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Cold, Cold Heart

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Wikipedia article




"'Cold, Cold Heart'" is a country music and pop song recorded by Hank Williams. This blues ballad is both a classic of honky-tonk and an entry in the 'Great American Songbook'.

Hank Williams version



Williams adapted the melody for the song from T. Texas Tyler's 1945 recording of "You'll Still Be in My Heart," written by Ted West in 1943.

In the Williams episode of 'American Masters', country music historian Colin Escott states that Williams was moved to write the song after visiting his wife Audrey in the hospital, who was suffering from an infection brought on by an abortion she had carried out at their home unbeknownst to Hank. Escott also speculates that Audrey, who carried on extramarital affairs as Hank did on the road, may have suspected the baby was not her husband's. Florida bandleader Pappy Neil McCormick claims to have witnessed the encounter:

The first draft of the song is dated November 23, 1950, and was recorded with an unknown band on December 21, 1950. Like his earlier masterpiece "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry," it was released as the B-side (MGM-10904B) to "Dear John" (MGM-10904A), since it was an unwritten rule in the country music industry that the faster numbers sold best. "Dear John" peaked at #8 after only a brief four-week run on 'Billboard' magazine's country music charts, but "Cold, Cold Heart" proved to be a favorite of disc jockeys and jukebox listeners, whose enthusiasm for the song catapulted it to #1 on the country music charts.

Williams featured the song on his 'Mother's Best' radio shows at the time of its release and performed the song on 'The Kate Smith Evening Hour' on April 23, 1952, which ran from September 1951 to June 1952; the appearance remains one of the few existing film clips of the singer performing live. He is introduced by his idol Roy Acuff. Although a notorious binge drinker, Williams appears remarkably at ease on front of the cameras, with one critic noting, "He stared at the camera during his performance of 'Cold, Cold Heart' with a cockiness and self-confidence that bordered on arrogance."

The song would become a pop hit for Tony Bennett, paving the way for country songs to make inroads into the lucrative pop market. In the liner notes to the 1990 Polygram compilation 'Hank Williams: The Original Single Collection', Fred Rose's son Wesley states, "Hank earned two major distinctions as a songwriter: he was the first writer on a regular basis to make country music national music; and he was the first country songwriter accepted by pop artists, and pop A&R men."

Controversy

Music journalist Chet Flippo and Kentucky historian W. Lynn Nickell have each written that 21-year-old Kentuckian Paul Gilley wrote the lyrics, then sold them to Williams along with the rights, allowing Williams to take credit for it. Gilley also claimed to have written the lyrics to "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry" and other songs before drowning at the age of 27.

Chart performance



Tony Bennett version



That same year, it was recorded in a pop version by Tony Bennett with a light orchestral arrangement from Percy Faith. This recording was released by Columbia Records as catalog number 39449. It first reached the Billboard magazine charts on July 20, 1951, and lasted 27 weeks on the chart, peaking at number 1.



The popularity of Bennett's version has been credited with helping to expose both Williams and country music to a wider national audience. 'Allmusic' writer Bill Janovitz discusses this unlikely combination:



That a young Italian singing waiter from Queens could find common ground with a country singer from Alabama's backwoods is testament both to Williams' skills as a writer and to Bennett's imagination and artist's ear.



Williams subsequently telephoned Bennett to say, "Tony, why did you ruin my song?" But that was a prank – in fact, Williams liked Bennett's version and played it on jukeboxes whenever he could. In his autobiography 'The Good Life', Bennett described playing "Cold, Cold Heart" at the Grand Ole Opry later in the 1950s. He had brought his usual arrangement charts to give to the house musicians who would be backing him, but their instrumentation was different and they declined the charts. "You sing and we'll follow you," they said, and Bennett says they did so beautifully, once again recreating an unlikely artistic merger.

The story of the WilliamsBennett telephone conversation is often related with mirth by Bennett in interviews and on stage; he still performs the song in concert. In 1997, the first installment of A&E's 'Live By Request' featuring Bennett (who was also the show's creator), special guest Clint Black performed the song, after which Bennett recounted it. Bennett re-recorded the song as a duet with Tim McGraw for the 2006 album Duets: An American Classic. A Google Doodle featured Bennett's recording of the song on its Valentine's Day doodle in February 2012.

In 2012, Bennett recorded once again "Cold, Cold Heart" in a duet with Argentinian singer-songwriter Vicentico for 'Viva Duets', a studio album of Bennett in collaboration with Latin American music stars, released in October 2012.

Notable cover versions



*Jazz singer Norah Jones included a sultry swing version on her 2002 album 'Come Away With Me', which was seen as "re-introducing" modern audiences to the song.

* The song has been recorded by a plethora of artists over the years.

Use in media



During the credits for the 2013 videogame 'Batman: Arkham Origins', the Joker, voiced by Troy Baker, can be heard singing the song.

A quest in the 2010 post-apocalyptic open world action-RPG 'Fallout: New Vegas' uses this song as its name.

References



Sources



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Category:1951 songs

Category:Songs written by Hank Williams

Category:Hank Williams songs

Category:The Fontane Sisters songs

Category:Tony Bennett songs

Category:Petula Clark songs

Category:Johnny Cash songs

Category:Louis Armstrong songs

Category:Aretha Franklin songs

Category:Bill Haley songs

Category:Rosemary Clooney songs

Category:George Jones songs

Category:Guy Mitchell songs

Category:Jerry Lee Lewis songs

Category:Frankie Laine songs

Category:Glen Campbell songs

Category:Number-one singles in the United States

Category:Billboard Hot Country Songs number-one singles of the year

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