Recent from talks
All channels
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Welcome to the community hub built to collect knowledge and have discussions related to Hello Vietnam.
Nothing was collected or created yet.
Hello Vietnam
View on Wikipediafrom Wikipedia
This article needs additional citations for verification. (November 2025) |
| "Hello Vietnam" | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single by Johnnie Wright | ||||
| from the album Hello Vietnam | ||||
| B-side | "Mexico City" | |||
| Released | 1965 | |||
| Recorded | 1965 | |||
| Genre | Country | |||
| Length | 3:06 | |||
| Label | Decca | |||
| Songwriter | Tom T. Hall | |||
| Producer | Owen Bradley | |||
| Johnnie Wright singles chronology | ||||
| ||||
"Hello Vietnam" is a song written by Tom T. Hall and recorded by American country singer Johnnie Wright in 1965.[1] Its lyrics supported the Vietnam War. "Hello Vietnam" spent 20 weeks on the American Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart with three weeks at number one. The single, featuring vocals from Wright's wife, Kitty Wells, was Wright's most successful release on the US country music charts as a solo singer.
The song was used for the opening theme of the war film Full Metal Jacket. It was also used in the third part of Ken Burns' documentary series The Vietnam War.
Chart performance
[edit]| Chart (1965) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles | 1 |
References
[edit]- ^ Estrada, Louie (August 21, 2021). "Country music's prolific, Grammy-winning 'Storyteller'". Washington Post. Retrieved 2025-11-04 – via EBSCOhost.
Hello Vietnam
View on Grokipediafrom Grokipedia
The track, released amid escalating U.S. involvement in Southeast Asia, became one of the earliest country music recordings to directly address the conflict, framing deployment as a necessary defense of freedom against ideological threats.[1][3]
It achieved commercial success by topping the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart for three weeks and charting for a total of twenty weeks, reflecting initial public backing for the war effort within country music audiences.[3]
As anti-war sentiment grew later in the decade, the song's unapologetic pro-intervention stance drew retrospective criticism for overlooking the war's mounting casualties and strategic failures, though it remains a cultural artifact of mid-1960s American resolve.[1]
