Sonido Fulgor

martes, 9 de marzo de 2010

I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry

I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry

Hear that lonesome whippoorwill,
He sounds too blue to fly. 




The midnight train is whining low, 
I'm so lonesome I could cry. 

I've never seen a night so long

When time goes crawling by. 
The moon just went behind a cloud
To hide its face and cry. 

Did you ever see a robin weep, 
When leaves began to die? 
That means he's lost the will to live, 
I'm so lonesome I could cry. 

The silence of a falling star
Lights up a purple sky. 
And as I wonder where you are
I'm so lonesome I could cry.

Hank Williams...........................

According to Colin Escott who wrote a biography on Hank "Here is the chill of the void that would become one of the hallmarks of Hank's writing. It is the most oft cited example of Hank Williams the hillbilly poet, but its poetic form comes from the fact that it was originally intended to be spoken, not sung. Acuff-Rose staff writer Vic McAlpin said that Hank had written it for his first session of recitations slated for January 1950, but at some point he changed his mind. "I think ol' Hank needs to record this," he told McAlpin. Hank was concerned that some of the lines might sound self-consciously artsy and alienate his audience, but, as he so often did, he tried out the song on friends, fellow performers, and Fred Rose, and let them convince him that he had excelled".

Veteran Nashville songwriter Jimmy Rule recalls: "One day I was over at Acuff-Rose, our mutual publisher, and Hank handed me a piece of paper and said, "Do you think people will understand what I'm trying to say when I say this?" The line was 'Did you ever see a robin weep when leaves begin to die? It's because he's lost the will to live; I'm so lonesome I could cry'. Hank had this lonesome streak, and I think it was largely caused by his marital problems. I think he wrote it out of a feeling of loneliness that stayed very much with him. He would be the natural person to write 'I'm so lonesome I could cry'." 


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