The Same Sweet Girl | |
Cover: | Hank Locklin--The Same Sweet Girl.jpg |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Hank Locklin |
B-Side: | "The Last Look at Mother" |
Recorded: | March 1949 |
Studio: | ACA Studio |
Label: | Four Star |
Prev Title: | I Worship You |
Prev Year: | 1949 |
Next Title: | Born to Ramble |
Next Year: | 1949 |
"The Same Sweet Girl" is a song written and originally recorded by American country singer–songwriter, Hank Locklin. It was released as a single via Four Star Records in 1949. The song became Locklin's first major hit as a recording artist, reaching the top ten of the Billboard country chart. Since its release, it has been reissued several times on compilation records.
Locklin had composed "The Same Sweet Girl" after several years performing in the southeastern region of the United States.[1] He had been gaining notoriety performing with his backing band titled "The Rocky Mountain Playboys." Locklin signed his first recording contract with his band under the Gold Star label. Without much success, he moved to Four Star Records, where he would record "The Same Sweet Girl."[2] The song was composed for Locklin's first wife, Willa Locklin, whom he would later divorce.[1] It was recorded in March 1949 in the ACA Studio, which was located in Houston, Texas. In the same session, Locklin also cut "The Last Look at Mother," which would later be released on the opposite side of the single release. It was only Locklin's third studio session.[3]
"The Same Sweet Girl" was released as a single in April 1949 on the Four Star label. It was Locklin's first single release with the label and would also be his first major hit. The song became a top ten hit, reaching number eight on the Billboards Country & Western Records Most Played By Folk Disk Jockeys chart.[4] In its original release, the single was issued as a 78 RPM record, containing "The Last Look at Mother" on its B-side.[5]
The song would later be re-recorded several times and would later appear on several compilation albums, including 1997's Send Me the Pillow You Dream On box set by Bear Family Records.[3] In his review of the box set, Bruce Eder of Allmusic commented that Locklin's earliest recordings (which includes "The Same Sweet Girl") incorporated a more traditional musical style: "They present Locklin doing a rougher, harder honky-tonk brand of music, derived from Texas dance-band roots, but different from the Nashville countrypolitan sound with which he achieved lasting fame -- compared to his later, softer material, this stuff rocks."
78 PM single[5]
All credits are adapted from the box set, Send Me the Pillow You Dream On.[3]