"Girl in Saskatoon" | ||||
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Single by Johnny Cash | ||||
from the album Heart of Cash | ||||
A-side | "Girl in Saskatoon" "Locomotive Man" | |||
Released | 1960 | |||
Genre | Country, pop | |||
Length | 2:12 | |||
Label | Columbia 4-41920 | |||
Songwriter(s) | Johnny Cash, Johnny Horton[1][2] | |||
Johnny Cash singles chronology | ||||
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Audio | ||||
"Girl in Saskatoon" on YouTube |
"Girl in Saskatoon" is a song co-written by Johnny Cash with Johnny Horton[2] and originally recorded by Cash for Columbia.
It was released as a single (Columbia 4-41920, with "Locomotive Man" on the opposite side).[3][4][5][6] in December 1960,[3][6] the same month Sun Records released "Oh, Lonesome Me" / "Life Goes On" (Sun 355).[7]
U.S. Billboard picked the song "Girl in Saskatoon" as one of the "Spotlight winners of the week", giving it four stars that corresponded to a "very strong sales potential". The review called the song "another fine folkish effort by Cash" and continued:
It has the quality of one of those old Robert Service poems about the Far North. Solid chanting and it can go.[8]
Nevertheless, the song didn't chart on Billboard at all:
A couple of weeks after Horton's death, Cash and crew recorded "Girl in Saskatoon," a song co-written by Cash and Horton. Both that song and another recorded at the session, “Locomotive Man,” were released as singles. Although promoted heavily by Columbia, neither entered the charts, but songs from his Sun days continued to do so.
— C. Eric Banister. Johnny Cash FAQ: All That's Left to Know About the Man in Black[9]
On the Cash Box country singles chart, "Girl in Saskatoon" reached number 25 during its nine weeks stay.[10]
Later the song was included on Johnny Cash's albums "Heart of Cash" (1968) & "More of Old Golden Throat" (1969).
Johnny Cash - Girl In Saskatoon
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has generic name (help)Another month when Sun and Columbia release singles at the same time -- "Oh, Lonesome Me"/"Life Goes On" (Sun 355) and "Locomotive Man"/"Girl in Saskatoon" (Columbia 4-41920).
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