HE WROTE “BIG IRON” THAT MORNING — AND THOUGHT IT WAS TOO GOOD TO STOP THERE. SO HE SAT DOWN AT A PIANO HE BARELY KNEW HOW TO PLAY AND WROTE ANOTHER ONE THE SAME DAY. RECORDED APRIL 10, 1962, COLUMBIA STUDIO, NASHVILLE. IT HIT #1 FOR 8 STRAIGHT WEEKS. THE LYRICS WERE ABOUT A MAN NAMED MARTY CONFESSING TO A WOMAN NAMED MARY. Nobody asked Marty Robbins to write two masterpieces in one day. He just couldn’t stop. He was messing around at a piano he couldn’t really play when he stumbled onto a falsetto he liked — fragile, almost apologetic. He built the song around that sound. In the studio that April night, Marty sat down in a chair to record his vocal — which forced his backing singers Don Winters and Joe Babcock to kneel on the floor just to match his microphone height. The lyrics told the story of a man ending his affair, confessing to a wife named Mary. Marty’s wife was Marizona. Nobody had to ask. Eight weeks at #1. Sixteen on the pop chart. The song was never really about the other woman. It was about the man who finally looked in the mirror and didn’t flinch. What did Marty Robbins see in that mirror — that he couldn’t stop writing about until the song was finished?
The Day Marty Robbins Couldn’t Stop Writing Some songs feel planned. Others arrive like weather. And every now and then,…