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George Glenn Jones (1931-2013) was, to say the least, one of ''the'' most important CountryMusic singers of all time, and given his influence on a large number of ''very'' important rock-and-roll singers, was arguably one of the most important pop singers as well. Active from the early [[TheFifties fifties]] to his death in 2013, he has had an incredibly fruitful career that includes nearly 170 single releases in all. He is widely regarded as one of the most skilled and distinctive vocalists in country music history, and is considered by many country music artists and scholars to be the greatest ever. Among all of his songs, "He Stopped Loving Her Today", a song written about his break-up with Tammy Wynette, is often cited as the best country music song of all time (ironically, its only real competition is "Stand By Your Man" a song written and performed by Tammy Wynette, who was married to Jones at the time, and wrote the song ''about'' her relationship with Jones) and others such as "A Good Year for the Roses" and "The Grand Tour" have attained legendary status in country music canon.

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George '''George Glenn Jones Jones''' (1931-2013) was, to say the least, one of ''the'' most important CountryMusic singers of all time, and given his influence on a large number of ''very'' important rock-and-roll singers, was arguably one of the most important pop singers as well. Active from the early [[TheFifties fifties]] to his death in 2013, he has had an incredibly fruitful career that includes nearly 170 single releases in all. He is widely regarded as one of the most skilled and distinctive vocalists in country music history, and is considered by many country music artists and scholars to be the greatest ever. Among all of his songs, "He Stopped Loving Her Today", a song written about his break-up with Tammy Wynette, is often cited as the best country music song of all time (ironically, its only real competition is "Stand By Your Man" a song written and performed by Tammy Wynette, who was married to Jones at the time, and wrote the song ''about'' her relationship with Jones) and others such as "A Good Year for the Roses" and "The Grand Tour" have attained legendary status in country music canon.


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* LondonEnglandSyndrome: His duet with Tammy Wynette, "(We're Not) The Jet Set", makes reference to Rome (Texas), Athens (Georgia), and Paris (Tennessee).
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This change in labels also shifted him to a more ballad-oriented sound, with which he would stick. After he and Wynette divorced, Jones started hitting the bottle and cocaine, causing him to miss more shows and earn the FanNickname "No-Show Jones." He went to rehab, but it didn't do much until 1983; nonetheless, the hits kept coming until the end of the decade. By 1990, a switch to MCA brought a couple of critically-acclaimed albums but no hits. By the time he moved to Asylum Records in the end of the decade, his traditional sound was highly out of favor against the crossover-happy sound still present today. Nonetheless, Jones left a massive influences on the neotraditionalist acts of the eighties, and his songs are widely recorded to this day. In terms of influence and lasting impact, he is arguably the second most important male country artist after HankWilliams (although you could make an equally strong case for a few others like JohnnyCash and MerleHaggard).

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This change in labels also shifted him to a more ballad-oriented sound, with which he would stick. After he and Wynette divorced, Jones started hitting the bottle and cocaine, causing him to miss more shows and earn the FanNickname "No-Show Jones." He went to rehab, but it didn't do much until 1983; nonetheless, the hits kept coming until the end of the decade. By 1990, a switch to MCA brought a couple of critically-acclaimed albums but no hits. By the time he moved to Asylum Records in the end of the decade, his traditional sound was highly out of favor against the crossover-happy sound still present today. Nonetheless, Jones left a massive influences on the neotraditionalist acts of the eighties, and his songs are widely recorded to this day. In terms of influence and lasting impact, he is arguably the second most important male country artist after HankWilliams Music/HankWilliams (although you could make an equally strong case for a few others like JohnnyCash Music/JohnnyCash and MerleHaggard).
Music/MerleHaggard).
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George Glenn Jones (1931-2013) was, to say the least, one of ''the'' most important CountryMusic singers of all time. Active from the early [[TheFifties fifties]] to his death in 2013, he has had an incredibly fruitful career that includes nearly 170 single releases in all. He is widely regarded as one of the most skilled and distinctive vocalists in country music history, and is considered by many country music artists and scholars to be the greatest ever. Among all of his songs, "He Stopped Loving Her Today", a song written about his break-up with Tammy Wynette, is often cited as the best country music song of all time (ironically, its only real competition is "Stand By Your Man" a song written and performed by Tammy Wynette, who was married to Jones at the time, and wrote the song ''about'' her relationship with Jones) and others such as "A Good Year for the Roses" and "The Grand Tour" have attained legendary status in country music canon.

