Tennessee Waltz

"Tennessee Waltz" is a popular country music song with lyrics by Redd Stewart and music by Pee Wee King[1] written in 1946 and first released in January 1948. The song became a multimillion seller via a 1950 recording – as "The Tennessee Waltz" – by Patti Page. As of 1974, it was the biggest-selling song ever in Japan.[2]

"Tennessee Waltz"
Single by Pee Wee King
A-side"Rootie Tootie"
ReleasedJanuary 1948 (1948-01)
RecordedDecember 2, 1947
StudioRCA Victor Studios, Chicago. Illinois
GenreCountry
Length2:57
LabelRCA Victor
Composer(s)Pee Wee King
Lyricist(s)Redd Stewart
Pee Wee King singles chronology
"Quit Honkin' That Horn"
(1947)
"Tennessee Waltz"
(1948)
"The Waltz of Regret"
(1948)

All versions of the lyrics narrate a situation in which the persona has introduced his or her sweetheart to a friend who then waltzes away with her or him. The lyrics are altered for pronoun gender on the basis of the gender of the singer.

The popularity of "Tennessee Waltz" also made it the fourth official song of the state of Tennessee in 1965.[3]

Early versions

"The Tennessee Waltz"
Single by Patti Page
A-side"Boogie Woogie Santa Claus"
B-side"Long, Long Ago"
(1951 reissue)
ReleasedNovember 1950
RecordedNovember 1950
Length3:06
LabelMercury
Composer(s)Pee Wee King
Lyricist(s)Redd Stewart
Patti Page singles chronology
"So in Love"
(1950)
"The Tennessee Waltz"
(1950)
"Would I Love You"
(1951)

Pee Wee King, Redd Stewart, and their fellow Golden West Cowboys members were en route to Nashville "close to Christmas in 1946" when King and Stewart, who were riding in a truck carrying the group's equipment, heard Bill Monroe's new song "Kentucky Waltz" on the radio. Stewart had an idea to write a Tennessee waltz using the melody of King's theme song: "No Name Waltz", and wrote the lyrics on a matchbox as he and King thought up the words.[4] King and Stewart presented "Tennessee Waltz" to music publisher Fred Rose the next day, and Rose adjusted one line of Stewart's lyric: "O the Tennessee waltz, O the Tennessee Waltz," to "I remember the night and the Tennessee Waltz."

A considerable amount of time passed before Pee Wee King's Golden West Cowboys were able to record "Tennessee Waltz." Their recording was made in a December 2, 1947 session at the RCA Victor Studio in Chicago.[5] Its release as Victor (20–2680) was noted the following month.[6]

Acuff-Rose Music, the publisher, did not immediately register a copyright to the song when it was presented to the company by King and Stewart and did not obtain the "consummate proof of ownership, and the key to protecting a songwriter's property" until February 1948.[7]

A version by Cowboy Copas, a former member of the Golden West Cowboys was released by King Records (King 696) two months later in March 1948.[8]

Both singles became Top Ten C&W hits – the chart was then known as "Best Selling Folk Retail Records" – in the spring and summer of 1948 with respective peaks of No. 3 (Pee Wee King's Golden West Cowboys)[9] and No. 6 (Cowboy Copas).[10]

Patti Page recorded the song – as "The Tennessee Waltz" – to serve as B-side to the seasonal single "Boogie Woogie Santa Claus", issued by Mercury Records as Catalog# 5534 at the end of 1950. It's been asserted that Page herself chose to record "Tennessee Waltz", the C&W version being a favorite song of her father, and also that Jerry Wexler, then a record reviewer for Billboard brought "Tennessee Waltz" to the attention of Page's manager, Jack Rael, by playing him a new R&B rendition by Erskine Hawkins. Page cut "The Tennessee Waltz" in a November 1950 session in New York City with Rael conducting his orchestra: her vocal was cut multitracked with three voices, with two, and as a single voice with Page herself selecting the two-voice multitracked vocal featured on the single as released. "The Tennessee Waltz" entered the Pop Music chart of Billboard dated November 10, 1950 for a 30-week chart run and peaked at number one on the December 30, 1950 chart; the track would remain at number one for a total of nine weeks. (After the initial pressings "Boogie Woogie Santa Claus" was replaced as the B-side by "Long Long Ago".) A No. 2 C&W hit, "The Tennessee Waltz" became Page's career record.[11][12] The song would later be included on Page's 1957 Mercury album This Is My Song, and re-recorded (in stereo, and with a different arrangement) for her 1966 Columbia Records album Patti Page's Greatest Hits.

The success of the Patti Page version led to covers by Les Paul with Mary Ford (Capitol 1316) and Jo Stafford (Columbia 39065) both of which reached the Top Ten – Stafford's at No. 7 and Paul/Ford at No. 6 (the latter was a double-sided hit with "Little Rock Getaway" reaching number 18). The Fontane Sisters made their first solo recording cutting "Tennessee Waltz" in a November 1950 session at RCA Victor Studios in New York City; the track would reach the Top 20. In addition, the original version – credited to Pee Wee King – was re-released to reach No. 6 C&W. Patsy Cline also recorded The Tennessee Waltz for Decca records in 1962.

