. . "\"Where Grass Won't Grow\" is a song by American country music singer George Jones. It was written by Earl \"Peanut\" Montgomery, one of Jones' favorite songwriters, and tells the story of the hardships faced by a family living on a twelve-acre farm in south Tennessee. The song features a gentle mandolin and three modulations that build to a redemptive closing but, despite a moving vocal from Jones, the single, released on Musicor in 1970, stalled at #28 on the Billboard country singles chart. He would record it again in 1994 with Emmylou Harris, Dolly Parton, and Trisha Yearwood for the Bradley Barn Sessions."@en . . . "198.0"^^ . . . "She's Mine"@en . . . "Where Grass Won't Grow"@en . . . . . . "47370363"^^ . . . "198.0"^^ . "869535275"^^ . . "Earl Montogomery"@en . . . . "Where Grass Won't Grow"@en . . . . "1970"^^ . "Where Grass Won't Grow (song)"@en . . "single"@en . "Tell Me My Lying Eyes Are Wrong"@en . . . . . . . . . "1969"^^ . . "1970"^^ . . . "1570"^^ . . . "3.3"^^ . "\"Where Grass Won't Grow\" is a song by American country music singer George Jones. It was written by Earl \"Peanut\" Montgomery, one of Jones' favorite songwriters, and tells the story of the hardships faced by a family living on a twelve-acre farm in south Tennessee. The song features a gentle mandolin and three modulations that build to a redemptive closing but, despite a moving vocal from Jones, the single, released on Musicor in 1970, stalled at #28 on the Billboard country singles chart. He would record it again in 1994 with Emmylou Harris, Dolly Parton, and Trisha Yearwood for the Bradley Barn Sessions."@en . . . . . . . . . . . .