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Johnny Paycheck

 
Artist: Johnny Paycheck
See Johnny Paycheck Lyrics
  • Born: May 31, 1938, Greenfield, OH
  • Died: February 18, 2003, Nashville, TN
  • Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Country
  • Instrument: Vocals, Guitar, Bass
  • Representative Albums: "The Soul & the Edge: The Best of Johnny Paycheck," "The Real Mr. Heartache: The Little Darlin' Years," "She's All I Got"
  • Representative Songs: "Take This Job and Shove It," "I'm the Only Hell (Mama Ever," "(Don't Take Her) She's All I"

Biography

The first time that many people ever heard of Johnny Paycheck was in 1977, when his "Take This Job and Shove It" inspired one-man wildcat strikes all over America. The next time was in 1985, when he was arrested for shooting a man at a bar in Hillsboro, OH. That Paycheck is remembered for a fairly amusical novelty song and a violent crime (for which he spent two years in prison) is a shame, for it just so happens that he is one of the mightiest honky tonkers of his time. Born and raised in Greenfield, OH, Paycheck was performing in talent contests by the age of nine and riding the rails as a drifter by the time he turned 15. After a Navy stint landed him in the brig for two years, he arrived in Nashville, where he performed in the bands of Porter Wagoner, Faron Young, Ray Price, and George Jones. He recorded several singles under the name Donny Young, then, in 1965, cut his first sides as Johnny Paycheck for the Hilltop label. A year later, he and gadfly producer Aubrey Mayhew started the Little Darlin' label, for which Paycheck recorded his greatest work. Marked by Lloyd Green's knockout steel guitar and Paycheck's broad, resonant vocals (not to mention his rounder's sense of humor) his Little Darlin' records of the 1960s have since become cult favorites. After splitting with Mayhew (and after running his life into the gutter) Paycheck made a celebrated comeback on Epic in the 1970s. "Take This Job and Shove It" was the most famous result, though ballads like "She's All I Got" and "Someone to Give My Love To" are far more indicative of his stylistic range.

Born Donald Lytle, Paycheck began playing guitar when he was six, and within three years, he was performing talent contests across the state. When he was 15, he ran away from home, hitchhiking, and hoboing his away across the country, singing in honky tonks and clubs along the way. By his late teens, he had joined the Navy, but while he was serving, he assaulted a superior officer and was convicted of court martial. As a result, he spent two years in the brig. Upon his release, he moved to Nashville, where made the acquaintance of Buddy Killen at Decca Records, who offered him a contract. At Decca, Paycheck released two rockabilly singles on the label under the name Donny Young; neither were hits. Shortly afterward, he moved to Mercury, where he released two country singles, which were also failures. By that time, he had begun supporting other musicians, playing bass and occasionally steel guitar with Porter Wagoner, Faron Young, and Ray Price. He frequently moved between employers because of his short-fused temper. Paycheck finally found his match in George Jones. He stayed with Jones for four years, fronting the Jones Boys between 1962 and 1966, and singing backup on George's hits "I'm a People," "The Race Is On," and "Love Bug."

Toward the end of his stint with Jones, Donald Lytle refashioned himself as Johnny Paycheck, taking his name from a Chicago heavyweight boxer. Late in 1965, he relaunched his solo career with the assistance of producer Aubrey Mayhew, who produced a pair of singles -- "A-11" and "Heartbreak Tennessee" -- for Hilltop Records. Though it only charted at number 26, "A-11" caused a sensation within the country community, earning several Grammy nominations as well as reviews that compared Paycheck to his mentor, Jones. In 1966, he and Mayhew formed Little Darlin' Records, primarily designing the label to promote Paycheck, but also recording Jeannie C. Riley, Bobby Helms, and Lloyd Green. That summer, "The Lovin' Machine" became Paycheck's first Top Ten hit. Also that year, he wrote Tammy Wynette's first hit, "Apartment #9," with Bobby Austin and Fuzzy Owen; Paycheck also wrote Ray Price's number three hit "Touch My Heart."

