There's a Honky Tonk Angel (Who'll Take Me Back In) explained

There's a Honky Tonk Angel (Who'll Take Me Back In)
Type:single
Artist:Conway Twitty
Album:Honky Tonk Angel
B-Side:Don't It Let Go To Your Heart
Released:January 1974
Recorded:October 29, 1973
Studio:Bradley's Barn, Mount Juliet, Tennessee
Genre:Country
Length:2:57
Label:MCA
Producer:Owen Bradley
Prev Title:You've Never Been This Far Before
Prev Year:1973
Next Title:I'm Not Through Loving You Yet
Next Year:1974

"There's a Honky Tonk Angel (Who'll Take Me Back In)" is a song best known for the 1974 recording by American country music artist Conway Twitty, who took it to number 1 on the Hot Country Singles chart. The song was written by Troy Seals and Denny Rice and originally released on Troy Seals' 1973 debut album Now Presenting Troy Seals.[1]

Conway Twitty version

Twitty's version was released in January 1974 as the first single from the album Honky Tonk Angel. The song was Twitty's 10th number one on the U.S. country singles chart as a solo artist and 13th overall. It stayed at number one for one week and spent 12 weeks on the chart in all.[2]

Personnel

Chart performance

Cliff Richard version

Honky Tonk Angel
Cover:Honky_Tong_Angel_-_Cliff_Richard_single.jpg
Caption:Cover of the German release
Type:single
Artist:Cliff Richard
B-Side:(Wouldn't You Know It) Got Myself a Girl
Released:5 September 1975
Recorded:20 June 1974
Studio:Morgan Studios, London
Genre:Country
Length:3:03
Label:EMI
Prev Title:It's Only Me You Left Behind
Prev Year:1975
Next Title:Miss You Nights
Next Year:1975

In 1974, Bruce Welch, who had previously worked with Richard as part of the Shadows and who would go on to produce several of his subsequent albums, heard the song and thought that it would make a good "comeback" single after disappointing chart performances during the previous two years.[4] A version was arranged for Richard by John Farrar with a string arrangement by Nick Ingman, and recorded on 20 June, 1974. The single was released in September 1975 with the B-side "(Wouldn't You Know It) Got Myself a Girl", written by Alan Tarney and Trevor Spencer.

While recording the song, Richard incorrectly assumed that the song was about a Chinese lady from Hong Kong (a.k.a. a "Honky"), unaware that the phrase "honky-tonk angel" was an American slang term for a prostitute.[5] [4] Some of his fans and friends were aware of the song's actual meaning, and expressed surprise that he had chosen to cover the song, given his Christian beliefs. By the time Richard was made aware of his mistake, the single had been on sale for a short time in the UK, Europe, and Japan, and he had already made multiple television appearances to promote it. He decided to make a televised announcement which called for EMI to withdraw the record, and declared that he would be refusing to promote it any further. Even though the single was expected to perform well, EMI eventually agreed to withdraw the single at his request.[4]

In the decades since its withdrawal, "Honky Tonk Angel" has appeared as a bonus track on the 2001 CD reissue of I'm Nearly Famous, and on the 2002 compilation The Singles Collection. An alternate take from the same recording session appears on 2009's Lost & Found (From the Archives).

Track listing

7": EMI / EMI 2344

  1. "Honky Tonk Angel" – 3:03
  2. "(Wouldn't You Know It) Got Myself a Girl" – 3:03

Personnel

Charts

Despite only a thousand copies being sold, "Honky Tonk Angel" did in fact chart in the UK. It peaked at number five on the "Star Breakers" list, which was an officially-published BMRB list of the most popular records in the UK outside of the Top 50. It entered the chart during the final week of September and spent a total of five weeks on the list before the single was ultimately withdrawn.

Elvis Presley version

There's a Honky Tonk Angel (Who'll Take Me Back In)
Cover:There's_A_Honky_Tonk_Angel_-_Elvis_Presley_single.jpg
Caption:Cover with the track titles flipped
Type:single
Artist:Elvis Presley
A-Side:I Got a Feelin' in My Body
Released:July 1979
Recorded:15 December 1973
Studio:Stax
Genre:Country
Length:3:02
Label:RCA
Prev Title:Are You Sincere
Prev Year:1978
Next Title:"It Won't Seem Like Christmas (Without You)" (UK release)
Next Year:1979

Elvis Presley covered the track in 1975 and first released it on his Promised Land album, however it was released as the B-side of the posthumous single "I Got a Feelin' in My Body": a posthumous single in 1979, which peaked at number 6 on the Hot Country Singles chart.[7] Along the way, the song titles on the cover sleeve were reversed accordingly. The track was recorded at Stax Records, 15 December 1973.

Other cover versions

Notes and References

  1. Troy Seals . 1973 . Now Presenting Troy Seals . LP album . US . Atlantic .
  2. Book: Whitburn, Joel . The Billboard Book Of Top 40 Country Hits: 1944-2006, Second edition. Joel Whitburn . 2004 . Record Research . 361.
  3. The Conway Twitty Collection. Conway Twitty. MCA Records. MCAD4-11095. Universal City, California.
  4. Book: Ewbank, Tim. Cliff: An Intimate Portrait of a Living Legend. 2008. Random House. 229–230. Hildred, Stafford.
  5. News: Sandall. Robert. The straight man. The Sunday Times. 21 March 1993.
  6. 4 October 1975. Top 50 Singles. Music Week.
  7. Elvis Presley . 1979 . There's a Honky Tonk Angel (Who'll Take Me Back In) . 7-inch single . US . RCA .