Why Baby Why Explained

Why Baby Why
Cover:Why_Baby_Why_GJ_sgl.jpg
Type:single
Artist:George Jones
Album:Grand Ole Opry's New Star
B-Side:Seasons of My Heart
Released:September 17, 1955
Recorded:August 27, 1955
Studio:Gold Star (Houston, Texas)
Genre:Country, rockabilly
Length:2:47 (original 1955 version)2:16 (Unbridged Version)
Label:Starday
Starday 202
Producer:Pappy Daily
Prev Title:Hold Everything
Prev Year:1955
Next Title:What Am I Worth
Next Year:1956
Why Baby Why
Type:single
Artist:Charley Pride
Album:Charley Pride Live
B-Side:It's So Good to Be Together
Released:1982
Genre:Country
Length:2:11
Label:RCA
Producer:Norro Wilson
Prev Title:You're So Good When You're Bad
Prev Year:1982
Next Title:More and More
Next Year:1983

"Why Baby Why" is a country music song co-written and originally recorded by George Jones. Released in late 1955 on Starday Records and produced by Starday co-founder and Jones' manager Pappy Daily,[1] it peaked at 4 on the Billboard country charts that year.[2] It was Jones' first chart single, following several unsuccessful singles released during the prior year on Starday.[3] "Why Baby Why", has gone on to become a country standard, having been covered by many artists.

Recording and composition

Jones' recording session for "Why Baby Why" took place at Gold Star Studios in Houston, Texas and featured the house lineup of Glenn Barber on lead guitar, Herb Remington on pedal steel guitar, Tony Sepolio on fiddle, and Doc Lewis on piano.[4] [5] [6] The arrangement is upbeat honky tonk,[1] led by a fiddle that plays throughout the song. Overall, the song has been described as a classic of the "finger-pointin' cheatin' song".[7] In the liner notes to the retrospective Cup Of Loneliness: The Classic Mercury Years, country music historian Colin Escott observes that part of the song's appeal "lay in the way a Cajun dance number was trying to break free of a honky tonk song." Jones recorded the backing vocal himself, with help from innovative techniques from engineer Bill Quinn, after a planned appearance by more established singer Sonny Burns did not materialize due to the latter's drinking. According to the book George Jones: The Life and Times of a Honky Tonk Legend, Jones's frequent songwriting partner Darrell Edwards was inspired to write the words after hearing an argument between a couple at a gas station.[8] The lyric sets up the theme of the song:

Credits and personnel

For the 1955 Original recording.

Reception

The single's early airplay occurred in Jones' home state of Texas, with Houston's country music station KIKK ranking it number one locally.[9] Their charts were sent to stations around the country, which began to pick it up as well, partially overcoming Starday's regionally limited distribution.[9] However, its progress on the chart was blunted by Red Sovine and Webb Pierce's cover duet,[2] which benefited from Decca Records' major label status and national distribution[9] and rose to number one on the chart over the 1955–1956 Christmas holiday period.[7] Jones's rendition was later included as the first track on his 1957 debut album Grand Ole Opry's New Star.

Cover versions

Since the release of Jones' rendition, "Why Baby Why" has been covered by several other artists, many of whom have also charted with it. Jones himself re-recorded it a couple of times as a duet; first with Gene Pitney for their It's Country Time Again! album released in 1966, and with Ricky Skaggs for the 1994 album The Bradley Barn Sessions which featured re-recordings of Jones' songs as duets with various artists. Two different versions of the song have reached Number One on the country charts, making it one of the only country songs to hold that distinction. Artists who have had country chart hits with renditions of this song include the following:

Notes and References

  1. Book: Nathan Brackett. Christian Hoard . The New Rolling Stone Album Guide . . 2004 . 0-7432-0169-8 . 438. 4th .
  2. Web site: [{{Allmusic|class=artist|id=p1669|pure_url=yes}} George Jones biography ]. 2008-09-11 . Erlewine . Stephen Thomas . Stephen Thomas Erlewine . Allmusic.
  3. Book: Irwin Stambler, Grelun Landon . Country Music: The Encyclopedia . . 2000 . 0-312-26487-9 . 223.
  4. Book: House of Hits: The Story of Houston's Gold Star/SugarHill Recording Studios . Andy Bradley . Roger Wood. University of Texas Press. Austin, Texas. 2010. 978-0-292-71919-4. 48–50.
  5. Web site: Wood. Roger. Cano. Ray. SugarHill Recording Studios. Texas State History Association. May 27, 2015. 19 August 2024.
  6. Web site: Mellard. Jason. Legendary Houston Recording Studio Sugarhill Opens. KUTX.org. October 9, 2023. August 19, 2024.
  7. Book: Holland, Richard . 'It All Began the Day My Conscience Died': The Cheatin' Song From Prototype to Post-Modern . 2001: A Texas Folklore Odyssey . registration . Francis Edward Abernethy. . 2001 . 1-57441-140-3 . 138, 142.
  8. Book: Allen, Bob . 1996 . George Jones: The Life and Times of a Honky Tonk Legend . St Martin's Press . 978-0312956981 . 103.
  9. Book: Jones, George . George Jones . Carter, Tom . I Lived to Tell It All . . 1996 . 0-679-43869-6 . 41–42 .
  10. Web site: Red Sovine biography . 2008-09-11 . Red Sovine website.
  11. Book: Whitburn, Joel . The Billboard Book of Top 40 Country Hits . 2006 . Joel Whitburn . 512 . 9780823082919 .
  12. http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/rpm/028020-119.01-e.php?&file_num=nlc008388.1434&volume=53&issue=10&issue_dt=February%2009%201991&type=1&interval=24&PHPSESSID=jn5agqeivqgdi8198ubcnp3ss6 RPM Country Tracks - Volume 53, No. 10, February 09 1991
  13. Web site: Palomino Road biography . 2008-08-10 . Oldies.com.