I Get Lonely in a Hurry

I Get Lonely in a Hurry
Studio album by George Jones
Released 1965
Genre Country
Label United Artists
Producer Pappy Daily
George Jones chronology

George Jones Sings Like The Dickens!
(1964)
I Get Lonely In A Hurry
(1964)
The Race is On
(1965)

I Get Lonely in a Hurry is an album by George Jones, released on United Artist in 1964.

The album marks the first appearance of "The Race Is On", which later became one of Jones's biggest hits and remains a concert staple throughout his long career. According to Bob Allen's book George Jones: The Life and Times of a Honky Tonk Legend, Don Rollins composed the song one day after visiting the Turf Paradise Race Track in Phoenix, Arizona. It features tongue-twisting lyrics that use the fast-paced images of a horse race to describe a broken relationship. Allen writes of Jones's memorable vocal: "By gleefully bending and stretching the notes and singing, at times, slightly ahead of or behind the song's fast-clipped meter, he embellished it with a subtle sense of tension and release that perfectly complimented the rapid-fire cascading effect of the song's lyrics." The album also contains "She's Mine", which would become a top ten hit for Jones on Musicor in 1969, and "Love's Gonna Live Here", a song written and popularized by Buck Owens, who was one of the few country singers who rivalled Jones's success in the 1960s.

Reception

I Get Lonely in a Hurry peaked at number 10 on the Billboard country albums chart. AllMusic calls Jones performance on "Book of Memories" "haunting".

Track listing

  1. "I Get Lonely in a Hurry"
  2. "Book of Memories"
  3. "I'm Gonna Change Everything"
  4. "The Race Is On" (Don Rollins)
  5. "Least of All" (Sonny James/Carol Smith)
  6. "Gonna Have a Little Talk with You" (Onie Wheeler)
  7. "I've Been Known to Cry" (Eddie Hallowell)
  8. "Love's Gonna Live Here" (Buck Owens)
  9. "Gold & Silver" (Shute Legate)
  10. "Holiday for Love" (Mel Tillis/Webb Pierce/Wayne Walker)
  11. "She's Mine" (George Jones/Jack Ripley)
  12. "Where Does a Little Tear Come From" (Majorie Barton/Johnny MacRae)