All of Paycheck's recordings for Little Darlin' Records rank among his grittiest, hardest country, but they weren't necessarily big hits. Between 1967 and 1969, Paycheck had eight more hit singles, with each record progressively charting at a lower position than its predecessor -- "Motel Time Again" reached number 13 in early 1967, while "If I'm Gonna Sink" climbed to number 73 in late 1968. Though "Wherever You Are" showed signs of a comeback in the summer of 1969, peaking at number 31, the label went bankrupt shortly after its release, partially due to Paycheck's declining commercial performance, partially due to his heavy drinking and erratic behavior. Over the course of the next year, he moved to California and sunk deeply into substance abuse. Meanwhile, Billy Sherrill at Epic Records had been searching for Paycheck with the hopes of producing his records. The label finally tracked him down in 1971 and offered him a contract, provided that he cleaned himself up. Paycheck accepted the offer and, with Sherrill's assistance, kicked his addictions.

Like many of Sherrill's records of the early '70s, his Paycheck recordings were heavily produced and often layered with stings. Though this was a shift from the hardcore country that Paycheck made on Little Darlin', the new approach was a hit -- his debut single for the label, "She's All I Got," became a number two hit upon its fall 1971 release. It was quickly followed by another Top Ten hit, "Someone to Give My Love To," and Paycheck was finally becoming a star. During the next four years, he had 12 additional hit singles -- including 1973's Top Ten singles "Something About You I Love" and "Mr. Lovemaker," and 1974's "For a Minute There" -- with the more accessible, pop-oriented songs Sherrill crafted for him, but Paycheck's wild ways hadn't changed all that much. In 1972, he was convicted of check forgery and, in 1976, was saddled with a paternity suit, tax problems, and bankruptcy. Accordingly, he shifted his musical style in the mid-'70s to put him in step with the renegade outlaw country movement.

Paycheck's first outlaw album, 1976's 11 Months and 29 Days (which happened to be the length of his suspended sentence for passing a bad check), featured a photo of him in a jail cell on the cover, signalling his change of direction. Initially, his outlaw records weren't hits, but early in 1977 he returned to the Top Ten with a pair of Top Ten singles, "Slide Off of Your Satin Sheets" and "I'm the Only Hell (Mama Ever Raised)." Later that year, he released his cover of David Allan Coe's "Take This Job and Shove It," which became his biggest hit, spending two weeks at number one; its B-side, "Colorado Kool-Aid," also charted at number 50. Soon, Paycheck's records were becoming near-parodies of his lifestyle, as the title "Me and the I.R.S." and "D.O.A. (Drunk on Arrival)" indicated. Nevertheless, he stayed at the top of the charts, with "Friend, Lover, Wife" and "Mabellene" both reaching number seven in late 1978 and early 1979.

Shortly after the twin success of those singles, his career began to crumble due to his excessive, violent behavior. In 1979, his former manager Glenn Ferguson began a prolonged and difficult legal battle. In 1981, a flight attendant for Frontier Airlines sued him for slander after he began a fight on a plane. The following year, he was arrested for alleged rape. The charges were later reduced and he was fined, but by that point, Epic had had enough and dropped him from the label. Paycheck moved over to AMI, where he had a number of small hit singles between 1984 and 1985. Later in 1985, he had a barroom brawl with a stranger in Hillsboro, OH, that ended with Paycheck shooting and injuring his opponent. The singer was arrested for aggravated assault and spent the next four years appealing the sentence while he recorded for Mercury Records. None of his singles for the label reached the Top 40, and he was dropped from the label in 1987. He spent 1988 at Desperado Records before signing with Damascus the following year, after his conversion to Christianity.

In 1989, Paycheck's appeals had expired and he was sentenced to the Chillicothe Correctional Institute. He spent two years at the prison, even performing a concert with Merle Haggard at the jail during his stint, before being released on parole in January 1991. Following his release, Paycheck kept a low profile, playing shows in Branson, MO, and recording for the small label Playback Records. After battling diabetes and emphysema for a number of years, Paycheck passed away in February 2003. He was 64. ~ Dan Cooper, All Music Guide
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Discography: Johnny Paycheck
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Pure

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Take This Job and Shove It [Gusto]

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Stars 2005

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Country Hit Parade

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Country Outlaws

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Survivor

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Little Darlin' Christmas

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Essential

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Collection

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Sings George Jones

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Live at Gilley's

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Johnny Paycheck [Platinum Disc]

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Forever Gold [2007]

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Hero of the Working Man

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Greatest Hits [Direct Source]

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Collector's Edition

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Best of Johnny Paycheck: Take This Job and Shove It

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All-Time Greatest Hits

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Master Classics: The Very Best

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Forever Gold [2001]

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Country Stars & Stripes

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Classic Country

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Johnny Paycheck [Delta]

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Best of Country: Mr. Lovemaker

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Tribute to George Jones

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Remembering

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Good Old Country

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Best of Johnny Paycheck [Curb]

