FORGET THE CROSSOVER HITS. FORGET THE STANDING OVATIONS. ONE SONG CAPTURED PATSY CLINE’S VOICE BETTER THAN ANYTHING ELSE SHE EVER RECORDED. Patsy Cline sold over 10 million copies of her Greatest Hits album. She was the first female country artist to headline her own concert tour. She broke down every wall between country and pop before most women in Nashville were even allowed to try. But if you want to hear the most haunting version of that rich contralto voice — just one song will do. It wasn’t “Crazy” — the Willie Nelson-written classic she recorded on crutches after a near-fatal car crash. It wasn’t “I Fall to Pieces” — the song she hated at first, then turned into her first number-one hit. It was something quieter. A song about lying awake at night, knowing the love you ache for will never come back. And when Patsy sang it, you could hear Winchester, Virginia in every note — a girl named Virginia Hensley who sang in her church choir and dreamed of a stage she almost never reached. Someone else wrote it. Someone else charted it first. But Patsy Cline made it immortal. She recorded that vocal just one month before a plane crash took her at 30. The album it was meant for was never released. But that voice — aching, unguarded, final — outlived everything. Some singers leave behind records. Patsy Cline left behind a voice that still keeps people awake at night.

Forget The Hits: Why “Sweet Dreams (Of You)” Was Patsy Cline’s Most Powerful Recording Patsy Cline changed country music forever.…

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