Every No. 1 Single of the Seventies: Ray Price, “She’s Got to Be a Saint”

“She’s Got to Be a Saint”

Ray Price

Written by Mike DiNapoli and Joe Paulini

Billboard

#1 (3 weeks)

December 30, 1972 – January 13, 1973

I was struggling with this one at first.

The protagonist here is shockingly loathsome in his mistreatment of the titular saint. He sings of his own cruelty as casually as if he’s acknowledging a slight change in the weather. Even Price’s peerless vocal performance can’t make this man likable.

Until the final verse, where he gives himself the comeuppance he deserves, and retroactively redeems the contrast he draws from the beginning between his sinful behavior and her saintly endurance of it.

I still can’t give it a perfect grade because of the “saint/ain’t” rhyme in the chorus. Just typing about it makes me shudder. But what a great performance and what a compelling character arc.

“She’s Got to Be a Saint” gets a B+.

Every No. 1 Single of the Seventies

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2 Comments

  1. Willie Nelson has said on numerous occasions that Ray Price is his favorite singer and the reason is very clear: Ray is simply a supreme vocalist, capable of handling a wide variety of material. Like Frank Sinatra, Price is fearless in his choice of material, and like Sinatra he is the master of phrasing. This is far from being my favorite Ray Price recording; however, it still falls in the B to B+ range.

    I only got to see Ray in concert one time when he was about 81 years old, but he could still sing most singers under the table at that age. By that time, he had incorporated both of his honky-tonk and countrypolitan hits back into his stage show.

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