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The Wild Side of Life

"The Wild Side of Life"
Single by Hank Thompson and His Brazos Valley Boys
Released March 1952 (U.S.)
Format 7", 78 rpm
Recorded December 11, 1951
Los Angeles, California
Genre Country
Length 2:44
Label Capitol F1942
Writer(s) Arlie Carter and William Warren
Producer(s) Ken Nelson
Hank Thompson and His Brazos Valley Boys singles chronology
"Soft Lips"/"The Grass Looks Greener Over Yonder"
(1949)
"The Wild Side of Life"
(1952)
"Waiting in the Lobby of Your Heart"
(1952)
"Wild Side of Life"
Single by Status Quo
B-side All Through the Night
Released 11 December 1976 (1976-12-11)
Format 7"
Genre Rock
Length 3:18
Label Vertigo
Writer(s) Arlie Carter
William Warren
Producer(s) Roger Glover
Status Quo singles chronology
"Mystery Song"
(1976)
"Wild Side of Life"
(1976)
"Rockin' All Over the World"
(1977)

"The Wild Side of Life" is a song made famous by country music singer Hank Thompson. Originally released in 1952, the song became one of the most popular recordings in the genre's history, spending 15 weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard country charts, solidified Thompson's status as a country music superstar and inspired the answer song, "It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels" by Kitty Wells.

"The Wild Side of Life" carries one of the most distinctive melodies of early country music, used in "Thrills That I Can't Forget" recorded by Welby Toomey and Edgar Boaz in 1925, "I'm Thinking Tonight of My Blue Eyes" by the Carter Family in 1929, and "Great Speckled Bird" by Roy Acuff in 1936. That, along with the song's story of a woman shedding her role as domestic provider to follow the night life, combined to become one of the most famous country songs of the early 1950s.

According to country music historian Bill Malone, "Wild Side" co-writer William Warren was inspired to create the song after his experiences with a young woman he met when he was younger — a honky tonk angel, as it were — who "found the glitter of the gay night life too hard to resist." Fellow historian Paul Kingsbury wrote that the song appealed to people who "thought the world was going to hell and that faithless women deserved a good deal of the blame."

Jimmy Heap and His Melody Masters first recorded "Wild Side" in 1951, but never had a hit with the song. Thompson did, and his version spent three and one-half months atop the Billboard country chart in the spring and early summer of 1952.

"Wild Side" was Thompson's first charting single since 1949's two-sided hit "Soft Lips"/"The Grass is Greener Over Yonder." Thompson had hooked up with producer Ken Nelson in the interim, and one of their first songs together was "Wild Side."

The lyric, "I didn't know God made honky tonk angels," and the tune's overall cynical attitude — Kingsbury noted the song "... just begged for an answer from a woman" — inspired "It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels," which was also based on the same melody. Recorded by Kitty Wells and released later in 1952, that song, too, became a No. 1 country hit. In "It Wasn't God ... ," Wells shifts the blame for the woman's infidelity to the man, countering that for every unfaithful woman there is a man who has led her astray.


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