Updates

• Added essential information to the Penny Records post. • Added newspaper ads to the Beau Hannon & the Mint Juleps post. • Expanded the Alabama Hayloft Jamboree post with the help of newspaper clippings.

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Hank Williams on MGM


Hank Williams with his Drifting Cowboys - I Won't Be Home No More (MGM K11533), 1953

I'm always fond of some Hank Williams! I can really feel why so many people loved his music and why he was an inspiration for so many singers and musicians. His music and his voice have something you can't find anywhere else. Here is one of my favorite Hank songs, "I Won't Be Home No More". I won't go into detail here on his career - there has been written so much about him - but let me give you a bit of background info on this particular recording.

"I Won't Be Home No More" was recorded on July 11, 1952 at the Castle Studio, located in the Tulane Hotel in Nashville, Tennessee. Apart from Williams on vocals and rhythm guitar, the line-up included Jack Shook on acoustic guitar, Chet Atkins on electric lead guitar, Don Helms on steel guitar, Jerry Rivers on fiddle, and Ernie Newton on bass. Also recorded that day were "Be Careful of Stones That You Throw", "Why Don't You Make Up Your Mind", and the mega hit "You Win Again".

Billboard July 11, 1953, C&W review


Coupled with "My Love for You (Has Turned to Hate)", a song originally recorded by Williams already in 1947 for Sterling, "I Won't Be Home No More" was released in July 1953 (MGM #11533) on both 45rpm and 78rpm format. By then, Williams had been dead for seven months but MGM still turned out recordings of him frequently and many of those posthumous released songs became hits and standards. "I Won't Be Home No More" was no exception, reaching #4 on Billboard's best selling country singles.

Similar to "You Win Again", the song is believed to cover the relationship and break-up with Williams' wife Audrey. In fact, both were legally divorced the day before Williams recorded it.


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