5 Saddest Country Songs Ever Written (Ranked by Emotional Damage)

Few musical genres master the art of writing a song that rips your heart out quite like country. (There’s a reason why the old joke about playing country music in reverse means you get your truck, dog, house, and ex-wife back.) Country music has evolved from traditional U.K. ballads that often recounted the most harrowing and tragic human experiences of loss, violence, and heartache. Those same ideas still apply in modern country music; it just sounds slightly different.

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Here are five of the saddest country songs ever written, conveniently ranked from pretty sad to utterly devastating, so that you can plan your tissue ratio accordingly.

“He Stopped Loving Her Today” by George Jones

George Jones’ classic 1980 track, “He Stopped Loving Her Today”, is one of the finest examples of a sad country song. There’s the initial heartbreak of the couple’s split early in the song. Then, the real gut punch happens in the latter verses, when the narrator reveals that the only reason he stopped loving her that day was that he died. The only thing that would make the song sadder is if the woman had spent as much time suffering as he did. But then again, if that were the case, we’d be talking about the last song on this list.

“Sam Stone” by John Prine

Few people could write about grief, loss, and tragedy as poignantly as John Prine. He didn’t bog down his ideas with flowery language, nor did he make his songs so specific that you couldn’t possibly see yourself inside the storyline. “Sam Stone”, from Prine’s incredible 1971 debut, tells the story of a veteran who comes back from war with significant physical injuries, grows more dependent on the medications the doctors prescribe for the pain, and eventually succumbs to addiction. The most heartbreaking part of this song is how universal an experience this really has been for American veterans.

“I Love You This Much” by Jimmy Wayne

Jimmy Wayne’s 2003 track, “I Love You This Much”, portrays a heartbreakingly distant relationship between a son and his father. The son spends his life trying to get his father’s attention, admiring and looking up to a man who is almost always absent or dismissive. A child begging their parent to love them as much as the child loves them is a kind of heartbreak no young soul should have to experience. The vulnerable way Wayne describes this tenuous relationship makes it all the more depressing. And don’t even get me started on the music video.

“Whiskey Lullaby” by Brad Paisley and Alison Krauss

Closing out this list of the saddest country songs of all time is one that still brings me to tears, even if I just read the lyrics without listening to the music. “Whiskey Lullaby” by Brad Paisley and Alison Krauss is a devastating song about a couple who break up but still love each other. They end up drinking themselves to death, and both die holding momentos from their ex-lover. The song ends with the couple being laid to rest under the same willow tree, which gives this track a bittersweet tinge that’s almost too much to bear.

Photo by Chris Walter/WireImage

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