I'm Sorry

Album: The Brenda Lee Story: Her Greatest Hits (1960)
Charted: 12 1
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • "I'm Sorry" was written by Ronnie Self, who was a signed songwriter and performer for Columbia and Decca records through the 1950s and '60s. His only charted single was the 1958 "Bop-A-Lena" (#68). Brenda Lee's covers of his songs were his greatest successes.

    Self and Lee shared a manager, Dub Allbritten, whose business savvy helped make Lee a star. He tried to do the same for Self, but the rockabilly singer's wild antics and penchant for alcohol and amphetamines thwarted his efforts. Allbritten is also credited as a cowriter on most of Self's tunes despite the fact that he wasn't a songwriter at all.

    "I don't think he was trying to be dishonest," Lee mused in her 2002 autobiography Little Miss Dynamite: The Life And Times Of Brenda Lee. "That was the only way Dub could hope to recoup all the money he'd invested in that crazy guy."
  • Guys, you might want to be careful about falling in love with this voice. Brenda Lee was just 15 years old when she recorded the song! Decca records actually held back release on it for a few months while they pondered the legalities of having a teenager sing with such passion about affairs of the heart. In fact, Brenda Lee was a child star, beginning her career at the age of six by winning a school talent show whose reward was to perform live on the local Atlanta radio show Starmakers Revue. She was born and raised in a poor family in the red-clay belt of Georgia, so even as a tot she was the chief breadwinner for the family.
  • This song is notable for being one of the first examples of the "Nashville Sound." This sound focuses on stringed instrument sections, backing vocals, and a crooning lead singer - sort of a fusion between country, pop, and a dash of doo-wop. It was pioneered by RCA and Columbia Records in the mid-1950s.
  • "I'm Sorry" was Brenda Lee's first #1 hit, coming just after "Sweet Nothin's," which made its mark at #4. Along with "Rockin' Around The Christmas Tree," it's one of her signature songs and one of the finest songs of the teen pop genre.
  • Lee's producer Owen Bradley dismissed the ballad as being too short and repetitive but relented when they had some studio time left. The musicians worked up an arrangement on the spot and Bradley instructed the violinists he hired for the session to answer Lee's vocal with a string embellishment. But the eight-bar song was still too short, so Lee had to get creative.

    "It needed to be 16 bars," the singer recalled in Little Miss Dynamite. "That's when I remembered the recitations I'd heard the Ink Spots doing when I'd appeared with them in Vegas. We all agreed that I should do a spoken verse in the middle of the song."

    Lee also incorporated a slowed-down version of the hiccuping effect she'd been using on her rockabilly records.

    "It just came naturally," she continued. "It just seemed like that 'Oh-oh-oh-oh, oh-oh, oh yes' belonged in there."
  • Early in her career, many radio DJs thought Lee was Black and played her tunes on the R&B stations. The assumption worked in her favor and she landed a handful of hits on the R&B chart, including "I'm Sorry," which went to #4.
  • This was used in these TV shows:

    Woke ("Prayers For Kubby" - 2020)
    The Simpsons ("Woo-Hoo Dunnit?" - 2019)
    The End Of The F***ing World ("Episode #1.3" - 2017)
    Two And A Half Men ("Last Chance To See Those Tattoos" - 2004)
    The Wire ("Ebb Tide" - 2003)

    And these movies:

    The Rhythm Section (2020)
    Domino (2005)
    The Princess And The Warrior (2000)
    Casino (1995)
    Tommy Boy (1995)
    This Boy's Life (1993)
    The Fisher King (1991)
  • Still nervous about "I'm Sorry," Decca issued the tune as the B-side to the uptempo number "That's All You Gotta Do," but DJs around the country started playing the ballad side first. As a result, both songs reached the Top 10 on the Hot 100.

