Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down | |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Ray Stevens |
Album: | Have a Little Talk with Myself |
B-Side: | The Minority |
Released: | 1969 |
Studio: | Monument Recording, Nashville, Tennessee |
Genre: | Pop, country |
Length: | 4:25 |
Label: | Monument |
Producer: | Jim Malloy, Ray Stevens |
Prev Title: | Along Came Jones |
Prev Year: | 1969 |
Next Title: | Have a Little Talk with Myself |
Next Year: | 1970 |
"Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down" is a song written by Kris Kristofferson that was recorded in 1969 by Ray Stevens before becoming a No.1 hit on the Billboard US Country chart for Johnny Cash.
Stevens' version of the song reached No.55 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart and No.81 on the Hot 100 pop chart in 1969. In 2021, it was listed at #476 on Rolling Stone's "Top 500 Best Songs of All Time".[1] It also appeared on the author's own album Kristofferson.
In a 2013 interview, Kristofferson said the song "opened up a whole lot of doors for me. So many people that I admired, admired it. Actually, it was the song that allowed me to quit working for a living."[2]
In 2024, Rolling Stone ranked the song at #96 on its 200 Greatest Country Songs of All Time ranking.[3]
Sunday Morning Coming Down | |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Johnny Cash |
Album: | The Johnny Cash Show |
B-Side: | "I'm Gonna Try to Be That Way" |
Released: | 1970 |
Genre: | Country, folk |
Length: | 4:04 |
Label: | Columbia |
Producer: | Bob Johnston |
Prev Title: | What Is Truth |
Prev Year: | 1970 |
Next Title: | Flesh and Blood |
Next Year: | 1970 |
The biggest success on disc for the song came from a Johnny Cash performance that had been taped live at the Ryman Auditorium during a taping of The Johnny Cash Show as part of a "Ride This Train" segment, with filmed background visuals showing a down-and-out wanderer roaming around the Public Square area of Shelbyville, Tennessee. Cash introduced the song with the following monologue:
"You know, not everyone who has been on 'the bum' wanted it that way. The Great Depression of the 30s set the feet of thousands of people—farmers, city workers—it set 'em to ridin' the rails. My Daddy was one of those who hopped a freight train a couple of times to go and look for work. He wasn't a bum. He was a hobo but he wasn't a bum. I suppose we've all....all of us 'been at one time or another 'drifter at heart', and today like yesterday there's many that are on that road headin' out. Not searchin' maybe for work, as much as for self-fulfillment, or understanding of their life...trying to find a *meaning* for their life. And they're not hoppin' freights much anymore. Instead they're thumbin' cars and diesel trucks along the highways from Maine to Mexico. And many who have drifted...including myself...have found themselves no closer to peace of mind than a dingy backroom, on some lonely Sunday morning, with it comin' down all around you."
With the monologue edited off, the recording would appear on the soundtrack LP The Johnny Cash Show the following year, as well as being issued as a single (Columbia Records 4-45211). Cash's version won the Country Music Association Award for Song of the Year in 1970 and hit #1 on the country chart.[4]
This version was used in the Columbo episode Swan Song in 1974, in which Cash performed it during a garden party.
According to Kristofferson, network executives ordered Cash to change the line "I'm wishing Lord that I was stoned" when he performed the song on his TV show, but he refused to comply.[5]
Chart (1969) | Peak position | |
---|---|---|
Canadian RPM Country Tracks[7] | 46 | |
Canadian RPM Top Singles[8] | 59 |
Chart (1970) | Peak position | |
---|---|---|
US Billboard Adult Contemporary[9] | 13 | |
Canadian RPM Country Tracks | 1 | |
Canadian RPM Top Singles | 30 |