In 1970, a raw and deeply human country song climbed to the top of the charts while narrowly avoiding controversy on national television.
"Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down," was written and originally recorded by Kris Kristofferson, but later became a massive hit after being covered by Johnny Cash. The song has since earned recognition as one of the greatest songs of all time according to Rolling Stone, celebrated for its emotional honesty and vivid storytelling.
Kristofferson's track paints a painfully realistic portrait of loneliness, regret and emotional exhaustion, following a narrator struggling through a hungover Sunday morning. His masterful songwriting stood out for its literary detail and vulnerability, helping redefine what country music lyrics could sound like in the 1970s.
When Johnny Cash recorded the song, it quickly resonated with audiences and became a No. 1 hit on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart. But one lyric nearly prevented the song from being performed as written on television.
Ahead of Cash's performance on The Johnny Cash Show, network executives reportedly objected to the line referencing someone "wishing, Lord, that I was stoned." Producers wanted the lyric changed to avoid references to drugs on national television.
"There was a bunch of [producers] standing around and they suggested 'wishing, Lord, that I was home.' And I said, 'That's not the same thing,' you know, and John never said a word. He just stood there looking at us, so I didn't know what he was going to do," recalled Kristofferson in a 2007 interview.
"I would have gone with whatever he wanted to do, but in the show, I was in the balcony up there, and he got to that line and looked up and he said, 'wishing, Lord, that I was stoned,' and I just loved him for that. He saved the song. It would not have been the same thing."
That decision became one of the song's most famous moments and reinforced Cash's reputation for authenticity and artistic independence.
The controversy only added to the song's legacy, highlighting how groundbreaking its realism felt at the time. Rather than romanticizing hardship, "Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down" presented emotional pain in an unfiltered and deeply relatable way.
Over the decades, the track has remained a cornerstone of country songwriting, influencing generations of artists with its honesty and narrative depth.
Today, it stands not only as one of Johnny Cash's signature hits, but as a timeless classic that helped push country music into more emotionally daring territory.
Related: 1971 Soft Rock Classic, Banned by Some Radio Stations, Became a No. 1 Hit
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