Doug Sahm previously wandered onto the blog three times with the Sir Douglas Quintet — a band I’ve quietly, then loudly, then permanently filed under “a favorite go‑to listen.” I recently picked up a stock copy of this 45 to keep my promo company. Being the completist I am, of course I gathered them all. It’s instinct at this point — like a cat batting at a dangling string, except the string is a discography.
And the LP… well, that’s a whole archaeological dig. I bought an import copy from an antique store twenty years ago, and if memory serves, it’s Spanish — though I’ll admit I was far too lazy to excavate it from the shelves to confirm. Years later, during my stint in the VMP club, an orange‑vinyl reissue arrived like a little neon blessing.
Both sides of this 45 find Doug in fine form. Girls Today (Don’t Like To Sleep Alone) was one of the standout tracks for me on the LP — the moment where that Tex‑Mex and Country pulse really kicks the door open and lets the sunlight pour in. It’s got that groove, the border‑town sway, the feeling that somebody in the band is wearing sunglasses indoors for reasons no one questions.
Doug, meanwhile must’ve had a gravitational field for record contracts. The man collected labels the
way the rest of us collect coffee mugs we swear we won’t break. Every time you
turn around he’s on another imprint, another lineup, another “this time it’s
gonna stick” moment. You don’t bounce around that much unless you’ve got a
personality big enough to charm, confuse, and possibly overwhelm an entire
A&R department before lunch.
His chart success with the Sir Douglas Quintet was before 1969 and afterwards he had one lonely top‑200 solo LP on the Billboard charts and one solo 45 chart hit — at #100 on the country charts, of all things. A man who should’ve been a household name but instead became a cult‑hero footnote.
Thankfully, YouTube has become a kind of digital shrine. There are full television concerts floating around — especially those Austin City Limits performances — and they’re absolutely worth sinking into. Sahm in his natural habitat: loose, joyful, and unmistakably himself.

























