I Don’t Need Your Rockin’ Chair

This song is for all of us that the song yesterday was NOT for.   “I Don’t Need Your Rockin’ Chair”  by George Jones from the album Walls Can Fall.  Songwriter(s)    Billy Yates, Frank Dycus, Kerry Kurt Phillips.  Jones, who by 1992 had taken his place as one of the true legends of country music, used the composition as a personal statement, asserting his determination to carry on singing as he always had. Its final chorus is done as a call and response, with several other country singers providing the response: Vince Gill, Mark Chesnutt, Garth Brooks, Travis Tritt, Joe Diffie, Alan Jackson, Pam Tillis, T. Graham Brown, Patty Loveless and Clint Black.  The song was praised by critics. In the book The Life and Times of a Honky Tonk Legend, Bob Allen describes it as a “boisterous musical declaration[…]about a man’s determination to keep right on honky tonkin’ into his golden years.  Richard Carlin, in the book Country Music: A Biographical Dictionary, called it “a good-natured but defiant statement of where this old fella’s comin’ from.”  Brian Mansfield, in his review of Walls Can Fall, called the song “scarier because of George’s past”, while Jones himself described the song as “my attitude set to music.”   However, the single only rose to No. 34, and Jones remained frustrated at how many country radio stations had turned their backs on him. “There has never been a time when country radio was so disrespectful to its elders,” he declared in his 1995 memoir. The song won the 1993 Country Music Association Award for Vocal Event of the Year.

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