Don't Wait on Me

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"Don't Wait on Me"
Single by The Statler Brothers
from the album Years Ago
B-side"Chet Atkins' Hand"
ReleasedJune 13, 1981
GenreCountry
Length3:16
LabelMercury Nashville
Songwriter(s)Don Reid, Harold Reid
Producer(s)Jerry Kennedy
The Statler Brothers singles chronology
"In the Garden"
(1981)
"Don't Wait on Me"
(1981)
"Years Ago"
(1981)

"Don't Wait on Me" is a song written by Don Reid and Harold Reid, and recorded by American country music group The Statler Brothers. It was released in June 1981 as the first single from their album Years Ago. The song peaked at No. 5 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart.[1]

Group members Don Reid and Lew DeWitt trade call-and-response lead vocals on the verses.

Content[edit]

The song is an affirmation of a breakup, with one half of the ex-couple using "when pigs fly"-type hyperboles – including the sun rising in the west and setting in the east, San Diego sailors not getting tattooed, the wind not blowing in Chicago (opposing the city's nickname "The Windy City"), L.A. being cold and clear (opposing the city's warm climate and smog), winter weather for the Fourth of July, and so forth – to impress upon the other half that they should not expect to reunite as a couple.

Several cultural references are made, including infamous atheist Madalyn Murray O'Hair (though the song was released years before her tragic and untimely death, in any event she could never have been ordained a priest in the Roman Catholic Church), and Wrigley Field (when the lights go on), which, at the time of the recording, was the only unlighted field in Major League Baseball. On the Statlers' live 1989 album Live-Sold Out, on which they performed the song, the lyric referring to Wrigley Field was revised as putting a dome on the ballpark (as lights for night games had been installed in the ballpark in 1988, since the song's studio recording).

Chart performance[edit]

Chart (1981) Peak
position
US Hot Country Songs (Billboard)[2] 5
Canadian RPM Country Tracks 36

Re-recording (LIVE)[edit]

Chart (1989) Peak
position
US Hot Country Songs (Billboard)[2] 67

References[edit]

  1. ^ "The Statler Brothers singles". Allmusic. Retrieved December 24, 2011.
  2. ^ a b "The Statler Brothers Chart History (Hot Country Songs)". Billboard.