Walk Through This World with Me (song) explained

Walk Through This World with Me
Type:single
Artist:George Jones
Album:Walk Through This World with Me
B-Side:Developing My Pictures
Released:January 1967
Recorded:May 23, 1966
Studio:Columbia, Nashville
Genre:Country
Label:Musicor
Producer:Pappy Daily
Prev Title:Close Together (As You and Me)
Prev Year:1966
Next Title:I Can't Get There from Here
Next Year:1967

"Walk Through This World with Me" is a song written by Sandy Seamons and Kaye Savage and recorded by American country music artist George Jones. It was released in January 1967 as the title track of his twenty-fourth album. The single was George Jones' fifty-seventh release on the country chart and his fourth number one. "Walk Through This World With Me" stayed at number one for two weeks and spent a total of nineteen weeks on the country chart.[1]

Recording and composition

Jones was less than enthusiastic about the musically middle-of-the-road love ballad that was almost inspirational in its unabashedly optimistic and romantic sentiments, and it was only at his producer H.W. "Pappy" Daily's insistence that he recorded the song at all.[2] In the 1994 retrospective Golden Hits, Jones states that he was unhappy with his singing on the LP version and, after the song started getting heavy airplay in Chicago, he told his manager Pappy Daily that he wanted to recut it. "The single record on it was different," he asserted in the documentary, "even though it was almost the same. I did a little better job singing the single than I did on the album." Two years later he elaborated in his autobiography I Lived to Tell It All:

"At first I fought Pappy, telling him consistently that I thought the song was weak. He kept pitching it to me, and I kept telling him no. He regularly brought it to me at recording sessions, which meant that he brought it to me often...I couldn't believe that a song I had resisted so much had done so well."[3]

For all his dominance of the country charts for most of his career, Jones would only score nine solo #1 hits in his lifetime, with "Walk Through This World with Me" being his first since "She Thinks I Still Care" in 1962. Jones would not score another #1 until "The Grand Tour" in 1974.

Other versions

Notes and References

  1. Book: Whitburn, Joel . The Billboard Book Of Top 40 Country Hits: 1944-2006, Second edition. Joel Whitburn . 2004 . Record Research . 181.
  2. Book: Allen, Bob . 1996 . George Jones: The Life and Times of a Honky Tonk Legend . St Martin's Press . 978-0312956981 . 168.
  3. Book: Jones . George . Carter . Tom . 1996 . I Lived to Tell it All . Villard . 978-0679438694 . 107.