The Bluest Eyes in Texas

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"The Bluest Eyes in Texas"
File:Restless Heart - The Bluest Eyes in Texas.jpg
Single by Restless Heart
from the album Big Dreams in a Small Town
B-side "El Dorado"
Released May 13, 1988
Format 7-inch
Genre Country
Length 4:45
Label RCA Nashville
Writer(s) Tim DuBois
Dave Robbins
Van Stephenson
Producer(s) Tim DuBois, Scott Hendricks, Restless Heart
Restless Heart singles chronology
"Wheels"
(1987)
"The Bluest Eyes in Texas"
(1988)
"A Tender Lie"
(1988)

"The Bluest Eyes in Texas" (originally released as "Bluest Eyes in Texas") is a song written by Tim DuBois, Dave Robbins and Van Stephenson, and recorded by American country music group Restless Heart. It was released in May 1988 as the lead single from Restless Heart's album Big Dreams in a Small Town.

Content

In the United States, the single reached the top position in the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart in 1988.[1] In Canada, the single peaked at the number-two position on the RPM Country Tracks chart.

Bill Balsey directed the song's music video, which premiered in early 1988.

Song co-writers Robbins and Stephenson later joined with Henry Paul to form the country group Blackhawk in 1992.

Inspiration

In an interview with The Boot, Robbins said that Van Stephenson provided the idea of the song when he started telling them about an old girlfriend from high school who he bumped into recently. He dated her until her family moved from Nashville, Tennessee to Texas. When they reunited, all he could think about was how blue her eyes were.[2]

In the song, the narrator sings that he has just left his partner. He questions the reason for their break-up, but says that he is trying to move on. He bemoans that he can't forget her blue eyes, and that they haunt him.

Chart performance

Chart (1988) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles 1
Canadian RPM Country Tracks 2

Cover versions

Chloë Sevigny sang a cover version in her role as Lana Tisdel in Kimberly Peirce's 1999 film Boys Don't Cry. A Camp (Nina Persson and Nathan Larson) also covered the song in a studio recording for the film's closing credits and soundtrack album.[3]

References

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  3. Boys Don't Cry (Music from the Motion Picture Soundtrack) at DiscogsTemplate:Accessdate

External links

Preceded by Billboard Hot Country Songs
number-one single

August 20, 1988
Succeeded by
"The Wanderer"
by Eddie Rabbitt