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Please Remember Me

"Please Remember Me"
Single by Rodney Crowell
from the album Jewel of the South
Released 1995
Genre Country
Length 3:45
Label MCA
Writer(s)
Producer(s)
Rodney Crowell singles chronology
"I Don't Fall in Love So Easy"
(1994)
"Please Remember Me"
(1995)
"I Walk the Line Revisited"
(1998)
"Please Remember Me"
Timmcgrawrememberme.jpg
Single by Tim McGraw
from the album A Place in the Sun
B-side For a Little While
Released March 22, 1999
Format CD single
Genre
Length 4:55
Label Curb
Writer(s)
Producer(s)
Tim McGraw singles chronology
"For a Little While"
(1998)
"Please Remember Me"
(1999)
"Something Like That"
(1999)

"Please Remember Me" is a song co-written by American country music artists Rodney Crowell and Will Jennings. Originally recorded by Crowell on his 1995 album Jewel of the South, his version was released as a single that year. Crowell's version of the song peaked at number 69 on the Billboard country charts upon its release. A later version was released by Aaron Neville and Linda Ronstadt, but was not released as a single.

Four years after the release of his own version, Crowell selected several songs which he recommended to record producer Byron Gallimore. Eventually, "Please Remember Me" made its way to Tim McGraw, who recorded it for his 1999 album A Place in the Sun. Released that year as the first single from that album, McGraw's rendition reached the top of the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks (now Hot Country Songs) charts, a position that it held for five weeks. The song was also McGraw's biggest solo hit on the Billboard Hot 100, where it peaked at number 10. McGraw's rendition features Patty Loveless on harmony vocals.

Deborah Evans Price, of Billboard magazine reviewed the song favorably, calling it a "lush and lovely ballad." She goes on to say that he is "surprisingly effective" on this pop-side release as he is usually best with traditional material. She finishes the review by saying that McGraw "seems to a newfound vocal maturity." Kevin John Coyne of Country Universe gave the song an A grade, calling it "a lush and gorgeous ballad that is elevated by a Patty Loveless harmony vocal." He goes on to say that McGraw's "pleading performance gives the song its urgency, and the pop-flavored production, complete with strings, harkens back to the glory days of the Nashville sound." The song ranks 96th on the RIAA 365 songs of the century list


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