- Teddy Bear (Red Sovine song)
Infobox Single
Name = Teddy Bear
Artist =Red Sovine
from Album = Teddy Bear
Released = June 1976 (U.S.)
Format = 7"
Recorded = 1976
Genre = Country,truck-driving country
Length = 5:15
Label =Starday Records 142
Writer = Billy Joe Burnette, Tommy Hill, Dale Royal, Red Sovine
Producer = Tommy Hill
Certification = Gold (RIAA)
Chart position =- #1 (Billboard Hot Country Singles)
- #40 (
Billboard Hot 100 )
Last single =
This single =
Next single =
"Teddy Bear" is a song made famous by
country music singerRed Sovine . Originally released in 1976, the song was the title track to Sovine's album released that same year.tory
The song — actually, a recitation with an instrumental backing — was one of Sovine's many recordings that saluted the American
truck driver . "Teddy Bear," released during the height of thecitizens' band radio craze of the mid-1970s, is titled after the song's main character, a young paraplegic boy whose semitrailer truck-driving father had been killed in a road accident, and is left with a CB radio to keep him company.In the song, the little boy gets on the CB radio and asks for somebody to talk to him. The narrator (also an over-the-road truck driver) answers "Teddy Bear's" call, and listens as the boy tells a heart-rending tale. Aside from his health and the father being deceased, his mother has been forced into the workplace to provide a meager income. Teddy Bear then says his wish had been to go for a ride in a semitractor trailer truck (he and his mother were to have joined the father on the road that summer) and is resigned to never getting to realize his dream.
The narrator is so taken by his tale that he decides to risk being late with his delivery to answer the boy's dream. However, when he arrives at the boy's home ("Jackson Street, 229"), numerous truck drivers — who also have been listening to Teddy Bear's call — are lined up at the boy's home, giving him rides in their trucks. The boy thoroughly enjoys his experience.
At the end of the day, the truckers take up a collection for Teddy Bear's mother. Later, his mother ("Mama Teddy Bear") goes on the air to express her gratitude, telling them Teddy Bear's dream had just come true. She offers a special
prayer to the truckers for their act of kindness.Fate of "Teddy Bear"
The post-song fate of Teddy Bear is unclear, as two different singles — one of which was released by Sovine — have conflicting stories about the boy's future.
Not long after "Teddy Bear" peaked in popularity, singer Diana Williams (who was signed to
Capitol Records ) released a song called "Teddy Bear's Last Ride." This story, told from the point-of-view of a friend of Teddy Bear's mother (who cared for the lad while the mother was at work), suggests that the boy's paraplegia is part of a terminal health condition, one that eventually kills him. The song's ending has a group of truck drivers attending the boy's funeral, with one of the semitrailer trucks serving as the hearse.Sovine's follow-up-of-sorts to "Teddy Bear" is "Little Joe" (the tale of a truck driver's dog, who saves his master's life after an accident). In this song, in which Teddy Bear is a character, Sovine says that there was a miracle and that the boy — now older and apparently healthy — could now walk. Teddy Bear is instrumental in helping reunite Little Joe with his now-blinded master.
Neither song reached the "
Billboard magazine " Hot Country Singles Top 40.Chart success
"Teddy Bear" was the last of three "Billboard" Hot Country Singles No. 1 hits during Sovine's 25-year recording career, and his first since 1966's "Giddyup Go." Released in June 1976, the song needed just five weeks to reach its peak position, where it stayed for three weeks.
In addition, "Teddy Bear" was a crossover hit, peaking at No. 40 on the
Billboard Hot 100 ."Teddy Bear" was certified gold for sales of 1 million units by the
Recording Industry Association of America [http://www.riaa.com/goldandplatinumdata.php?resultpage=1&table=SEARCH_RESULTS&action=&title=teddy%20bear&artist=red%20sovine&startMonth=1&endMonth=1&startYear=1958&endYear=2008&sort=Artist&perPage=25 RIAA Gold & Platinum Search] - AcceessedApril 24 2008 ]ources
* Roland, Tom, "The Billboard Book of Number One Country Hits" (Billboard Books, Watson-Guptill Publications, New York, 1991 (ISBN 0-82-307553-2)
*Whitburn, Joel, "Top Country Songs: 1944-2005," 2006.- #1 (Billboard Hot Country Singles)
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