Английская Википедия:A Good Year for the Roses
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:More citations needed Шаблон:Infobox song Шаблон:Infobox song Шаблон:Infobox song
"A Good Year for the Roses" is a ballad written by Jerry Chesnut and originally recorded by American country singer George Jones. It rose to #2 on the country singles chart in 1970.
Background
"A Good Year for the Roses" describes the thoughts of a man as his wife leaves him, and is as good an example as any of Jones' ability to deliver an intensely moving vocal, in this case one that conveys both the sadness and profound bitterness that comes with a broken marriage. Although recorded while George was with Musicor, the production is typical of the sound Billy Sherrill would employ when Jones moved to Epic Records the following year.Шаблон:Citation needed Although supported by a choir of background singers and strings on the chorus, Jones' vocal is the centerpiece throughout, with Chris Woodstra of AllMusic calling it "one of his all-time greatest performances."[1] The lyric, infused by Jones' nuanced delivery, captures the disillusion of the narrator.
Jones recorded two versions of the song; the second can be heard on the A Good Year for the Roses: The Complete Musicor Recordings 1965-1971. Jones also cut the song with Alan Jackson as a duet in 1994 for the Bradley Barn Sessions, but was disappointed with its reception by country radio, noting in his autobiography, "Alan was white-hot on the radio, and programmers wanted his voice. But some didn't want his if they had to take mine. The vast majority of Alan's other single records have gone to number one. His duet with me was his first not to crack the top 50."Шаблон:Sfn It actually peaked at number 57. In June 1995, the song won the Music City News Country Awards "Vocal Collaboration of the Year."Шаблон:Citation needed
Other notable recordings
Elvis Costello scored a No. 6 hit in the UK Singles Chart with the song in 1981.[2]
Video
The video for the Elvis Costello version of the song was shot at The Meldrum House Hotel, Oldmeldrum, Aberdeenshire on Wednesday 29th July 1981. The band were in the north east of Scotland to appear at the Aberdeen Country and Western Club on the 30th July, with the performance to be filmed by LWT Television.[3]
Chart performance
George Jones version
Шаблон:SinglechartChart (1970–1971) | Peak position |
---|---|
US Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles (Billboard)[4] | 12 |
US Hot Country Singles (Billboard) | 2 |
Elvis Costello version
Chart (1981–1982) | Peak position |
---|---|
Australia (Kent Music Report)[5] | 34 |
Belgium (Flanders)[6] | 25 |
Netherlands[7] | 11 |
UK Singles Chart[2] | 6 |
George Jones and Alan Jackson version
Шаблон:SinglechartШаблон:SinglechartChart (1994) | Peak position |
---|
References
Bibliography
Шаблон:George Jones singles Шаблон:Alan Jackson singles Шаблон:Elvis Costello
- Английская Википедия
- 1970s ballads
- 1970 songs
- 1970 singles
- 1981 singles
- 1994 singles
- George Jones songs
- Alan Jackson songs
- Musicor Records singles
- MCA Nashville Records singles
- Song recordings produced by Brian Ahern (producer)
- Songs written by Jerry Chesnut
- Male vocal duets
- Elvis Costello songs
- Country ballads
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