Jones had recorded "The Race Is On" in June 1963 but it was not released until September 1964 on the album
I Get Lonely in a Hurry. The single reached #3 on the
Billboard country chart. It also climbed to number 96 on the pop charts, a rarity for a Jones single, and United Artists capitalized on its success by making it the title of his next 1965
LP. According to the Bob Allen book
George Jones: The Life and Times of a Honky Tonk Legend, Don Rollins wrote the song one day after visiting
Turf Paradise Race Course in
Phoenix, Arizona. Allen observes: :George imbued 'The Race Is On' with a masterfully frenetic, on-the-edge vocal reading, full of whining emotional ambivalence and mock sadness. By gleefully bending and stretching the notes and singing, at times, slightly ahead of or behind the song's fast-clipped meter, he embellished it with a subtle sense of tension and release that perfectly complemented the rapid-fire cascading effect of the song's lyrics. In the 1994 retrospective
Golden Hits, Jones recalled that
Dewey Groom first played him the song in his office at the
Longhorn Ballroom in
Dallas. Jones was unimpressed with all the demo tapes Groom played for him and had started to leave when Groom played the Rollins song; Jones heard the opening line and exclaimed, "I'll take it!" The singer on that 1961 demo recording was Jimmie Gray, for whom Don Rollins wrote the song. Gray's version is one whole step higher than Jones' version, and prompted George to seek him out. The two became friends, Jimmie eventually roading in George's band, on bass and high harmony, and Jimmie was in the studio when George cut his hit. According to the liner notes for the 1994 Sony compilation
The Essential George Jones: The Spirit of Country, the throbbing, echoey six-string bass guitar solo was played by Kelso Herston, who went on to write hit songs for Jones and produce one of his later
MCA albums. Jones was extremely fond of the tune, recording it again with
Musicor,
Epic, and as a duet with
Travis Tritt for
The Bradley Barn Sessions in 1994. He almost always performed it live in concert as well. ==Dave Edmunds and the Stray Cats version==