Comments: 5

  • Barry from Sauquoit, NyOn November 19, 1972, Joey Heatherton's covered version of "I'm Sorry" entered Billboard's Top 100 chart at position #100, six weeks later it would peak at #87 {for two weeks} and it spent nine weeks on the Top 100...
    The Rockville Centre, NY native had one other Top 100 record, a covered version of Ferlin Husky's "Gone", it reached #24 earlier in 1972...
    Davenie Johanna 'Joey' Heatherton celebrated her 74th birthday two months ago on September 14th, 2018.
  • Barry from Sauquoit, NyOn November 30, 1960, Brenda Lee and Chubby Checker kicked-off a tour of the Hawaiian Islands, the first stop on the tour was Maui, the second largest city on the islands...
    At the time both artists that three records each on Billboard's Hot Top 100 chart:
    Brenda Lee was at #2* with "I Want To Be Wanted", at #40 was "Just A Little", and at #85 was her "I'm Sorry" {"I'm Sorry" it was in it's 23rd and last week on the Top 100}...
    Chubby's three records on the Top 100 were, at #4, "The Twist", the "Hucklebuck" was at #36, and his covered version of "Whole Lot of Shakin' Goin' On" was at #50...
    *As noted, "I Want To Be Wanted" was at #2, and the record at #1 was "Save The Last Dance For Me" by the Drifters, but "I Want to Be Wanted" was the #1 record the week before.
  • Barry from Sauquoit, NyOn September 9th 1960, Brenda Lee appeared at the Michigan State Fair in Detroit, it was her second state fair appearance for the month of September 1960...
    {See the next post below}...
    Another act appearing at the Michigan State Fair was Johnny and the Hurricanes; and at the time their "Rockin' Goose" was in its first week on Billboard's Hot Top 100 chart at #95, eighteen days later on September 27th it peaked at #60 {for 1 week} and it stayed on the chart for 6 weeks.
  • Barry from Sauquoit, NyOn September 4th 1960, Brenda Lee began a three-day engagement at the Indiana State Fair in Indianapolis...
    At the time her "I'm Sorry" was at #4 on Billboard's Hot Top 100 chart; just under seven weeks earlier on July 18th it had peaked at #1 {for 3 weeks} and it stayed on the chart for 23 weeks...
    The record's B-side, "That's All You Gotta Do", also made the Top 10, it reached #6 on the same day "I'm Sorry" peaked at #1...
    And eight days later on September 12th, 1960 her next release, "I Want To Be Wanted", would enter the Top 100 at #67, it also peaked at #1 {for 1 week} on October 24th, 1960.
  • Barry from Sauquoit, NyAccording to Billboard this was a two-sided Top Ten record by Brenda Lee; "I'm Sorry" stayed at #1 for three weeks while the flip-side "That's All You Gotta Do" peaked at #6!!!
see more comments

Editor's Picks

Director Mark Pellington ("Jeremy," "Best Of You")

Director Mark Pellington ("Jeremy," "Best Of You")Song Writing

Director Mark Pellington on Pearl Jam's "Jeremy," and music videos he made for U2, Jon Bon Jovi and Imagine Dragons.

Emmylou Harris

Emmylou HarrisSongwriter Interviews

She thinks of herself as a "song interpreter," but back in the '80s another country star convinced Emmylou to take a crack at songwriting.

Neal Smith - "I'm Eighteen"

Neal Smith - "I'm Eighteen"They're Playing My Song

With the band in danger of being dropped from their label, Alice Cooper drummer Neal Smith co-wrote the song that started their trek from horror show curiosity to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

The Punk Photography of Chris Stein

The Punk Photography of Chris SteinSong Writing

Chris Stein of Blondie shares photos and stories from his book about the New York City punk scene.

Martyn Ware of Heaven 17

Martyn Ware of Heaven 17Songwriter Interviews

Martyn talks about producing Tina Turner, some Heaven 17 hits, and his work with the British Electric Foundation.

Ian Astbury of The Cult

Ian Astbury of The CultSongwriter Interviews

The Cult frontman tells who the "Fire Woman" is, and talks about performing with the new version of The Doors.