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Dueling Country

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On His Way

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Pure Country

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Pure Country

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11 Months and 29 Days/Slide Off of Your Satin Sheets

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Take This Job & Shove It [Intercontinental]

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Country Collection: Johnny & Porter

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Shakin' the Blues

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Take This Job and Shove It/Armed and Crazy

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Super Hits

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Super Hits

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16 Biggest Hits

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Greatest Hits [Classic World]

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Little Darlin' Sound of Johnny Paycheck: The Gospel Truth

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Difference in Me

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Beginning

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Take This Job and Shove It [Legacy]

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Soul & the Edge: The Best of Johnny Paycheck

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Real Mr. Heartache: The Little Darlin' Years

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Greatest Hits [Retro Music]

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Live In Branson, MO, USA

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Take This Job & Shove It [Laserlight]

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Hits Home

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16 Greatest Hits

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Take This Job & Shove It [Richmond]

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Golden Hits [Hollywood]

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Back on the Job

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Biggest Hits

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Mr. Hag Told My Story

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Bars, Booze & Blondes

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Country Spotlight

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Song and Dance Man

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Someone to Give My Love To

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She's All I Got

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Country Soul

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Lovin' Machine

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Wikipedia: Johnny Paycheck
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Johnny Paycheck
Birth name Donald Eugene Lytle
Born May 31, 1938(1938-05-31)
Origin Greenfield, Ohio, USA
Died February 19, 2003 (aged 64)
Genres Country Music
Outlaw Country
Honky tonk
Occupations Singer-Songwriter
Instruments Vocalist
Electric Guitar
Acoustic Guitar
Bass Guitar
Steel Guitar
Years active 19532003
Labels Sony
Website www.johnnypaycheckmusic.com

Johnny Paycheck (May 31, 1938 – February 19, 2003) was a country music singer most famous for recording the David Allan Coe song "Take This Job and Shove It". He achieved his greatest success in the 1970s as a major force in country music's "Outlaw Movement" popularized by artists such as Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, Billie Joe Shaver and Merle Haggard. In the 1980s, his career suffered from his almost legendary use of drugs and alcohol. A prison sentence in the early 1990s and declining health effectively ended his career.

Contents

Biography

Early life and recordings

Born Donald Eugene Lytle in Greenfield, Ohio, United States, he began playing guitar by age six and made his first record at age 15.[citation needed] After a time served in the United States Navy (which included a court-martial for assault)[1], he began performing under the name Donny Young. The singer took a job with country music star George Jones, for whom he played bass and steel guitar. He later co-wrote Jones' hit song "Once You've Had the Best." Paycheck was a tenor harmony singer for numerous hard country acts of the late 1950s and early 1960s including Ray Price. Paycheck along with Willie Nelson worked in Price's band the Cherokee Cowboys. He is featured as a tenor singer on recordings by Faron Young, Roger Miller, and Skeets McDonald.[citation needed] All of these recordings are recognizable by their honky tonk purism. The recordings shun vocal choruses and strings in favor of steel guitar, twin fiddles, shuffle beats, high harmony and self-consciously miserable lyrics. As George Jones' tenor singer, Paycheck has been credited with the development of Jones' unique vocal phrasing.[citation needed]

Career success

In 1960, he reached Top 35 status in Cashbox magazine's country charts as Donny Young with the tune "Miracle Of Love".

Later in the 1960s, he had changed his name to Johnny Paycheck. Lytle reportedly re-named himself after the boxer, Johnny Paychek, who fought Joe Louis in 1940.[citation needed] Paycheck had his first hit with a minor Buck Owens' hit, "A-11". This recording set a pattern for the rest of his 1960s work. Paycheck also co-owned his own record company, Little Darlin' Records, with his producer, Aubrey Mayhew. Paycheck's Little Darlin' recordings featured the shrieking pedal steel guitar work of Lloyd Green. By the end of the 1960s, Paycheck had descended into alcoholism and drug abuse, and Little Darlin' Records folded. In the late 1990s, after taking them for granted for years, country music historians began to recognize the distinctive and sharp-edged sound of the Little Darlin' recordings as unique in their time, Paycheck's in particular.[citation needed]

In the early 1970s, Paycheck's career was revived by producer Billy Sherrill, who significantly changed his sound and image. Some of his biggest hits from this era were "She's All I Got" (a cover of an R&B single by Freddie North), "Someone To Give My Love To", and "For a Minute There". With the popularity of Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings in the mid 70's, Paycheck changed his image to that of outlaw, where he was to have his largest financial success. It was ironic that Sherrill was best known for carefully choreographing his records and infusing them with considerable pop feel. The Paycheck records were clearly based on Sherrill's take on the bands backing Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson on records.

