*** Welcome to piglix ***

City Lights (Ray Price song)

"City Lights"
Single by Ray Price
B-side "Invitation to the Blues"
Released June 1958 (U.S.)
Format 7"
Recorded May 29, 1958
Genre Country
Length 2:59
Label Columbia
Songwriter(s) Bill Anderson
Ray Price singles chronology
"Curtain in the Window"
(1957)
"City Lights"
(1958)
"That's What It's Like to Be Lonesome"
(1958)
"Curtain in the Window"
(1957)
"City Lights"
(1957)
"That's What It's Like to Be Lonesome"
(1958)
"City Lights"
Single by Mickey Gilley
from the album City Lights
B-side "Fraulein"
Released November 1974 (U.S.)
Format 7"
Recorded 1974
Genre Country
Length 2:48
Label Playboy 6015
Songwriter(s) Bill Anderson
Producer(s) Eddie Kilroy
Mickey Gilley singles chronology
"I Overlooked an Orchid"
(1974)
"City Lights"
(1974)
"Window Up Above"
(1975)
"I Overlooked an Orchid"
(1974)
"City Lights"
(1974)
"Window Up Above"
(1975)

"City Lights" is an American country music song written by Bill Anderson. It twice became a #1 hit — in 1958 and again in 1975.

Ray Price recorded the original version in 1958, with his version becoming a long-running #1 hit.

"City Lights" was one of Anderson's earliest major successes. He wrote the song when he was just 19, and it was picked up by Price in the spring of 1958, when Price was country music's predominant honky-tonk singer and stylist.

According to country music historian Bill Malone, "City Lights" depicts personal isolation and "the estrangement of the individual in a world of urban anonymity." Price's "hard, lonesome vocal" and Texas shuffle beat (the styling hallmarks of his recordings from the mid-1950s through early 1960s) were prominent in his rendition.

Released in June 1958, Price's version of "City Lights" stalled at #2 on the Billboard magazine Most Played C&W by Disc Jockeys chart later that summer. When Billboard introduced its all-encompassing chart for country music (called "Hot C&W Sides") on October 20, "City Lights" was the new chart's first #1 song. It remained atop the chart for 13 weeks, its last week being January 12, 1959. The song spent a total of 34 weeks on the chart.


...
Wikipedia

...