The world was almost deprived of Patsy Cline‘s signature song, “Crazy.”

The 1961 track, which is now regarded as one of the top-rated country songs of all time, almost didn’t even make it to the recording studio, according to Willie Nelson, who was actually the songwriting mastermind behind “Crazy.”

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Nelson pitched the song to Cline’s husband, Charlie Dick, who instantly wanted the country songstress to record it. As Nelson recalled in his 2023 memoir Energy Follows Thought: The Stories Behind My Songs, “I played [‘Crazy’] for Charlie, who liked it so well he drove me over to his house at one a.m., woke up poor Patsy, and made her listen to it.” (via AARP.)

But Cline was hesitant about “Crazy” at first.

“It almost didn’t happen because Patsy, who recorded it in a Nashville studio, tried singing like me. Big mistake,” Nelson wrote, adding that he “sure as hell didn’t sound like an angel” on the demo. “No one should ever try to follow my style of phrasing. Not that I don’t like my style. I do. I believe it’s natural, at least for me. But it’s offbeat. I tend to kick way back behind the beat or hurry up ahead of the beat.”

Ultimately, Cline was encouraged by producer Owen Bradley to record the song in her own style — so she did. She released “Crazy” as a single in October 1961, and it later peaked at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs Chart in January 1962.

It has since become one of the most beloved country ballads ever, earning a top spot on Rolling Stone‘s list of the Greatest Country Songs of All Time, where it’s listed at No. 3. (It’s ranked behind two other country classics: Johnny Cash‘s “I Walk the Line” and Dolly Parton‘s “Jolene.”)

Though it ended up being one of her signature songs, it wasn’t just Cline’s career that was forever changed by “Crazy.” Nelson credits Cline’s version of the song as having “convinced me, at a time when I wasn’t a hundred percent sure of my writing talent, that I’d be crazy to stop writing.”

Related: 1983 Timeless Ballad, Named One of the ‘Best Country Songs’ of All Time, Never Made It to No. 1

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