Yesterday's Wine (song) explained

Yesterday's Wine
Type:single
Artist:Willie Nelson
Album:Yesterday's Wine
B-Side:Me and Paul
Released:October 23, 1971
Recorded:May 3, 1971
Studio:RCA Studio A, Nashville, Tennessee
Genre:Country
Length:3:15
Label:RCA
Producer:Felton Jarvis
Chronology:Willie Nelson
Prev Title:What Can You Do to Me Now?
Prev Year:1971
Next Title:The Words Don't Fit the Picture
Next Year:1972
Yesterday's Wine
Type:single
Artist:Merle Haggard and George Jones
Album:A Taste of Yesterday's Wine
B-Side:I Haven't Found Her Yet
Released:August 7, 1982
Recorded:May 17, 1982
Genre:Country
Length:3:15
Label:Epic
Producer:Billy Sherrill
Chronology:Merle Haggard
Prev Title:Are the Good Times Really Over (I Wish a Buck Was Still Silver)
Prev Year:1982
Next Title:Going Where the Lonely Go
Next Year:1982

"Yesterday's Wine" is the title track of the 1971 album of the same name by Willie Nelson. The track was also written by Willie Nelson. It later became a #1 duet for George Jones and Merle Haggard in 1982.

Background

"Yesterday's Wine" was released as a single by RCA in the fall of 1971. Its parent album, which opened with a peculiar existential dialogue featuring Nelson and contained songs with philosophical and spiritual themes, confounded the label, with the singer later lamenting, "I think it's one of my best albums but Yesterday's Wine was regarded by RCA as way too spooky and far out to waste promotion money on."[1] Although it was perhaps the LP's most accessible track, and has since become regarded as one of Nelson's finest compositions, "Yesterday's Wine" limped to #62 on the Billboard country survey. RCA appeared to realize its folly five years later Jerry Bradley included it on the Wanted! The Outlaws compilation after Nelson's popularity had exploded. The song, a tale of two old friends meeting up unexpectedly in a bar after many years, was a perfect fit for the outlaw-themed record.

In 1982, Merle Haggard and George Jones recorded a duet of "Yesterday's Wine" which became a #1 single, remaining so for one week and spending a total of ten weeks on the chart.[2] The song inspired the title of their first duet LP, A Taste of Yesterday's Wine, and was a natural fit for the two singers, who were often singled out as two of the finest interpreters of pure country music and had both battled many personal demons over the course of their respective careers.

Chart performance

Chart performance

Notes and References

  1. Book: Willie . Nelson . Bud . Shrake . 1988 . Willie: An Autobiography . Simon and Schuster . 978-0671680756 . .
  2. Book: Whitburn, Joel . The Billboard Book Of Top 40 Country Hits: 1944-2006, Second edition. Joel Whitburn . 2004 . Record Research . 182.