Detour (song)

{{Infobox song

| name = Detour (There's a Muddy Road Ahead)

| cover =

| alt =

| type =

| artist = Jimmy Walker

| album =

| released = {{Start date|1945}}

| format =

| recorded =

| studio =

| venue =

| genre = Western swing

| length =

| label =

| writer = Paul Westmoreland

| producer =

}}

"Detour (There's a Muddy Road Ahead)" is a Western swing ballad written by Paul Westmoreland in 1945.{{cite web | url=https://secondhandsongs.com/work/39959 | title=Original versions of Detour (There's a Muddy Road Ahead) written by Paul Westmoreland | SecondHandSongs | website=SecondHandSongs }} The original version was by Jimmy Walker with Paul Westmoreland and His Pecos River Boys, issued around the beginning of November 1945.Billboard, November 3, 1945

Background

Westmoreland wrote the song while traveling to Murphy, North Carolina. He debuted the song in the neighboring town of Hayesville.{{cite book |last=Moore |first1=Carl S. |title=Clay County, N.C.: Then and Now |location=Franklin, N.C. |publisher=Genealogy Publishing Service |year=2008 |isbn=978-1881851240 }}

The title comes from the repetition of detour in the chorus:

{{poemquote|Detour, there's a muddy road ahead.

Detour, paid no mind to what it said.

Detour, all these bitter things I find.

Should have read that detour sign.}}

Written in the first person, the song tells of the singer's regrets for the choices made in life.

{{poemquote|Headed down life's crooked road

Lots of things I never knowed,

And because of me not knowin', I now pine.

Trouble got in the trail,

Spent the next five years in jail,

Should have read that detour sign.

(chorus)}}

1946 recordings

  • Spade Cooley (Columbia 36935), with Tex Williams on vocals, had a big hit with it in 1946, spending 11 weeks on the country charts, reaching number two.

{{cite book

| last = Whitburn

| first = Joel

| author-link = Joel Whitburn

| title = The Billboard Book of Top 40 Country Hits

| publisher = Billboard Books

| year = 2005

| pages= 89, 423

}}

Other versions

  • A well-known version of the song was the popular recording by Patti Page in 1951. It was released by Mercury Records as catalog number 5682, and first entered the Billboard chart on August 4, 1951, staying for 16 weeks and peaking at number five.

{{cite book

| last = Whitburn

| first = Joel

| author-link = Joel Whitburn

| title = Top Pop Records 1940-1955

| publisher = Record Research

| year = 1973 }}

Willie Nelson and Leon Russell on the album One For The Road (1979; not released as a single, album charted #3 on Billboard country)

  • In 2016, American singer Cyndi Lauper recorded "Detour" with Emmylou Harris for her album Detour.{{cite web |author=Wicks, Amanda |url= http://radio.com/2016/01/28/cyndi-laupers-country-album-detour-features-willie-nelson-emmylou-harris-more/ |title=Cyndi Lauper's Country Album 'Detour' Features Willie Nelson, Emmylou Harris & More |publisher=Radio.com |date=January 28, 2016 |accessdate=January 21, 2017}}

Popular culture

  • In its various versions, it is the Theme music of the Radio program, "Detour, The Folk, Roots, and World Music Show".{{cite web |url=http://detourradio.com/ |title=Detour, WTMD's folk, roots, and world music show |accessdate=December 17, 2017}}

References