
"Where Have All the Cowboys Gone?" (E-Team Drugstore Cowboy Radio Edit) – 3:57."Hush, Hush, Hush." (album version) – 4:23."Where Have All the Cowboys Gone?" (album version edit) – 3:47."Hush, Hush, Hush." (album version) – 4:22 "Where Have All the Cowboys Gone?" (edit) – 3:46 B. The song received Grammy nominations for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance (losing to Sarah McLachlan's " Building a Mystery"), Record of the Year, and Song of the Year (losing both to " Sunny Came Home" by Shawn Colvin). The video was nominated for Best Female Video at the 1997 MTV Video Music Awards, losing to Jewel's " You Were Meant for Me". There are several points where the video looks grainy, adding to the effect of the song. These shots are augmented by various shadowy or obscure images of people walking, sitting at a table, sitting in a car and riding a horse. It is simple, primarily featuring Cole in the foreground singing or posing for the camera, while her band plays in the background. The video was directed by Caitlin Felton.
#LYRICS TO SUNNY CAME HOME FULL#
The verse score is minimalist and includes only low, rasping vocals by Cole with percussion accompaniment, while the choral transitions, chorus, and bridge use the full instrumentation and Cole's mezzo-soprano range. The song is written in 4/4 time and maintains a minor key throughout. A brief transition and chorus that repeats the song's title follows each verse, and questions the loss of the narrator's idyllic dream of spending her lifetime with a Western-styled hero.


The first two verses explore infatuation and discovery a bridge expresses disillusionment, and a final verse changes to despair.

The song traces the stages of a tragic romance.
