and country album charts, and Hill made her debut as musical guest on
Saturday Night Live, the album's singles (including the title track "
Cry", written and originally performed by
Angie Aparo) received much less radio airplay than her previous smashes. The album however, did win a Grammy Award and has sold over 3 million copies worldwide.
Faith Hill's 2002 single "
Baby You Belong" off her
Cry album was used as the theme song for the movie
Lilo & Stitch. The music video featured clips from the movie as well as performance clips, It was released and well received in Asia.
Hill was also interested in branching out into
acting. Although she was rumored to have won a part in
Mel Gibson's We Were Soldiers, she did not actually appear in the movie. Her movie debut came in the summer of 2004, when Hill co-starred with
Nicole Kidman, Matthew Broderick and
Glenn Close in director
Frank Oz's remake of the 1975 thriller
The Stepford Wives.