NRR Project: “Lovesick Blues”
Music by Cliff Friend; lyrics by Irving Mills
Performed by Hank Williams with his Drifting Cowboys
Recorded Dec. 22, 1948
Released Feb. 11, 1949
2:45
Read Susan Masino’s excellent explanatory essay here at the National Recording Registry!
Who can account for the hellacious splendiferousness of Hank Williams? His songs were imprinted on my soul by my mother, who played him constantly. We went and saw the 1964 biopic “Your Cheatin’ Heart” with George Hamilton as Williams. He was revered in our home like a saint.
A born songwriter. A beautiful voice. And a huge pain in the neck.
.Born in 1923 in Alabama, Williams learned the guitar as a kid. He began performing country music in bars, schoolhouses, theaters, and at tiny radio stations. He finally got a record contract in 1944. He joined the Louisiana Hayride radio program. Then he performed this song.
It was not a country song. It was not his own song. “Lovesick Blues” was a Tin Pan Alley song, written by Cliff Friend and Irving Mills in 1922. Emmett Miller recorded it in 1925 and 1928. Country singer Rex Griffin put his spin on it in 1939. Williams, who had heard Miller and Griffin’s renditions, decided to imitate Griffin’s approach. He played it on the Hayride show. The crowd went wild.
They recorded it. It went to Number One and stayed there for 16 weeks. Williams made it to the Grand Ole Opry on June 11, 1949; he was instantly a superstar.
He deserved it. He had a magical ability to telegraph whatever he was singing at the heart of the listener. He wrote and sang “Your Cheatin’ Heart” and “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry” and “I Saw the Light,” “Honky Tonkin’” and “Jambalaya,” “Hey, Good Lookin’” and “Cold Cold Heart.” He even did gospel – his narrative performances as Luke the Drifter are worth seeking out, as are his radio transcriptions.
And he had a tremendous problem with a alcohol and drugs. He was in chronic pain from a case of spina bifida. He became a stumbling wreck; he grew notoriously unreliable and out of it. He married and had a child, but he did not stop destroying himself as fast as he possibly could. He died in the back seat of a car on the way to a gig. He was 29.
Touched with genius and madness, Hank Williams’ life is a cautionary tale. His art is eternal, deeply influentials, and at its best poignantly heart-breaking. He was heartbreak personified.
The National Recording Registry Project tracks one writer’s expedition through all the recordings in the National Recording Registry in chronological order. Next time: ‘Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer’.






