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Burton Cummings' 1976 Top 10 Soft Rock Ballad Became a Breakup Survival Anthem

Burton Cummings' 1976 Top 10 Soft Rock Ballad Became a Breakup Survival Anthem

Victoria MillerSat, April 18, 2026 at 10:04 AM UTC

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In 1976, Burton Cummings had his first solo hit after leaving the Guess Who, the legendary rock band he fronted starting in 1965. The singer-songwriter hit No. 10 in the Billboard Hot 100 in October 1976 with his solo song “Stand Tall.” The soft rock single also peaked at No. 2 on the Adult Contemporary chart, landing just under the Captain and Tennille's "Muskrat Love."

“'Stand Tall' was huge,” Cummings once said in an interview posted by Uncut Music Interviews. “Because it was a ballad, it got played on so many stations across the board, you know. It got played on the hard rock stations as it climbed the charts, but it got played on all the easy listening stations, all the kind of softer stations. It did extremely well in Australia, it got played all over Europe. It was a monster in Canada. I mean, you can't even imagine how huge that was in Canada for me.”

“’Stand Tall,’ really for being the first single with Burton Cummings as the artist on it, it certainly took away some of the fears, you know, of being solo,” he added.

Cummings wrote ‘Stand Tall’ after a breakup

More than a traditional breakup ballad, “Stand Tall” was a survival anthem for Cummings, who penned every word from the heart.

According to Vegas Rocks, Cummings once shared that shortly after his departure from the Guess Who in 1975, his longtime girlfriend left him for a lawyer. He wrote “Stand Tall” alone at his piano.

In 2023, Cummings elaborated in a lengthy Facebook post. “I have a very clear picture of writing ‘Stand Tall’ in my big house in Winnipeg,” he wrote. “I was genuinely emotionally broken when the song came rolling out of me. Years earlier, when [Guess Who bandmate] Randy Bachman and I had written ‘These Eyes’ and ‘Laughing,’ I had been too young to know about emotional matter of this intensity. But 'Stand Tall' was for real. I felt it when I wrote it.”

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Cummings noted that he wrote "Stand Tall" while sitting in the dark at his piano, “alone in a house with far too many rooms for one person.”

“I was spilling my guts onto the keys,” he shared. “I had never really wanted hit ballads… but ‘Stand Tall’ seemed so real to people, I suppose its honesty came through. No matter what anyone thinks of the song, it is real. Not one syllable of it is phony.”

Cummings also recalled that when he performed the song on Dinah Shore’s daytime talk show in the 1970s, fellow guest Ray Charles told him “he could hear the pain in it.”

Though he’d been in the music business for years, his solo status felt different. “’Stand Tall’ was the first record ever that had the name Burton Cummings on it as the artist,” he shared. "I was the new kid in town, innocently blown away by all of it."

In an interview with Glide magazine, Cummings said performing the solo song along with his Guess Who classics still excited him years later. “I still love being onstage and watching the reaction,” he said. “People cry, and they react emotionally when I sing ‘These Eyes’ or ‘American Woman’ or ‘Stand Tall,’ some of the big records that really got through to them. I still love being able to invoke that reaction with people.”

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This story was originally published by Parade on Apr 18, 2026, where it first appeared in the News section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

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Source: “AOL Entertainment”

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