A member of the Grand Ole Opry, Paycheck is best remembered for his 1977 hit single, "Take This Job and Shove It", written by David Allan Coe. The song sold over two million copies, and inspired a motion picture of the same name. "Colorado Kool-Aid", "Me and the IRS", "Friend, Lover, Wife", "Slide Off of Your Satin Sheets", and "I'm the Only Hell (Mama Ever Raised)" were hits for Paycheck during this period. He received a 1977 Academy of Country Music Career Achievement award.

Paycheck recorded eleven songs that made it into country music's top ten chart. Additionally, he co-wrote several successful songs for other country singers, including "Apartment #9" (with Bobby Austin), Tammy Wynette's first hit.

He appeared on the television show, The Dukes of Hazzard, as himself.[citation needed] The scene had him playing "Take This Job and Shove It" and arguing with Boss Hogg when the sheriff tried to give him a citation over the content of the song.

Later life

In 1981, Paycheck was sued for slander by a flight attendant for Frontier Airlines after he began a fight on a plane. In 1982, he was arrested for alleged statutory rape.[citation needed] At a concert in Missouri, Paycheck was approached by a young girl who told him that she was a student at University of Missouri. Paycheck allegedly engaged in sexual relations with the girl. The girl's family filed charges and sued Paycheck. The musician was unaware that she was only 14 years old instead of 19, which is what she allegedly told him. The charges were later reduced and he was fined.[citation needed]

In 1985, Paycheck was convicted of shooting a man in Hillsboro, Ohio after he fired a .22 pistol, grazing the man's head with a bullet. Paycheck claimed the act was self-defense. He spent 22 months in prison and was pardoned by the Governor of Ohio, Richard Celeste.[citation needed]

In 1990, Paycheck filed for bankruptcy after tax problems with the IRS.[citation needed]

Death

Although Paycheck suffered from drug and alcohol addiction during his career, he later was said to have "put his life in order" [2] after his prison stay. Suffering from emphysema and asthma after a lengthy illness, Johnny Paycheck died at Nashville's Vanderbilt University Medical Center. He was buried in Woodlawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Nashville and survived by his wife and son.

Johnny's brother was killed in a car crash near Wilmington, Ohio in 2009.

Tributes

An original tribute song and video to Paycheck called "Greenfield To Nashville" can be seen at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=skavLJ33Sts.

A tribute album, Touch My Heart: a Tribute to Johnny Paycheck, was released in 2004 on the Sugar Hill Label. Produced by Robbie Fulks, the album features George Jones, Marshall Crenshaw, Hank Williams III, Al Anderson, Dallas Wayne, Neko Case, Gail Davies and Fulks himself covering some of Paycheck's best-known songs.

Quotes

  • "I heard from fans constantly throughout the entire two years. The letters never stopped, from throughout the world. I looked forward to mail call every day."[citation needed] (After his release from prison).
  • "I'm a man who believes that right is right and wrong is wrong. Treat me right, and I will give you my all. Treat me wrong, and I will give you nothing. They don't like me for that, but that's the way I am."[citation needed]
  • "To me, an outlaw is a man that did things his own way, whether you liked him or not. I did things my own way."[citation needed]

Discography

Albums

Year Album US Country RIAA Label
1966 At Carnegie Hall 22 Little Darlin'
The Lovin' Machine
1967 Gospel Time in My Fashion
Jukebox Charlie 10
Country Soul 41
1968 Greatest Hits 42
1969 Wherever You Are
1971 She's All I Got 5 Epic
1972 Someone to Give My Love To 9
Somebody Loves Me 16
1973 Mr. Lovemaker 12
Song and Dance Man 16
1974 Greatest Hits 21
1975 Loving You Beats All I've Ever Seen
1976 11 Months and 29 Days 40
1977 Slide Off of Your Satin Sheets 22
Take This Job and Shove ItA 2 Platinum
1978 Greatest Hits 2 23 Gold
Armed and Crazy 15
1979 Everybody's Got a Family 42
1980 Double Trouble (w/ George Jones) 45
New York Town 48
Mr. Hag Told My Story 40
1981 Encore
1982 Lovers and Losers
Biggest Hits
1987 Modern Times 54 Mercury
1993 Live In Branson Delta
1995 Difference in Me Playback
1996 Johnny Paycheck Sings George Jones K-Tel
I'm a Survivor Playback
1999 Live at Gilley's Atlantic
16 Biggest Hits Sony
2002 Remembering Orpheus
  • ATake This Job and Shove It also peaked at #72 on the Billboard 200.