Other recordings were made by Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians (Decca 27336), for the UK market by Petula Clark and for the Japanese market by Chiemi Eri.

On the Cash Box charts, "Tennessee Waltz" reached No. 1 on December 30, 1950 with the Patti Page, Jo Stafford, Guy Lombardo and LesPaul/Mary Ford versions being given a tandem ranking; as such "Tennessee Waltz" remained No. 1 in Cash Box through the February 3, 1951 chart.

Later versions

In 1950, the same year as Patti Page's hit recording, Spike Jones and his City Slickers recorded a parody featuring a duet with singers sporting Yiddish accents.

Ivo Robić recorded "Tennessee Waltz" for his 1957 album Cowboyske Pjesme.

"Tennessee Waltz" returned to the charts in the fall of 1959 with a rockabilly version recorded by both Bobby Comstock & the Counts and Jerry Fuller: on the Billboard Hot 100 the versions respectively reached No. 52 and No. 63 while Cash Box assigned both versions a joint ranking on its Top 100 Singles chart with a peak position of No. 42.

In 1962 Damita Jo had a non-charting single release of "Tennessee Waltz".

In 1964 "Tennessee Waltz" was recorded in a rock and roll ballad style by Alma Cogan; this version was No. 1 in Sweden for five weeks and also reached No. 14 in Denmark while a German language rendering (with lyrics by Theo Hansen) reached No. 10 in Germany. Cogan's version served as template for the arrangement of the 1974 Danish-language rendering "Den Gamle Tennessee Waltz" by Birthe Kjær which spent 17 weeks in the Top Ten of the Danish hit parade with a two-week tenure at No. 1 also spending an additional eight weeks at No. 2. The arrangement of Cogan's version was also borrowed for remakes of "Tennessee Waltz" by Swedish singers Kikki Danielsson (Wizex (on the 1978 album Miss Decibel)[13]) and Lotta Engberg (on the 2000 album Vilken härlig dag)[14] and – with the German lyrics – by Heidi Brühl, Gitte, Renate Kern and Ireen Sheer.

Sam Cooke recorded a double-time version of "Tennessee Waltz" for his Ain't That Good News album recorded January 28, 1964 at the RCA Studio in Hollywood. Released 1 March 1, 1964, Ain't That Good News would be the final album release of new material by Cooke, and "Tennessee Waltz", coupled with another album track: "Good Times", would be the final Sam Cooke single released during the singer's lifetime, with "Tennessee Waltz", the original B-side, becoming sufficiently popular to chart at No. 35. Cooke performed "Tennessee Waltz" – and also "Blowin' in the Wind" – as a guest on the premiere of Shindig! broadcast September 16, 1964. The October 1964 live album release Sam Cooke at the Copa also features "Tennessee Waltz".[15]

Al Hirt released a version on his 1965 album, Live at Carnegie Hall.[16]

A French-language pop version of the song (as "Cette danse") was recorded by Canadian singer Renée Martel in 1965.

Ray Brown & the Whispers had a No. 4 hit in Australia in 1966 with a rockabilly version of "Tennessee Waltz" released as "Tennessee Waltz Song".

In 1966, Otis Redding recorded a version of "Tennessee Waltz" featuring Booker T & the MGs on his R&B album, Complete & Unbelievable: The Otis Redding Dictionary of Soul cut at the Stax Studio in Memphis, Tennessee: Redding was familiar with "Tennessee Waltz" from the album Sam Cooke at the Copa.[17]

Manfred Mann included a version of the song on their number-one EP in 1966.

In 1967 Dobie Gray recorded "Tennessee Waltz" as the B-side of a non-charting version of "River Deep - Mountain High": both sides of the single were produced and arranged by Leon Russell.

Johnny Jones – a native of Atlanta who had briefly replaced Sam Cooke in the Soul Stirrers before Johnnie Taylor joined the group – reached No. 49 R&B in 1968 with his deep soul rendition of "Tennessee Waltz" cut for producer Bobby Robinson's Fury Records.

In July 1971 Cymarron recorded "Tennessee Waltz" in the sessions for their self-titled album produced by Chips Moman at his American Sound Studio in Memphis.

In 1972 American Spring recorded a cover of "Tennessee Waltz" produced by Brian Wilson to open their debut album, Spring.

David Bromberg includes a live version on his 1972 album, Demon in Disguise, on Columbia Records.

Lacy J. Dalton recorded "Tennessee Waltz" for her 1979 self-titled debut album recorded at CBS Studio in Nashville, Tennessee: issued as a single in 1980 Dalton's gritty reworking of the song reached No. 18 on the C&W – the sole C&W charting of "Tennessee Waltz" since 1951.

In 1983 the song was featured on the James Brown album Bring It On (Churchill Records).[18]

American R&B and boogie-woogie pianist and singer Little Willie Littlefield recorded a version for his 1990 album Singalong with Little Willie Littlefield.

Norah Jones performed "Tennessee Waltz" as an encore during a live show at the House of Blues in New Orleans on August 24, 2002. It is featured as extra material on the following DVD-release of the show.

