About The Song
If you’ve got no one to talk to about your pain, where do you go? If there is nothing but walls around while in remorse, you can have some company while playing Faron Young’s 1961 single “Hello Walls.” His smooth, clean, tenor voice will take you to a comforting place where you can find solace in what surrounds you. With Willie Nelson’s writing craftsmanship, the single became popular in the United States during the early 60s.
Faron Young’s greatest songs can be traced back from the 1950s to 60s. One of which is “Hello Walls,” a definitive hit that charted at No. 1 on the US Billboard Hot C&W Sides, No. 12 on the Hot 100, and No. 13 on Billboard Easy Listening. It even reached the Australian Kent Music Charts at No. 69 and was recognized at the 2021 Grammy Hall of Fame. The song was also featured in the 2004 biographical drama 3: The Dale Earnhardt Story.
The Hillbilly heartthrob was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame after his career took off as a significant honky-tonk singer. In 1996, Young died at 64 due to suicide.
“Hello Walls” is the result of Willie Nelson’s pen game. After offering the song to Faron Young for $500, his name in country music began to arise. Nelson owned the publishing rights of the song and received a $20,000 royalty check when it stayed at the top of the Billboard charts in nine weeks. Living as a broke artist at the time, he was extremely elated that he expressed his thanks to Young with a kiss.
“I was sitting at Tootsie’s,” Young shared in his biography Live Fast Love Hard: The Faron Young Story, “and this big hairy arm came around my neck, and Willie french-kissed me. It’s probably the best kiss I ever had.”
Nelson released a rock version of the song for the 1996 album Twisted Willie with the band The Reverend Horton Heat. Johnny Paycheck also recorded his version sometime between the late 1950s and early 1960s.
Nelson released a rock version of the song for the 1996 album Twisted Willie with the band The Reverend Horton Heat. Johnny Paycheck also recorded his version sometime between the late 1950s and early 1960s.
Sometimes, making sense of our predicament may seem unnatural, but grief takes different forms for every person.
Video
Lyrics
Hello walls, (hello) (hello)
How’d things go for you today?
Don’t you miss her
Since she up and walked away?
And I’ll bet you dread to spend
Another lonely night with me
But lonely walls, I’ll keep you company
Hello window (hello) (hello)
Well I see that you’re still here
Aren’t you lonely
Since our darlin’ disappeared?
Well, look here, is that a teardrop
In the corner of your pane?
Now don’t you try to tell me that it’s rain
She went away and left us all alone
The way she planned
Guess we’ll have to learn to get along
Without her if we can
Hello ceiling, (hello) (hello)
I’m gonna stare at you awhile
You know I can’t sleep
So won’t you bear with me awhile?
We must all stick together or else
I’ll lose my mind
I’ve got a feelin’, she’ll be gone a long, long time
(Hello, hello)