The Chilling Truth Behind Patsy Cline’s ‘Sweet Dreams’
on Apr 14, 2016 • Updated Nov 30, 2018
In the early ’60s, female country legend and vocal powerhouse, Patsy Cline was working on her upcoming album, Faded Love, and had begun to finish the recording sessions in preparation for its launch.
The first masterpiece written by Don Gibson, “Sweet Dreams,” won him a songwriter’s contract with Acuff-Rose Publications and a recording deal with MGM. It was later a hit for Gibson, Faron Young, and Patsy Cline. #MemberMonday pic.twitter.com/pVrlMT6teQ
— Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum (@countrymusichof) May 21, 2018
On March 3rd, 1963, Cline finished performing a benefit at the Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Kansas for the family of an industry friend. Following the concert, she was unable to fly out due to foggy conditions.
Don with Patsy Cline who put "Sweet Dreams" on the map. pic.twitter.com/K5mxU80u
— Don Gibson (@DonEGibson) November 15, 2012
The next day, Cline’s friend and fellow country artist, Dottie West, asked her to ride in the car with her and West’s husband instead, but Cline dismissed the offer saying, “Don’t worry about me, Hoss. When it’s my time to go, it’s my time.”
Just a day later, Cline’s plane faced horrible conditions and the pilot was not trained to use the instruments aboard – instead relying on visual flight rules for navigation. These rules were not suited for the torrential downpour facing the flight, and Cline’s plane crashed nose-first into a forest outside of Camden, Tennessee killing all passengers.
https://twitter.com/larrypareigis/status/970637622124085249
The chilling foreshadowing Cline had presented to Dottie West wasn’t the only time she had predicted her death in recent weeks. When the country star was in the midst of recording what would be her first posthumous single, “Sweet Dreams”, she made a chilling announcement that has haunted some people to this day.
In a film called Remembering Patsy, singer Jan Howard attended a playback party following the recording sessions for Cline’s upcoming album, where they played “Sweet Dreams”.
#OTD 1963,Patsy Cline,died in a Plane Crash
One of Country Musics most unforgettable Voices.
"Sweet Dreams"#CountryMusic #1960s #otd #patsycline #Radio https://t.co/4PgbuEBR1X pic.twitter.com/wHcP4W5PPR— Tom's Old Days (@sigg20) March 5, 2018
According to Howard, Cline raised a copy of her very first album in the air, gesturing toward the album and the recording booth (referencing the new tracks), and said “Well, here it is…the first and the last.”
Of all the tragedies in music history, there has not been another artist so open and clear about possible predictions of their death.
The world truly misses Patsy Cline, and over five decades after her death, she still remains an unforgettable classic.
Listen to the stunning performance of “Sweet Dreams” in the video below that she had dedicated as “her last”.