Singles

Year Single US Country Album
1964 "I'd Rather Be Your Fool" Singles only
1965 "For Those Who Think Young"
"A-11" 26
"Heartbreak Tennessee" 40
1966 "I'm Barely Hangin' on to Me"
"The Lovin' Machine" 8 The Lovin' Machine
"Ballad of Green Berets" At Carnegie Hall
"Right Back Where We Parted" Single only
"Motel Time Again" 13 Jukebox Charlie
1967 "Jukebox Charlie" 15
"The Cave" 32 Single only
"Don't Monkey with Another Monkey's Monkey" 41 Greatest Hits
1968 "(It Won't Be Long) And I'll Be Hating You" 59
"My Heart Keeps Running to You" 66
"If I'm Gonna Sink" 73 Wherever You Are
1969 "My World of Memories"
"Wherever You Are" 31
"Wildfire"
1971 "She's All I Got"A 2 She's All I Got
1972 "Someone to Give My Love To" 4 Someone to Give My Love To
"Love Is a Good Thing" 12
"Somebody Loves Me" 21 Somebody Loves Me
1973 "Something About You I Love" 10 Mr. Lovemaker
"Mr. Lovemaker" 2
"Song and Dance Man" 8 Song and Dance Man
1974 "My Part of Forever" 19
"Keep on Lovin' Me" 23 Greatest Hits
"For a Minute There" 12 Song and Dance Man
1975 "Loving You Beats All I've Ever Seen" 26 Loving You Beats All I've Ever Seen
"I Don't Love Her Anymore" 38
"All-American Man" 23 Single only
1976 "The Feminine Touch" 56 11 Months and 29 Days
"Gone at Last" (w/ Charnissa) 49
"11 Months and 29 Days" 34
"I Can See Me Lovin' You Again" 44
1977 "Slide Off of Your Satin Sheets" 7 Slide Off Your Satin Sheets
"I'm the Only Hell (Mama Ever Raised)" 8
"Take This Job and Shove It" 1 Take This Job and Shove It
1978 "Colorado Kool-Aid" 50
"Georgia in a Jug" 17
"Me and the I.R.S." 33 Armed and Crazy
"Friend, Lover, Wife" 7
"Maybelline" (w/ George Jones) 7 Double Trouble
1979 "The Outlaw's Prayer" 27 Armed and Crazy
"Down on the Corner at a Bar Called Kelly's" 94 Single only
"You Can Have Her" (w/ George Jones) 14 Double Trouble
"(Stay Away From) The Cocaine Train" 49 Everybody's Got a Family
"Drinkin' and Drivin'" 17
1980 "Fifteen Beers" 40
"When You're Ugly Like Us
(You Just Naturally Got to Be Cool)" (w/ George Jones)
31 Double Trouble
"In Memory of a Memory" 22 New York Town
"You Better Move On" (w/ George Jones) 18 Double Trouble
1981 "I Can't Hold Myself in Line" (w/ Merle Haggard) 41 Mr. Hag Told Me a Story
"Yesterday's News (Just Hit Home Today)" 57
"The Highlight of '81" 75 Lovers and Losers
1982 "No Way Out" 69
"D.O.A. (Drunk on Arrival)" 88
1983 "I Don't Need to Know That Right Now" Single only
1984 "I Never Get Over You" 30 I'm a Survivor
1985 "You're Every Step I Take" 47
"Everything Is Changing" 63
1986 "Sexy Southern Lady" Single only
"Old Violin" 21 Modern Times
"Don't Bury Me 'Til I'm Ready" 49
1987 "Come to Me" 56
"I Grow Old Too Fast (And Smart Too Slow)" 72
1988 "Out of Beer" 81 Singles only
"Josie"
1989 "Scars" 90
1994 "There Lies the Difference" Difference in Me

Guest singles

Year Single Artist US Country Album
1972 "Let's All Go Down to the River" Jody Miller 13 There's a Party Goin' On

References

  • Cooper, Daniel. (1998). "Johnny Paycheck". In The Encyclopedia of Country Music. Paul Kingsbury, Editor. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 408.

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