"Girl in Saskatoon" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by Johnny Cash | ||||
from the album Heart of Cash | ||||
A-side | "Girl in Saskatoon" "Locomotive Man" | |||
Released | 1960 | |||
Genre | Country, pop | |||
Length | 2:12 | |||
Label | Columbia 4-41920 | |||
Songwriter(s) | Johnny Cash, Johnny Horton [1] [2] | |||
Johnny Cash singles chronology | ||||
| ||||
Audio | ||||
"Girl in Saskatoon" on YouTube |
"Girl in Saskatoon" is a song co-written by Johnny Cash with Johnny Horton [2] and originally recorded by Cash for Columbia.
It was released as a single (Columbia 4-41920, with "Locomotive Man" on the opposite side). [3] [4] [5] [6] in December 1960, [3] [6] the same month Sun Records released "Oh, Lonesome Me" / "Life Goes On" (Sun 355). [7]
U.S. Billboard picked the song "Girl in Saskatoon" as one of the "Spotlight winners of the week", giving it four stars that corresponded to a "very strong sales potential". The review called the song "another fine folkish effort by Cash" and continued:
It has the quality of one of those old Robert Service poems about the Far North. Solid chanting and it can go. [8]
Nevertheless, the song didn't chart on Billboard at all:
A couple of weeks after Horton's death, Cash and crew recorded "Girl in Saskatoon," a song co-written by Cash and Horton. Both that song and another recorded at the session, “Locomotive Man,” were released as singles. Although promoted heavily by Columbia, neither entered the charts, but songs from his Sun days continued to do so.
— C. Eric Banister. Johnny Cash FAQ: All That's Left to Know About the Man in Black [9]
On the Cash Box country singles chart, "Girl in Saskatoon" reached number 25 during its nine weeks stay. [10]
Later the song was included on Johnny Cash's albums "Heart of Cash" (1968) & "More of Old Golden Throat" (1969).
By the time Cash returned to the road on March 4[, 1960,] in Winnipeg, he had a song idea, albeit a slim one—a story about a guy longing to get home to the girl of his dreams in Saskatoon, somewhat the reverse of "Ballad of a Teenage Queen." He figured he needed to get back on the pop charts, and "The Girl in Saskatoon," which he cowrote with Horton, was certainly closer to a teen pop song than anything he had recorded since leaving Sun.
— Robert Hilburn. Johnny Cash: The Life [11]
John M. Alexander writes in his book The Man in Song: A Discographic Biography of Johnny Cash:
"Girl in Saskatoon" is another exceptional collaboration between Cash and Horton. It's unfortunate that it did not find a wider audience. It was originally released as a single in 1960, but failed to chart. It's a breezy retro ballad wherein the singer follows the girl he's in love with all the way to Saskatoon, Canada, where he ultimately finds her and weds her. And, despite the cold temperatures, he "found eternal spring with the girl in Saskatoon." An interesting side note is that while performing in Saskatoon in 1961, Cash selected a girl from the audience named Alexandra Wiwcharuk to sing the song to. She was a local beauty queen who dreamed of becoming a stewardess. Tragically, a few months later, the young woman was found murdered on the banks of the [South] Saskatchewan River. The story goes that once Cash heard this news he never sang the song again. [12]
"Train of Love" is a song written and originally recorded by Johnny Cash.
"Five Feet High and Rising" is a song written and originally recorded by Johnny Cash.
"Port of Lonely Hearts" is a song written and originally recorded by Johnny Cash.
"Bonanza" is the musical theme for the NBC western television series Bonanza starring Lorne Greene. It was written for the series by Jay Livingston and Raymond Evans.
"Pick a Bale o' Cotton" is a work song from the repertoire of Lead Belly.
"The Sons of Katie Elder" is the theme song for the 1965 Paramount western of the same name starring John Wayne. It was written by Ernie Sheldon (words) and Elmer Bernstein (music).
"Everybody Loves a Nut" is a song written by Jack Clement and originally recorded by Johnny Cash on Columbia Records for his 1966 novelty album Everybody Loves a Nut.
"Austin Prison" is a song written by Johnny Cash and originally recorded by him on Columbia Records for his 1966 novelty album Everybody Loves a Nut.
"Mister Garfield" is a traditional song sometimes credited to Ramblin' Jack Elliott.
"Happy to Be with You" is a song co-written by Johnny Cash with June Carter and Merle Kilgore.
"You Beat All I Ever Saw" is a song written and originally recorded by Johnny Cash.
"The Wind Changes" is a song written and originally recorded by Johnny Cash.
"Red Velvet" is a song written by Ian Tyson and recorded by Johnny Cash. While the Cash version is the best known, it was first recorded by Ian & Sylvia Tyson in 1965 on their album Early Morning Rain.
"Bad News" is a song written by and originally released by John D. Loudermilk, whose version reached #23 on the U.S. Billboard country chart in 1963.
"Rosanna's Going Wild" is a song written by June, Helen and Anita Carter for Johnny Cash.
"See Ruby Fall" is a song co-written by Johnny Cash and Roy Orbison. The title is a play on the phrase "See Ruby Falls", which is painted on some Southern barn roofs to direct potential tourists to a well-known waterfall in Chattanooga.
"Papa Was a Good Man" is a song written by songwriter Hal Bynum.
"I Will Rock and Roll with You" is a song written and originally recorded by Johnny Cash for his 1978 album Gone Girl.
Cash wrote two songs for the album, one of them being "I Will Rock and Roll with You," a rockedup retelling of his Memphis origins, featuring one of the best lead-guitar breaks to appear on a Johnny Cash tune since Carl Perkins left the group in 1973.
There are two songs written by Cash on his album, Gone Girl: "It Comes and Goes" and "I Will Rock and Roll with You." Both seem to look back at his Memphis roots while examining his life with June.
"Gone Girl" is a song written by Jack Clement and originally recorded by Johnny Cash, giving its title to Cash's album Gone Girl that appeared in December 1978.
"I Would Like to See You Again" is a song written by Charlie Craig and Larry Atwood.
Another month when Sun and Columbia release singles at the same time -- "Oh, Lonesome Me"/"Life Goes On" (Sun 355) and "Locomotive Man"/"Girl in Saskatoon" (Columbia 4-41920).