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George Glenn Jones (1931-2013) was, to say the least, one of ''the'' most important CountryMusic singers of all time.time, and given his influence on a large number of ''very'' important rock-and-roll singers, was arguably one of the most important pop singers as well. Active from the early [[TheFifties fifties]] to his death in 2013, he has had an incredibly fruitful career that includes nearly 170 single releases in all. He is widely regarded as one of the most skilled and distinctive vocalists in country music history, and is considered by many country music artists and scholars to be the greatest ever. Among all of his songs, "He Stopped Loving Her Today", a song written about his break-up with Tammy Wynette, is often cited as the best country music song of all time (ironically, its only real competition is "Stand By Your Man" a song written and performed by Tammy Wynette, who was married to Jones at the time, and wrote the song ''about'' her relationship with Jones) and others such as "A Good Year for the Roses" and "The Grand Tour" have attained legendary status in country music canon.
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* HillbillyMoonshiner: "White Lightning" is told from the POV of the moonshiner's son.
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* IHatePastMe: "Choices":
-->I've had choices since the day that I was born\\
There were voices that told me right from wrong\\
If I had listened, no I wouldn't be here today\\
Living and dying with the choices I've made
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* DualMeaningChorus: Played with on "The One I Loved Back Then". Both choruses refer to the same thing, and the dual meaning is achieved through misdirection (the other person in the song thinks that the chorus is referring to a woman, not a car).
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* TechnologyMarchesOn: "High-Tech Redneck" falls victim to this. Released in 1993, the song lists off the numerous ways the titular redneck employs then-state-of-the-art technology to further his hillbilly lifestyle, including watching sports on his big-screen TV with ''stereo'' sound, listening to country music via ''cassette'' (already outdated, as [=CDs=] had outstripped cassette sales by that time), and calling up his baby on his ''cellular phone''.
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* [[VocalEvolution Vocal Decay]]: Sadly, age and decades of drug abuse resulted in this. To be fair, he also had to learn to sing again after having throat surgery, and lost the lower end of his range after quitting smoking in 1999.

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* [[VocalEvolution Vocal Decay]]: Sadly, age and decades of drug abuse resulted in this. To be fair, he also had to learn to sing again after having throat surgery, and lost the lower end of his range after quitting smoking in 1999. It became much worse in 2012 after having a bout of pneumonia followed by a lung infection, which reduced his voice to slightly above a whisper.
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Jones first recorded for Starday Records in the 1950s, followed by stints on Mercury, Creator/UnitedArtists and Musicor. He was no stranger to the troubles that often plagued A-list musicians in his time, either. By 1968, he began drinking heavily and missing shows. His marriage broke up, but he soon wed fellow singer Tammy Wynette, with whom he would record a large number of duets. A dispute over the label's rights regarding duets between the two led to him jumping ship for Wynette's label, Epic Records, where he would stay from 1971 until 1990.

to:

Jones first recorded for Starday Records in the 1950s, followed by stints on Mercury, Creator/UnitedArtists and Musicor. He was no stranger to the troubles that often plagued A-list musicians in his time, either. By 1968, he began drinking heavily and missing shows. His marriage broke up, but he soon wed fellow singer Tammy Wynette, with whom he would record a large number of duets. A dispute over the label's rights regarding duets between the two led to him jumping ship for Wynette's label, Epic Records, Creator/EpicRecords, where he would stay from 1971 until 1990.
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None


* TechnologyMarchesOn: "High-Tech Redneck" falls victim to this. Released in 1993, the song lists off the numerous ways the titular redneck employs then-state-of-the-art technology to further his hillbilly lifestyle, including watching sports on his big-screen TV with ''stereo'' sound, listening to country music via ''cassette'', and calling up his baby on his ''cellular phone''.

to:

