From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Here Comes Honey Again"
Single by Sonny James
from the album Here Comes Honey Again
B-side"Only Ones We Truly Hurt (Are the Ones We Truly Love)"
ReleasedSeptember 1971
Genre Country
Label Capitol
Songwriter(s)Sonny James, Carole Smith
Sonny James singles chronology
" Bright Lights, Big City"
(1971)
"Here Comes Honey Again"
(1971)
" Only Love Can Break a Heart"
(1971)

"Here Comes Honey Again" is a 1971 single by Sonny James written by James and Carole Smith. "Here Comes Honey Again" was the last of sixteen, number one country hits in a row for Sonny James. His next release, his remake of "Only Love Can Break a Heart", would peak at number two on country charts. "Here Comes Honey Again" would stay at number one for a single week and spend a total of fourteen weeks on the country chart. [1]

No. 1 hits record

On the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles chart, "Here Comes Honey Again" established James as the new record holder for most No. 1 songs in as many single releases with 16, surpassing Buck Owens (his labelmate at Capitol Records) who had 15 consecutive No. 1 songs without a miss from 1963-1967. James' streak had started in 1967 with " Need You," and save for non-charting Christmas singles released between 1967-1970, every one of his songs went to No. 1. The next single release, " Only Love Can Break a Heart," peaked at No. 2 – held out by Freddie Hart's " My Hang-Up Is You," breaking the streak. James held the new record of 16 in a row without a miss until August 1985, when Alabama scored their 17th-straight No. 1 song in as many non-holiday single releases with " 40 Hour Week (For a Livin')."

Chart performance

Chart (1971) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles 1
Canadian RPM Country Tracks 4

References

  1. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2004). The Billboard Book Of Top 40 Country Hits: 1944-2006, Second edition. Record Research. p. 172.


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Here Comes Honey Again"
Single by Sonny James
from the album Here Comes Honey Again
B-side"Only Ones We Truly Hurt (Are the Ones We Truly Love)"
ReleasedSeptember 1971
Genre Country
Label Capitol
Songwriter(s)Sonny James, Carole Smith
Sonny James singles chronology
" Bright Lights, Big City"
(1971)
"Here Comes Honey Again"
(1971)
" Only Love Can Break a Heart"
(1971)

"Here Comes Honey Again" is a 1971 single by Sonny James written by James and Carole Smith. "Here Comes Honey Again" was the last of sixteen, number one country hits in a row for Sonny James. His next release, his remake of "Only Love Can Break a Heart", would peak at number two on country charts. "Here Comes Honey Again" would stay at number one for a single week and spend a total of fourteen weeks on the country chart. [1]

No. 1 hits record

On the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles chart, "Here Comes Honey Again" established James as the new record holder for most No. 1 songs in as many single releases with 16, surpassing Buck Owens (his labelmate at Capitol Records) who had 15 consecutive No. 1 songs without a miss from 1963-1967. James' streak had started in 1967 with " Need You," and save for non-charting Christmas singles released between 1967-1970, every one of his songs went to No. 1. The next single release, " Only Love Can Break a Heart," peaked at No. 2 – held out by Freddie Hart's " My Hang-Up Is You," breaking the streak. James held the new record of 16 in a row without a miss until August 1985, when Alabama scored their 17th-straight No. 1 song in as many non-holiday single releases with " 40 Hour Week (For a Livin')."

Chart performance

Chart (1971) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles 1
Canadian RPM Country Tracks 4

References

  1. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2004). The Billboard Book Of Top 40 Country Hits: 1944-2006, Second edition. Record Research. p. 172.



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