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"Your Cheatin' Heart" is a song written and recorded by country music singer-songwriter Hank Williams in 1952. It is regarded as one of country's most important standards . Williams was inspired to write the song while driving with his fiancée from Nashville, Tennessee , to Shreveport, Louisiana .
Among these recordings was "Always", "True Love" and "Your Cheatin' Heart. [5] At the time of Cline's death, she had recorded music that was planned for an anticipated fourth studio album. This music (among other previously-unreleased material) would later be issued in numerous compilation albums and boxed sets. [1]
Mind Your Own Business; Moanin' the Blues; Move It on Over; My Heart is True Confession (co-written with Jimmy Fields) My Heart Would Know; My Love for You (Has Turned to Hate) My Receipt for Love; My Son Calls Another Man Daddy (co-written with Jewell House) My Sweet Love Ain't Around; My Unfaithful Heart (co-written with Jimmy Fields)
The session also produced "I Could Never Be Ashamed of You," (written for his soon-to-be wife Billie Jean), "Take These Chains From My Heart" (also written by Rose), and Williams' signature ballad "Your Cheatin' Heart." ' More than any other song, "Kaw-Liga" bears evidence of the guiding hand of Rose, who moulded the song into nothing like ...
Your Cheatin' Heart is the second studio album by American musician Hank Williams Jr. The full title is: The MGM Sound Track Album Hank Williams' Life Story – The MGM Film Your Cheatin' Heart Sung by Hank Williams Jr. The album number is E/SE-4260.
The song makes use of a number of Williams-penned-and-recorded song titles in the lyrics ("You wrote 'Your Cheatin' Heart' about a gal like my first ex-wife/You moan the blues for me and for you/Hank Williams, you wrote my life") to express deep sorrow and sadness following a bitter breakup of a relationship.
"Your Cheatin' Heart" was the oldest track, recorded in 1958, nineteen years earlier. The one previously unissued track, " I Can't Stop Loving You ", was recorded during the afternoon performance at Madison Square Garden on June 10, 1972; [ 3 ] the remainder of the concert remained unreleased until 1997 when RCA issued the complete concert as ...
On side two, two songs from Cline's 1962 album, Sentimentally Yours, were put on the EP: "Heartaches" and "Your Cheatin' Heart." This would be Cline's last EP collection that would be released in her lifetime, as she would be killed in a plane crash less than a year later in March 1963.