"Rocky" is a song written by Ronald Johnson (aka Woody P. Snow) and performed by American
country music
Country (also called country and western) is a popular music, music genre originating in the southern regions of the United States, both the American South and American southwest, the Southwest. First produced in the 1920s, country music is p ...
artist
Dickey Lee
Royden Dickey Lipscomb (born September 21, 1936), known professionally as Dickey Lee (sometimes misspelled Dickie or Dicky), is an American pop/country singer and songwriter, best known for the 1960s teenage tragedy songs " Patches" and "Laurie ( ...
. It was released in July 1975 as the fifth single and title track from the album ''Rocky''. On the country chart, "Rocky" was Lee's most successful single, and his only number one. It spent fourteen weeks on the chart, including one week at number one.
Content
In a paradoxically upbeat melody in a major key, Rocky, the title protagonist, tells the tragic story of his young wife in first person. He first recalls the day four years earlier where, as an 18-year-old college student, he met his wife-to-be (unnamed in the song) and recalls how well they hit it off. She accepts Rocky's marriage proposal, and they spend the next several months fixing up an old house to make their home. The two soon learn they are expecting their first child, a girl.
Although the family has its usual problems, the happy memories outweigh the bad. One example is a particularly rambunctious first
birthday party
A party is a gathering of people who have been invited by a host for the purposes of socializing, conversation, recreation, or as part of a festival or other commemoration or celebration of a special occasion. A party will often feature ...
for the couple's daughter. With things going well and the family settling in on a content life, Rocky soon gets devastating news: his wife has been diagnosed with an apparently inoperable illness — the specific illness is unidentified in the song — and that she has only a short time to live.
All of this is told in flashback, as in the final verse, his young wife has
died
Death is the end of life; the irreversible cessation of all biological functions that sustain a living organism. Death eventually and inevitably occurs in all organisms. The remains of a former organism normally begin to decompose sho ...
. Rocky is now a widower and raising his daughter alone. He feels a sense of sadness every time he looks at his daughter, who strongly resembles her mother, and now doing the same things alone that he once did with his wife. However, he feels a sense of hope, with his wife looking down on him and the couple's daughter and reassures that his love for her will always remain safe.
Each of the first three verses — telling one of the chapters in the couple's life — ends with the woman having a sense of fear of the unknown, expressed through the refrain's statement, "Rocky, I've never…," followed by the appropriate follow-up ("been in love before," "had a baby before," "had to die before") and the unassured, "Don't know if I can do it." However, both he and she realize that the strength they have in each other can help them meet each challenge head on. At the end, Rocky says that "if the world would end, your love is safe with me." The fourth refrain has Rocky envisioning hearing his deceased wife reassure, "Rocky, you know that you've been alone before, you know that you can do it," and that in her own way, she can still advise him in his time of need.
Chart performance
Dickey Lee version
Austin Roberts recording
Also, in 1975,
Austin Roberts recorded a version which reached number 9 on the U.S.
''Billboard'' Hot 100 and number 10 in Canada in 1975.
The track reached #22 in the
UK Singles Chart in November 1975; Roberts' only
chart
A chart (sometimes known as a graph) is a graphics, graphical representation for data visualization, in which "the data is represented by symbols, such as bars in a bar chart, lines in a line chart, or slices in a pie chart". A chart can repres ...
appearance in the
UK.
Austin Roberts version
Weekly charts
Year-end charts
Cover versions
*A German version had been recorded by
Frank Farian
Franz Reuther (18 July 1941 – 23 January 2024), known professionally as Frank Farian, was a German record producer and singer who founded the 1970s disco-pop group Boney M., the pop band No Mercy, and the pop band Milli Vanilli. He frequent ...
, hitting the German charts (#1 for four weeks) and the Dutch, Swiss and Austrian Top 10s in 1976.
*The song had been translated into Dutch with using the female vocal arrangement of the Frank Farian version; Don Mercedes hit
#1 in June 1976, in the Nederlandse Top 40.
*in 1979,
Jimmy "Orion" Ellis
James Hodges Ellis (born James Hughes Bell, February 26, 1945 – December 12, 1998), who used the stage name Orion at times in his career, was an American singer. His voice was similar to Elvis Presley's, a fact which he and his record company ...
recorded his version.
References
{{Reflist
1975 singles
Dickey Lee songs
Austin Roberts (singer) songs
Number-one singles in Germany
Number-one singles in South Africa
Song recordings produced by Allen Reynolds
RCA Records singles
1975 songs
Private Stock Records singles
Song recordings produced by Bob Montgomery (songwriter)
Songs about mothers
Songs about death
Song recordings produced by Roy Dea