* TechnologyMarchesOn: "High-Tech Redneck" falls victim to this. Released in 1993, the song lists off the numerous ways the titular redneck employs then-state-of-the-art technology to further his hillbilly lifestyle, including watching sports on his big-screen TV with ''stereo'' sound, listening to country music via ''cassette'', ''cassette'' (already outdated, as [=CDs=] had outstripped cassette sales by that time), and calling up his baby on his ''cellular phone''.
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* VocalDecay: Sadly, age and decades of drug abuse resulted in this. To be fair, he also had to learn to sing again after having throat surgery, and lost the lower end of his range after quitting smoking in 1999.

to:

* VocalDecay: [[VocalEvolution Vocal Decay]]: Sadly, age and decades of drug abuse resulted in this. To be fair, he also had to learn to sing again after having throat surgery, and lost the lower end of his range after quitting smoking in 1999.
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* VocalDecay: Sadly, age and decades of drug abuse resulted in this. To be fair, he also had to learn to sing again after having throat surgery.

to:

* VocalDecay: Sadly, age and decades of drug abuse resulted in this. To be fair, he also had to learn to sing again after having throat surgery.surgery, and lost the lower end of his range after quitting smoking in 1999.

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* CallAndResponseSong: The last chorus of "I Don't Need Your Rockin' Chair" features various country stars echoing the lines sung by George.


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* MassiveMultiplayerCrossover: "I Don't Need Your Rocking Chair" had Music/VinceGill, Mark Chesnutt, Music/GarthBrooks, Travis Tritt, Joe Diffie, Music/AlanJackson, Pam Tillis, T. Graham Brown, Patty Loveless, and Music/ClintBlack participating in a [[CallAndResponseSong call-and-response]] at the end.
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* LongRunner: Around 60 years.

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* Retirony: In August 2012, he announced he planned on retiring after going on one final tour in 2013. On April 26, 2013, he died after being hospitalized for over a week for a fever and irregular heartbeat.

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* Retirony: {{Retirony}}: In August 2012, he announced he planned on retiring after going on one final tour in 2013. On April 26, 2013, he died after being hospitalized for over a week for a fever and irregular heartbeat.



* VocalDecay: Sadly, age and decades of drug abuse have resulted in this.
** To be fair, he also had to learn to sing again after having throat surgery.

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* VocalDecay: Sadly, age and decades of drug abuse have resulted in this.
**
this. To be fair, he also had to learn to sing again after having throat surgery.

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George Glenn Jones (born 1931) is, to say the least, one of ''the'' most important CountryMusic singers of all time. Active since the early [[TheFifties fifties]], he has had an incredibly fruitful career that includes nearly 170 single releases in all. He is widely regarded as one of the most skilled and distinctive vocalists in country music history, and is considered by many country music artists and scholars to be the greatest ever. Among all of his songs, "He Stopped Loving Her Today", a song written about his break-up with Tammy Wynette, is often cited as the best country music song of all time (ironically, its only real competition is "Stand By Your Man" a song written and performed by Tammy Wynette, who was married to Jones at the time, and wrote the song ''about'' her relationship with Jones) and others such as "A Good Year for the Roses" and "The Grand Tour" have attained legendary status in country music canon.

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George Glenn Jones (born 1931) is, (1931-2013) was, to say the least, one of ''the'' most important CountryMusic singers of all time. Active since from the early [[TheFifties fifties]], fifties]] to his death in 2013, he has had an incredibly fruitful career that includes nearly 170 single releases in all. He is widely regarded as one of the most skilled and distinctive vocalists in country music history, and is considered by many country music artists and scholars to be the greatest ever. Among all of his songs, "He Stopped Loving Her Today", a song written about his break-up with Tammy Wynette, is often cited as the best country music song of all time (ironically, its only real competition is "Stand By Your Man" a song written and performed by Tammy Wynette, who was married to Jones at the time, and wrote the song ''about'' her relationship with Jones) and others such as "A Good Year for the Roses" and "The Grand Tour" have attained legendary status in country music canon.


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George Jones passed away on April 26, 2013 after being hospitalized for over a week for a fever and irregular blood pressure.


