"Editorial abstract illustration evoking the emotional arc of a song titled "Your Cheatin' Heart" by Hank Williams. Modest rise and fall. balanced composition. Mood: melancholy, reflective. Visual style: 1953 vintage painting aesthetic, warm aged tones. Painterly, grainy film texture, muted palette with strategic accent colors. The composition should read left-to-right like a timeline — calm on one side, intensifying toward the other. Strictly no faces, no text, no logos, no literal objects, no band imagery. Pure color-field abstraction with emotional weight. 16:9 editorial format."
Your Cheatin' Heart
Fan image for "Your Cheatin' Heart"
An abstract illustration of what this song feels like. Each image is built from a prompt — the text description fed to the image generator. Listeners submit their own prompts, upvote the ones that fit best, and the top-voted prompt drives the next regeneration. After 100 image votes, we make a new picture.
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One or two sentences. Describe what the song feels like — a scene, a metaphor, a color, a place. Good descriptions are specific and sensory. Your submission becomes a candidate prompt that others can upvote.
Song DNA
Misophonia Triggers
A classic country ballad about heartbreak and regret, written by Hank Williams and released posthumously as one of his biggest hits.
Hear it the way it was made
The right gear changes everything.
Moods: melancholy, reflective
Traditions: country
How this song sits on each sensory axis
A dynamic range of 4/10 is within the normal pop-mix band. There is variation between verse and chorus, but it's the kind of variation most listeners encounter routinely.
Sudden changes: none. Transitions are musically signaled — nothing will surprise you if you're only half-listening.
Texture: smooth.
Predictability is high — the song telegraphs what it will do next. A sensory-sensitive listener can usually guess where it's going without close attention.
Vocal style: soft vocals.
Where this sits in Hank Williams's catalog
We have 20 songs from Hank Williams in the library. Of those, 18 are rated Safe, 2 Moderate, and 0 Intense. This song's dynamic range of 4/10 sits below the artist average of 4.3, making it the #18 most dynamic track of theirs in our library.
1953 context
Released in 1953. We have 13 songs from that year in our library, averaging a dynamic range of 5.3/10. This track is quieter / less dynamic than the year average. Explore more from the 1950s.
Explore by mood and tradition
Why this rating
We rate this song Safe because its dynamic range stays within our low-variance band, there are no unsignaled changes, and the texture and vocal style are both in the low-fatigue range. Our methodology uses an AND rule for Safe — a song has to clear every dimension to earn the rating.
Rating last reviewed: 2026-04-15. Reviewed by the Music I Want editorial team against the documented methodology.
Think this rating is wrong? Email the editor — every message is read and ratings get revised.
Frequently asked about "Your Cheatin' Heart"
Quick answers pulled from the song's sensory analysis.
What is the sensory intensity of "Your Cheatin' Heart" by Hank Williams?
"Your Cheatin' Heart" by Hank Williams rates as Low-Intensity. Dynamic range 4/10, no sudden changes, smooth texture. Our Low-Intensity rating means no single dimension triggers the higher-intensity thresholds.
How loud is "Your Cheatin' Heart" — what is its dynamic range?
"Your Cheatin' Heart" has a dynamic range of 4/10. Within normal pop-mix variation. Movement between verse and chorus but nothing dramatic.
Does "Your Cheatin' Heart" have sudden or surprising changes?
No. "Your Cheatin' Heart" has no sudden unsignaled changes. Every transition is musically telegraphed.
What is "Your Cheatin' Heart" best for?
In our library "Your Cheatin' Heart" is recommended for: meltdown recovery, relaxation. These tags are assigned only where the song's sensory profile genuinely supports the use case.
When was "Your Cheatin' Heart" released?
"Your Cheatin' Heart" is from 1953, on the album "All Time Top 100 #1 Country Classics". It appears in our 1950s catalog.
What is the emotional mood of "Your Cheatin' Heart"?
We tag "Your Cheatin' Heart" as melancholy, reflective. Moods are tonal descriptors based on how the song reads emotionally — separate from the sensory intensity axes.
What is the vocal style of "Your Cheatin' Heart"?
The vocal style is soft vocals.
Should I listen to "Your Cheatin' Heart"?
If you want gentle, low-arousal music, "Your Cheatin' Heart" is a solid pick — Low-Intensity across every sensory dimension.
Songs with the same DNA
smooth texture, similar intensity — across any genre or era.
What this song means to people
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