Good Hearted Woman (song)
"Good Hearted Woman" is a song written by American country music singers Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson. WritingIn 1969, while staying at the Fort Worther Motel in Fort Worth, Texas,[1] Jennings saw an advertisement in a newspaper promoting Tina Turner as a "good hearted woman loving two-timing men", a reference to Ike Turner.[2] Jennings went to talk to Nelson, who was in a middle of a poker game, about writing a song based on that phrase. Joining the game, he and Nelson expanded the lyrics as Nelson's wife Connie Koepke wrote them down.[1] RecordingJennings recorded the song for the first time as the title track of his 1972 album Good Hearted Woman,[1][3] the single peaked at number three on the Billboard's Hot Country Singles.[4] Jennings had recorded a concert version for Waylon Live, which served as a basis for the duet with Nelson. "I just took my voice off and put Willie's on in different places," he explained. "Willie wasn't within 10,000 miles when I recorded it." He also added canned crowd noises to add to the live feel for the album Wanted: The Outlaws!.[5] The album cemented the pair's outlaw image and became country music's first platinum album.[6] The song peaked at number one on Billboard's Hot Country Singles and at number 25 on the Billboard Hot 100.[7] The song won the Single of the Year award in the 1976 Country Music Association Awards,[8] and took Jennings and Nelson to the mainstream audiences, giving them nationwide recognition.[9][10] ChartsWaylon Jennings
Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson
Year-end charts
Cover versions
References
Works cited
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