There's a Tear in My Beer

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"There's a Tear in My Beer"
Warner Bros./Curb
Songwriter(s)Hank Williams
Producer(s)Hank Williams Jr., Barry Beckett, Jim Ed Norman
Hank Williams Jr. singles chronology
"Early in the Morning and Late at Night"
(1988)
"There's a Tear in My Beer"
(1989)
"Finders Are Keepers"
(1989)
Hank Williams singles chronology
"Please Don't Let Me Love You"
(1955)
"There's a Tear in My Beer"
(1989)

"There's a Tear in My Beer" is a

Big Bill Lister, which was later re-recorded by his son
in 1988.

Original version

The original version was written by Hank Williams during one of his Nashville sessions in 1950-51, but his publisher and producer Fred Rose was averse to mentioning alcohol in songs. Lister, who opened show dates for Williams for a time, needed a drinking song, and Williams gave him the demo he had recorded. Lister recorded it and released it in 1952 on the Capitol label. Lister gave the demo to Wiliams' son more than 40 years later.

1988 version

Grammy
award win in 1990 for Best Country Vocal Collaboration.

Music video

The music video was directed by Ethan Russell and produced by [Joanne Gardner/ACME Pictures] and premiered in early 1989. In the video, Hank Williams Jr. performs the song by himself in an old house on a stormy night. After the first chorus, he hears vocals and sees a silhouette coming from behind a door near him. After harmonizing for a couple of bars with the mystery singer, he opens the door to discover his father, Hank Williams Sr., playing the song with his band in footage of an old performance. Hank Jr. then walks through the door and magically appears by his father's side to finish the song together.

The footage of Hank Sr. was a digitally modified kinescope of a 1952 performance of "Hey, Good Lookin'" on the Kate Smith Evening Hour. The editing team made several hundred minute tweaks to lay a new mouth (that of an actor dressed like Hank, Sr.) over the mouth of the original Hank. What now seems quaint was at the time quite groundbreaking. The New York Times did a feature on the video and its cutting edge visual effects, released around the time Forrest Gump used similar effects.

Chart performance

Chart (1989) Peak
position
US Hot Country Songs (Billboard)[1] 7

References

External links