Leonard Cohen released a live version of "Tennessee Waltz" recorded in 1985– one of the few covers he's ever cut – on his 2004 album Dear Heather; this version featured an additional verse written by Cohen himself.

Belle and Sebastian used the melody from "Tennessee Waltz" in their song "Slow Graffiti".

Other artists who have recorded "Tennessee Waltz" (with the parent album): LaVern Baker (Woke Up This Mornin' 1993), Pat Boone (I'll See You in My Dreams/ 1962), Eva Cassidy (Imagine/ 2002), Holly Cole (Don't Smoke in Bed 1993), Connie Francis (Country & Western Golden Hits/ 1959), Emmylou Harris (Cimarron 1981), Tom Jones backed by The Chieftains (Long Black Veil 1995), (1995), Pete Molinari (Today, Tomorrow and Forever 2009), Anne Murray (Let's Keep It That Way 1978), Elvis Presley, Billie Jo Spears (Country Girl 1981), Lenny Welch, Kitty Wells (Kitty's Choice/ 1960), Dottie West (Feminine Fancy/ 1968), Margaret Whiting (Margaret/ 1958),[19] Broadway's Kerry Conte and Mike Rosengarten (An Evening With... Vol. 1/ 2019).[20]

Kelly Clarkson performed the song at the 2013 Grammy Awards as part of a tribute to Patti Page.[21]

Other performances

The University of Tennessee Pride of the Southland Band performs Tennessee Waltz at the end of each home game at Neyland Stadium and Thompson–Boling Arena in Knoxville as the fans are filing out of those venues. East Tennessee State University's Marching Bucs perform the song during their pregame show. After every home game, the Appalachian State University Marching Mountaineers perform the song during their post-game show. Baylor University's Golden Wave Band plays the song at the end of each home game, a tradition possibly begun with a request from former Head Coach Grant Teaff.[22] The Tennessee Waltz is also the corps song of Music City Drum and Bugle Corps, a Drum Corps International World Class corps from Nashville. The UTC Marching Mocs perform the Tennessee Waltz during their pregame show.

Use in media

The song was also used in an instrumental form in the final scenes of the film Primary Colors where Jack Stanton dances with his wife at his Inauguration Ball. It was also used briefly during the 1983 drama film, The Right Stuff. John Huston's 1979 Wise Blood, an adaptation of a Flannery O'Connor novel, uses an instrumental version during the opening montage and as a recurrent musical theme throughout the picture. Also at the beginning of the French movie Les Cowboys (2015), the song was played by François Damiens. Patti Page's version features in Zabriskie Point. The song is also featured in the Schitt's Creek TV series, season 1 episode 12, "Surprise Party."

See also

References

  1. Archived April 19, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  2. Williams, Bill "Country Cross-Over to Pop Grows" Billboard December 28, 1974, Section 2, pp. 4, 46, page 46
  3. It was adopted by Senate Joint Resolution 9 of the 84th General Assembly.
  4. Hall, Wade (1996). Hell-Bent for Music: the life of Pee Wee King. University Press of Kentucky. pp. 146, 147. ISBN 0-8131-1959-6.
  5. http://countrydiscoghraphy2.blogspot.com/2015/07/pee-wee-king.html Prague Frank's country discography Retrieved November 8, 2015
  6. Advance record Releases. Folk. Billboard January 24, 1948 page 69
  7. Restless Giant: The Life and Times of Jean Aberbach and Hill and Range Songs. Bar Biszick-Lockwood. University of Illinois Press, 2010 page 133
  8. King records advertisement "New King releases" Billboard March 20, 1948 page 31
  9. Billboard September 4, 1948 page 31
  10. Billboard August 14, 1948 page 31
  11. Whitburn, Joel (1973). Top Pop Records 1940–1955. Record Research. ASIN B0006VV23M.
  12. Schoemer, Karen (2006). Great Pretenders: My Strange Love Affair With '50s Pop Music. Thorndike Press. ISBN 978-0786287123.
  13. "Svensk mediedatabas". Smdb.kb.se. Retrieved June 10, 2011.
  14. "Svensk mediedatabas". Smdb.kb.se. Retrieved June 10, 2011.
  15. Guralnick, Peter (2005). Dream Boogie: the triumph of Sam Cooke. New York NY: Little Brown & Co. pp. 546–7, 596–7. ISBN 0-316-37794-5.
  16. "Al Hirt – Live at Carnegie Hall (Vinyl, LP, Album)". discogs. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
  17. Gould, Jonathan (2017). Otis Redding: an unfinished life. NYC: Crown Archetype. p. 363. ISBN 978-0307453952.
  18. "JAMES BROWN bring it on, LP released on 1983 on label churchill / augusta". Groovecollector.com. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
  19. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on May 27, 2012. Retrieved September 5, 2009.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  20. "Kerry Conte records Tennessee Waltz".
  21. "Kelly Clarkson, The Black Keys, more warm up for 55th Grammy Awards". The Tennessean. February 8, 2013. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
  22. "Forum: BUGWB: Special Request". BaylorFans.com. May 6, 2006. Archived from the original on November 29, 2014. Retrieved November 23, 2014.
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