*** Welcome to piglix ***

Ruby Don't Take Your Love to Town

"Ruby, Don't Take Your Love to Town"
Single by Johnny Darrell
from the album Ruby, Don't Take Your Love to Town
B-side "The Little Things I Love"
Format 7" single
Genre Country
Length 2:16
Label United Artists
Writer(s) Mel Tillis
Producer(s) Bob Montgomery
Johnny Darrell singles chronology
"She's Mighty Gone"
(1966)
"Ruby, Don't Take Your Love to Town"
(1967)
"My Elusive Dreams"
(1967)
"Ruby, Don't Take Your Love to Town"
Kenny Rogers & the First Edition - Ruby, Don't Take Your Love to Town.jpg
Cover of the 1969 single
Single by Kenny Rogers and The First Edition
from the album Ruby, Don't Take Your Love to Town
Released 1969
Genre Country, pop
Length 2:53
Label Reprise
Writer(s) Mel Tillis
Producer(s) Jimmy Bowen
Kenny Rogers and The First Edition singles chronology
"Once Again, She's All Alone"
(1969)
"Ruby, Don't Take Your Love to Town"
(1969)
"Reuben James"
(1969)

"Ruby, Don't Take Your Love to Town" is a song written by Mel Tillis about a paralyzed veteran of a "crazy Asian war" (given the time of its release, widely assumed—but never explicitly stated—to be the Vietnam War) who either lies helplessly in bed or sits helplessly in his wheelchair as his wife "paints [herself] up" to go out for the evening without him; he believes she is going in search of a lover, and as he hears the door slam behind her, he pleads for her to reconsider. The song was made famous by Kenny Rogers and The First Edition in 1969. "Ruby" was originally recorded in 1967 by Johnny Darrell, who scored a number nine country hit with it that year.

"Mel Tillis wrote this song. He based the song on a couple who lived near his family in Florida. In real life, the man was wounded in Germany in World War II and sent to recuperate in England. There he married a nurse who took care of him at the hospital. The two of them moved to Florida shortly afterward, but he had periodic return trips to the hospital as problems with his wounds kept flaring up. His wife saw another man as the veteran lay in the hospital.
Tillis changed the war in the song to the Korean War, and left out the life ending: the man killed her in a murder-suicide. In the song, the man says he would kill her if he could move to get his gun."

In 1969, after the success Kenny Rogers and The First Edition had enjoyed with the hits "Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Condition Was In)" and "But You Know I Love You," Rogers wanted to take his group more into a country music direction. They recorded their version of the song, with Rogers singing the lead, in a single take. The record was a major hit for them. It made #1 in the UK on the New Musical Express (#2 on the BBC chart) staying in the top 20 for 15 weeks and selling over a million copies by the end of 1970. In the United States it reached number six on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 39 on the country chart.


...
Wikipedia

...