"The Sky Is Crying" is a blues standard written and initially recorded by Elmore James in 1959. Called "one of his most durable compositions",[2] "The Sky Is Crying" became a R&B record chart hit and has been interpreted and recorded by numerous artists.
| "The Sky Is Crying" | |
|---|---|
| Single by Elmore James | |
| B-side | "Held My Baby Last Night" |
| Released | March 1960 (1960-03) |
| Recorded | Chicago, November 3 or 4, 1959 |
| Genre | Blues |
| Length | 2:47 |
| Label | Fire |
| Songwriter(s) | Elmore James[1] |
| Producer(s) | Bobby Robinson |
"The Sky Is Crying" is a slow-tempo twelve-bar blues notated in 12/8 time in the key of C.[3] It is an impromptu song inspired by a Chicago downpour during the recording session:[2]
The sky is crying, look at the tears roll down the street (2×)
I'm waiting in tears looking for my baby, and I wonder where can she be?
The songs features prominent slide guitar by James with his vocals, accompanied by his longtime backing band, the Broomdusters: J. T. Brown on saxophone, Johnny Jones on piano, Odie Payne on drums, and Homesick James on bass. James' unique slide guitar sound on the recording has generated some debate; Homesick James attributed it to a recording studio technique, others have suggested a different amplifier or guitar setup, and Ry Cooder felt that it was an altogether different guitar than James' usual Kay acoustic with an attached pickup.[4]
The single, with the artist credit "Elmo James and His Broomdusters", reached number 15 on Billboard magazine's Hot R&B Sides chart in 1960,[5] making it James' last chart showing before his death in 1963. James recorded a variation of the song, "The Sun Is Shining", in April 1960,[6] five months after the recording date of "The Sky Is Crying" (although some places "Sun" as a precursor to "Sky",[7] possibly because the bulk of James' recordings for Fire/Fury/Enjoy took place after the Chess recordings).
"The Sky Is Crying" is identified as a blues standard[8] and in 1991, James' original was inducted into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame in the "Classics of Blues Recordings" category.[9] Record producer Bobby Robinson noted that the song is "a magnificent vehicle both for Elmore's emotion-packed blues vocal and his ringing slide guitar".[9]
In 1969, Albert King recorded "The Sky Is Crying" for the album Years Gone By.[10] Unlike James' who played it with a slide, King used a fretted approach on guitar. Stevie Ray Vaughan later performed the song regularly as an apparent tribute to King.[11] He and his backing band, Double Trouble, recorded versions during the sessions for their 1984 album Couldn't Stand the Weather and 1985's Soul to Soul.[12] Neither was released until the posthumous compilations Blues at Sunrise (2000) and The Sky Is Crying (1991), respectively.[12][11] Critic Dan Forte noted, "Stevie tips his Clint Eastwood hat to two of his idols: Elmore James, who wrote the tune, and Albert King, who also recorded it, and whose influence is evident in every lick and bend here [on the 1991 release]."[11]
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