About The Song

There are certain songs in country music that don’t just tug at the heart—they linger, quietly inhabiting the listener’s soul long after the final note fades. Waylon Jennings’ poignant recording of “The Wurlitzer Prize (I Don’t Want to Get Over You)” is one such song. Released in 1977 as a standout single from the collaborative album Waylon & Willie—his celebrated partnership with fellow Outlaw Country icon Willie Nelson—this track holds a special place in the tapestry of Jennings’ illustrious career. Though the album is often remembered for its brash defiance and genre-bending spirit, “The Wurlitzer Prize” offers something different: a quiet, reflective masterpiece steeped in melancholic elegance.

Written by the brilliant Billy Joe Shaver, the song distills heartbreak into its purest form. The premise is beautifully simple yet devastatingly resonant—a narrator sitting at a bar, surrounded by music and memories, openly confessing that he does not wish to get over the love he has lost. The Wurlitzer, an iconic brand of jukebox, serves as both setting and symbol; it frames the story in a familiar honky-tonk scene, where music and memory intertwine. Yet, there’s a striking vulnerability in Jennings’ delivery that elevates the song beyond mere barroom lament. His deep, rumbling voice—graced here with an uncharacteristic tenderness—imbues every line with a weary sincerity that feels lived-in and unvarnished.

Musically, “The Wurlitzer Prize (I Don’t Want to Get Over You)” is understated, elegant, and deliberately sparse. The gentle sway of the rhythm section, the restrained pedal steel guitar, and the subdued piano accents all create an atmosphere that is intimate rather than grandiose. It is a reminder that Jennings, for all his reputation as a rebellious trailblazer, was equally capable of subtlety and restraint when the material demanded it. His performance here is a masterclass in economy—each phrase delivered with just enough weight to break your heart without melodrama.

Commercially, the song was a resounding success. It reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart, becoming one of Jennings’ most beloved ballads. More than that, it offered a counterpoint to the rougher edges of the Outlaw movement, showcasing that even the most hardened renegade could lay himself bare when the moment was right.

In essence, “The Wurlitzer Prize (I Don’t Want to Get Over You)” is a song about lingering love, about the quiet comfort of clinging to old pain because, in doing so, one can keep a connection to something precious. It’s timeless in its sentiment and executed with the effortless grace that only Waylon Jennings could deliver. A staple for anyone who appreciates country music’s ability to balance ruggedness with introspection, this track stands as one of Jennings’ most understated—and most moving—contributions to the genre.

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Lyric

🎵 Let’s sing along with the lyrics! 🎤

I’m not here to forget you I’m here to recall the things we used to say and do
I don’t wanna get over you I don’t wanna get over you
I haunt the same places we used to go alone at a table for two
I don’t wanna get over you I don’t wanna get over you
They ought to give me the wurlitzer prize for all the silver I let slide
Down the slot playin’ those songs sung blue
They help me remember you I don’t want to get over you

A fresh roll of quarters same old song missing you through and through
I don’t wanna get over you I don’t wanna get over you
They ought to give me
I don’t wanna get over you I don’t wanna get over you

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