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*Retirony: In August 2012, he announced he planned on retiring after going on one final tour in 2013. On April 26, 2013, he died after being hospitalized for over a week for a fever and irregular heartbeat.
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** To be fair, he also had to learn to sing again after having throat surgery.
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* SignatureSong: "White Lightnin'," "The Race Is On," "The Grand Tour," "Golden Ring," "He Stopped Loving Her Today," "Who's Gonna Fill Their Shoes," "The One I Loved Back Then (The Corvette Song)."
** "Finally Friday" is now a standard Friday-morning opening song for country music stations across the nation. Not bad for a song that never charted.

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[[quoteright:350:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/George_Jones_2519.jpg]]



Jones first recorded for Starday Records in the 1950s, followed by stints on Mercury, United Artists and Musicor. He was no stranger to the troubles that often plagued A-list musicians in his time, either. By 1968, he began drinking heavily and missing shows. His marriage broke up, but he soon wed fellow singer Tammy Wynette, with whom he would record a large number of duets. A dispute over the label's rights regarding duets between the two led to him jumping ship for Wynette's label, Epic Records, where he would stay from 1971 until 1990.

to:

Jones first recorded for Starday Records in the 1950s, followed by stints on Mercury, United Artists Creator/UnitedArtists and Musicor. He was no stranger to the troubles that often plagued A-list musicians in his time, either. By 1968, he began drinking heavily and missing shows. His marriage broke up, but he soon wed fellow singer Tammy Wynette, with whom he would record a large number of duets. A dispute over the label's rights regarding duets between the two led to him jumping ship for Wynette's label, Epic Records, where he would stay from 1971 until 1990.
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-->''If we could all sing like we wanted to, we'd all sound like George Jones.''
-->WaylonJennings

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-->''If ->''"If we could all sing like we wanted to, we'd all sound like George Jones.''
-->WaylonJennings
"''
-->--'''Music/WaylonJennings'''
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* CallAndResponseSong: The last chorus of "I Don't Need Your Rockin' Chair" features various country stars echoing the lines sung by George.
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Incorrect usage: not impossible. Furthermore No Real Life Example Please


* BeyondTheImpossible: Was known to snort entire ''Ziploc bags'' of cocaine. With a ''[=McDonald's=]'' straw.
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* AdvertisedExtra: On Shooter Jennings' "4th of July" — he sang a few bars of "He Stopped Loving Her Today" at the end, and still received chart credit despite his part being cut out of the radio edit.
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George Glenn Jones (born 1931) is, to say the least, one of ''the'' most important CountryMusic singers of all time. Active since the early [[TheFifties fifties]], he has had an incredibly fruitful career that includes nearly 170 single releases in all. He is widely regarded as one of the most skilled and distinctive vocalists in country music history, and is considered by many country music artists and scholars to be the greatest ever. Among all of his songs, "He Stopped Loving Her Today" is often cited as the best country music song of all time (ironically, its only real competition is "Stand By Your Man" a song written and performed by Tammy Wynette, who was married to Jones at the time, and wrote the song ''about'' her relationship with Jones) and others such as "A Good Year for the Roses" and "The Grand Tour" have attained legendary status in country music canon.

to:

George Glenn Jones (born 1931) is, to say the least, one of ''the'' most important CountryMusic singers of all time. Active since the early [[TheFifties fifties]], he has had an incredibly fruitful career that includes nearly 170 single releases in all. He is widely regarded as one of the most skilled and distinctive vocalists in country music history, and is considered by many country music artists and scholars to be the greatest ever. Among all of his songs, "He Stopped Loving Her Today" Today", a song written about his break-up with Tammy Wynette, is often cited as the best country music song of all time (ironically, its only real competition is "Stand By Your Man" a song written and performed by Tammy Wynette, who was married to Jones at the time, and wrote the song ''about'' her relationship with Jones) and others such as "A Good Year for the Roses" and "The Grand Tour" have attained legendary status in country music canon.
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George Glenn Jones (born 1931) is, to say the least, one of ''the'' most important CountryMusic singers of all time. Active since the early [[TheFifties fifties]], he has had an incredibly fruitful career that includes nearly 170 single releases in all. He is widely regarded as one of the most skilled and distinctive vocalists in country music history, and is considered by many country music artists and scholars to be the greatest ever. Among all of his songs, "He Stopped Loving Her Today" is often cited as the best country music song of all time (ironically, its only real competition is "Stand By Your Man" a song written by Tammy Wynette, who was married to Jones at the time, and wrote the song ''about'' her relationship with Jones) and others such as "A Good Year for the Roses" and "The Grand Tour" have attained legendary status in country music canon.

