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Articles in May 2026

May 1st, 2026
When Dwight Yoakam teamed up with Willie Nelson for the haunting duet “If Teardrops Were Diamonds,” he delivered a masterclass in using gemstone imagery to reflect the magnitude of his emotional pain. Featured on Yoakam’s 2003 album Population Me, today's Music Friday selection transforms sorrow into something tangible — and dazzling — through a trio of precious stones.

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The opening verse introduces diamonds as a metaphor for tears. Yoakam imagines a world where his teardrops are “cold blue” diamonds, so abundant they could pave highways from coast to coast. It’s a striking image: diamonds, typically symbols of love and endurance, are recast as remnants of heartbreak. Their sheer volume underscores the depth of his loss — not just a few scattered gems, but an endless supply born from grief.

In the second verse, Nelson takes the lead, shifting the focus to rubies — long associated with passion and the heart. Here, heartaches become rubies, “stacked up just like stones,” forming a mountain “10 miles high.” The metaphor is powerful: each ruby represents a wound, and together they create an overwhelming landscape of pain. The richness of the red hue reinforces the intensity of emotion, suggesting a love that once burned brightly, but is no more.

The final verse brings emeralds into the picture, symbolizing sadness and reflection. Yoakam and Nelson sing of “sad thoughts” so numerous they could “turn the whole world green.” Emeralds, often linked to renewal and hope, take on a bittersweet role here — beauty tinged with melancholy. The imagery suggests that sorrow has seeped into every corner of the singer’s world, coloring his entire reality.

While “If Teardrops Were Diamonds” was never released as a single, Population Me reached #8 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart. Born in Kentucky in 1956 and raised in Ohio, Yoakam rose to fame in the 1980s by blending honky-tonk traditions with a modern edge, eventually earning 18 Grammy nominations and selling more than 30 million records worldwide. He also has the distinction of being the most frequent musical guest in the history of The Tonight Show (24). He broke the record held by Lyle Lovett in 2008.

Even today, Yoakam remains a road warrior. His 2026 schedule includes the co-headlining “Dos Amigos Tour” with ZZ Top, along with a slate of solo dates across the US and Canada. Meanwhile, Nelson — now 93 — continues to defy expectations with an active touring calendar and new music releases, proving that true legends never slow down.

Together, their performance of “If Teardrops Were Diamonds” reminds us that the most beautiful gems can reflect life’s deepest emotions.

Please check out the audio clip of Yoakam and Nelson performing “If Teardrops Were Diamonds.” The lyrics are below if you’d like to sing along…

“If Teardrops Were Diamonds”
Written by Dwight Yoakam. Performed by Dwight Yoakam, featuring Willie Nelson.

If teardrops were diamonds
And only mine were used
They could pave every highway
Coast to coast
And not be close to through

If teardrops were diamonds
Cold blue

And if heartaches were rubies
Stacked up just like stones
There would be a mountain
Ten miles high
Built by mine alone
If heartaches were rubies
Mine alone

You might begin to understand
The price that love has to pay
For being wrong

If sad thoughts were emeralds
And with not counting
In between
Just half the ones
I’ve had today
Could turn
The whole world green

If sad thoughts were emeralds
And the world turned green

You might just
Get the message that
There’s more to loneliness
Than can be seen

If teardrops were diamonds
And only mine were used…



Credit: Image by dirkhansen, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons.