“There’s More Pretty Girls Than One” is a traditional American old-time song with origins in the 19th century. The first commercial recording was made on July 28, 1927, by Leonard Rutherford and John D. Rutherford as “There’s More Pretty Gals Than One,” with another early recording by Crocker and Cannon in 1930. The song circulated through the broader Anglo-American folk tradition before settling into the early commercial country and bluegrass repertoires.
The song’s lyrical premise — the singer affirming that no matter who he loses, there are plenty more pretty girls in the world — sits in the consolatory-courtship tradition that runs through much American folk song. The simple verse-chorus structure and the singalong refrain have given the song a particularly long working life across folk-revival, bluegrass, and old-time idioms.
“There’s More Pretty Girls Than One” crossed firmly into the bluegrass canon through Lester Flatt and Mac Wiseman, who recorded an influential duet version, and through Ricky Skaggs and Tony Rice’s notable 1980s reading. It remains a regular at jam sessions where pickers want a piece with the “more fish in the sea” emotional posture and a tight three-chord progression. The song’s classification as fully traditional means there is no clear writer credit; modern acts simply work from the established public-domain melody and verses.