to:

George Glenn Jones (born 1931) is, to say the least, one of ''the'' most important CountryMusic singers of all time. Active since the early [[TheFifties fifties]], he has had an incredibly fruitful career that includes nearly 170 single releases in all. He is widely regarded as one of the most skilled and distinctive vocalists in country music history, and is considered by many country music artists and scholars to be the greatest ever. Among all of his songs, "He Stopped Loving Her Today" is often cited as the best country music song of all time (ironically, its only real competition is "Stand By Your Man" a song written and performed by Tammy Wynette, who was married to Jones at the time, and wrote the song ''about'' her relationship with Jones) and others such as "A Good Year for the Roses" and "The Grand Tour" have attained legendary status in country music canon.
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George Glenn Jones (born 1931) is, to say the least, one of ''the'' most important CountryMusic singers of all time. Active since the early [[TheFifties fifties]], he has had an incredibly fruitful career that includes nearly 170 single releases in all. He is widely regarded as one of the most skilled and distinctive vocalists in country music history, and is considered by many country music artists and scholars to be the greatest ever. Among all of his songs, "He Stopped Loving Her Today" is often cited as the best country music song of all time, and others such as "A Good Year for the Roses" and "The Grand Tour" have attained legendary status in country music canon.

to:

George Glenn Jones (born 1931) is, to say the least, one of ''the'' most important CountryMusic singers of all time. Active since the early [[TheFifties fifties]], he has had an incredibly fruitful career that includes nearly 170 single releases in all. He is widely regarded as one of the most skilled and distinctive vocalists in country music history, and is considered by many country music artists and scholars to be the greatest ever. Among all of his songs, "He Stopped Loving Her Today" is often cited as the best country music song of all time (ironically, its only real competition is "Stand By Your Man" a song written by Tammy Wynette, who was married to Jones at the time, and wrote the song ''about'' her relationship with Jones) and others such as "A Good Year for the Roses" and "The Grand Tour" have attained legendary status in country music canon.
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* BeyondTheImpossible: Was known to snort entire ''Ziploc bags'' of cocaine. With a ''[=McDonald's=]'' straw.
* CloudCuckooLander: At times when he was high. He once famously announced at the beginning of a set: "My friends, Deedoodle the duck is going to sing for you tonight, because Deedoodle can do what George Jones can't." He proceeded to sing the entire concert in a Donald Duck voice.
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Bleep


* SoundEffectBleep: "Her Name Is..." uses notes on a clavinet to self-censor ("Her name is [note note note] / Her eyes are [note]...").

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* SoundEffectBleep: "Her Name Is..." uses notes on a clavinet to self-censor ("Her name is [note note note] / Her eyes are [note]..."). Longtime producer Billy Sherrill has often said the blanks referred to ex-wife Tammy Wynette.
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* OldShame: He recorded some rockabilly records in the fifties as "Thumper" Jones, and has openly admitted to these being an old shame.
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George Glenn Jones (born 1931) is, to say the least, one of ''the'' most important CountryMusic singers of all time. Active since the early fifties, he has had an incredibly fruitful career that includes nearly 170 single releases in all. He is widely regarded as one of the most skilled and distinctive vocalists in country music history, and is considered by many country music artists and scholars to be the greatest ever. Among all of his songs, "He Stopped Loving Her Today" is often cited as the best country music song of all time, and others such as "A Good Year for the Roses" and "The Grand Tour" have attained legendary status in country music canon.

to:

George Glenn Jones (born 1931) is, to say the least, one of ''the'' most important CountryMusic singers of all time. Active since the early fifties, [[TheFifties fifties]], he has had an incredibly fruitful career that includes nearly 170 single releases in all. He is widely regarded as one of the most skilled and distinctive vocalists in country music history, and is considered by many country music artists and scholars to be the greatest ever. Among all of his songs, "He Stopped Loving Her Today" is often cited as the best country music song of all time, and others such as "A Good Year for the Roses" and "The Grand Tour" have attained legendary status in country music canon.

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