About The Song

โ€œAmarillo By Morningโ€ has become one of country musicโ€™s most recognizable anthems, and it has helped propel George Strait to stardom. The song appeared on the King of Countryโ€™s 1982 album Strait from the Heart.

However, despite holding the record for the most No. 1 hits โ€“ with sixty under his belt, marking stands in all fields of music โ€“ โ€œAmarillo By Morningโ€ was one of Straitโ€™s best-known works that didnโ€™t make it to the top of Billboardโ€™s country singles chart. The song only peaked at No. 4.
Written by Terry Stafford and Paul Fraser, โ€œAmarillo By Morningโ€ tells the tale of a rodeo cowboy and his life on the road.

โ€œThey took my saddle in Houston, broke my leg in Santa Fe. Lost my wife and a girlfriend somewhere along the way. Well, Iโ€™ll be looking for eight when they pull that gate. And I hope that judge ainโ€™t blind. Amarillo by morning, Amarilloโ€™s on my mind,โ€ the song goes on.

Although Stafford was born in Hollis, Oklahoma, he grew up in Amarillo, Texas. In 1964, Stafford made his first appearance on the Billboard Hot 100 pop chart with the classic rock โ€˜nโ€™ roll hit โ€œSuspicion.โ€ When listeners initially heard his version of the song, many thought it was Elvis Presleyโ€™s latest release.

It became an instant hit for Stafford. However, he eventually couldnโ€™t find a follow-up to his big record and soon faded from the rock music scene. Still, Stafford did not get out of the business. Basing his operations out of California, the former singer wrote for other acts and worked in films and television as an actor.

Finally, in 1969, singer Buck Owens took Staffordโ€™s โ€œBig In Vegasโ€ up the charts, and the songwriter started thinking about coming back to his roots. By 1973, Stafford had signed a country record deal with the Atlantic label and tried making his mark in Nashville.

At about the same time, another old rocker, Paul Fraser, was offered a chance to earn a songwriting draw. Needing the steady money and tired of long road tours, Fraser took the job and teamed up with Stafford to write songs.
Paul Fraser had been enlisted to write a musical score for a movie, so he and Stafford started working on that each morning. One night, Stafford was watching television, and a commercial for a delivery service came on. The commercialโ€™s tagline of a delivery service got his attention! It guaranteed that it could โ€œget your package to places like Amarillo by the next morning.โ€ Stafford was caught up in the phrase โ€“ perhaps because Amarillo was his hometown โ€“ and he decided to write a song around that concept.

Stafford called Fraser and told him about his new idea. The two decided to meet the next morning and devoted some time to it. But Fraser couldnโ€™t wait that long, and the lyrics were starting to come to him immediately. Sitting down at his kitchen table, he wrote the whole thing in about an hour. The next morning, Fraser presented Stafford with the finished number. Stafford liked it, and within weeks, Staffordโ€™s recording of โ€œAmarillo By Morningโ€ was on the market โ€“ released on his album Say, Has Anybody Seen My Sweet Gypsy Rose in 1973.

Several cover versions have since been made. In addition to George Strait, rodeo champion Chris LeDoux also recorded the song in 1975 on his album Life as a Rodeo Man, Asleep at the Wheel, and John Arthur Martinez on his album Lone Starry Night in 2004.

Today, โ€œAmarillo by Morningโ€ is one of the most frequently covered George Strait songs.

Video

Lyrics

Amarillo by mornin’
Up from San Antone
Everything that I got
Is just what I’ve got on
When that Sun is high
In that Texas sky
I’ll be buckin’ at the county fair
Amarillo by mornin’
Amarillo I’ll be there
They took my saddle in Houston
Broke my leg in Santa Fe
Lost my wife and a girlfriend
Somewhere along the way
But I’ll be lookin’ for eight
When they pull that gate
And I hope that
Judge ain’t blind
Amarillo by mornin’
Amarillo’s on my mind
Amarillo by mornin’
Up from San Antone
Everything that I got
Is just what I’ve got on
I ain’t got a dime
But what I’ve got is mine
I ain’t rich
But Lord, I’m free
Amarillo by mornin’
Amarillo’s where I’ll be
Amarillo by mornin’
Amarillo’s where I’ll be

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