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Saturday Night Special (Conway Twitty song)

"Saturday Night Special"
Single by Conway Twitty
B-side "If You Were Mine to Lose"
Released June 1988
Format Country
Recorded 1987
Genre Country
Length 3:21
Label MCA
Songwriter(s) Larry Bastian, Dewayne Blackwell
Producer(s) Jimmy Bowen, Conway Twitty, Dee Henry
Conway Twitty singles chronology
"Goodbye Time"
(1988)
"Saturday Night Special"
(1988)
"I Wish I Was Still in Your Dreams"
(1988)
"Goodbye Time"
(1988)
"Saturday Night Special"
(1988)
"I Wish I Was Still in Your Dreams"
(1988)

"Saturday Night Special" is a song written by Larry Bastian and Dewayne Blackwell, and recorded by American country music artist Conway Twitty. It was released in June 1988 as the second single from the album Still in Your Dreams. The song reached #9 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart.

The song's title refers to the pejorative slang for an inexpensive handgun, which a young man purchases at a pawn shop.

The song's story tells of the man planning to kill himself after a failed relationship. The story opens with him bartering with a pawn dealer for the "Saturday night special" and one bullet. Before he is able to leave, he overhears the pawn dealer cruelly and callously deal with a young, distraught woman trying to hock her wedding ring ("Seven dollars, nothin' more!" he tells her, as the woman breaks down in tears). The previous customer turns around and stares angrily at the pawn dealer, placing his hand in his jacket pocket where he had placed the gun. The pawn dealer, knowing that a mistake in dealing at this point could cost him his life, relents and gives the woman a much fairer sum – $2,000 – for the ring. In the end, the young man and newly divorced woman decide to run away to Texas to start a new life.


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Wikipedia

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