The List

3 Shel Silverstein Songs That Became Surprising Country Hits

Shel Silverstein is known around the world as a poet and author. Silverstein is the writer behind books like The Giving Tree, Where The Sidewalk Ends, and more. But Silverstein is also a talented songwriter, penning songs for himself and others, including these three songs, which were all hits at country radio.

“A Boy Named Sue” by Johnny Cash

In 1969, Johnny Cash released โ€œA Boy Named Sueโ€. A quirky song, Cash includes โ€œA Boy Named Sueโ€ on his live At San Quentin album.

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โ€œA Boy Named Sueโ€ isย  song of revenge on an absentee father who named his son Sue, although the son later becomes grateful for his unique name,ย  โ€œA Boy Named Sueโ€ says, โ€œWell, I grew up quick and I grew up mean / My fist got hard and my wits got keen / Iโ€™d roam from town to town to hide my shame / But I made me a vow to the moon and stars / That I’d search the honky-tonks and bar / And kill that man who gave me that awful name.โ€

Cash heard โ€œA Boy Named Sueโ€ when they were both at someoneโ€™s house, playing music. Cashโ€™s wife, June Carter Cash, suggested he record โ€œA Boy Named Sueโ€. It became one of Cashโ€™s many No. 1 singles.

“One’s On The Way” by Loretta Lynn

โ€œOneโ€™s On The Wayโ€ is the title track of a record Loretta Lynn released in 1972. Out as a single in 1971, โ€œOneโ€™s On The Wayโ€ is the only single from the record. It’s a contemplative song about a woman who is stuck at home while life keeps going on,”

โ€œOneโ€™s On The Wayโ€ says, โ€œBut here in Topeka the rain is a-falling / The faucet is a dripping / And the kids are a-bawling / One of them is toddling / And one is a-crawling / And one’s on the way.โ€

โ€œOneโ€™s On The Wayโ€ earned Lynn a CMA Awards nomination for Single of the Year.

“Marie Laveau” by Bobby Bare

In 1974, 18 years after he released his first single, Bobby Bare scored his first No. 1 hit with โ€œMarie Laveauโ€. Silverstein wrote โ€œMarie Laveauโ€ with Baxter Taylor.ย 

Before Bare had a big hit with โ€œMarie Laveauโ€, Doctor Hook & the Medicine Show released the song. It appears on their 1972  Doctor Hook album. But itโ€™s Bareโ€™s version that remains the most popular.

โ€œMario Laveauโ€ begins with, โ€œThe most famous of the voodoo queens that ever existed / Is Marie Laveau, down in Louisiana / There’s a lot of weird ungodly tales about Marie / She’s supposed to have a lot of magic potions, spells, and curses. Down in Louisiana, where the black trees grow / Lives a voodoo lady named Marie Laveau / Got a black cat’s tooth and a Mojo bone / And anyone who wouldn’t leave her alone.โ€

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