“Unwanted Love” was recorded by Don Reno, Red Smiley and the Tennessee Cut-Ups in 1962 on King, the version associated with this entry. The recording belongs to the productive Reno and Smiley King-era catalogue from their long partnership through the late 1950s and early 1960s, when the duo was producing some of the most distinctive bluegrass material outside the Monroe and Stanleys orbit.
The song’s authorship is generally credited to Reno or to the Reno-Smiley team, in keeping with the bulk of the duo’s writer-credited material. The lyric is a quiet heartbreak text: the narrator’s affection has gone unwanted by the woman he loves, and the unrequited-love conceit gives the song its emotional shape rather than the more dramatic departure-and-betrayal heartbreak pieces of the broader bluegrass repertoire.
Reno’s bluesy three-finger banjo and Smiley’s smooth baritone vocal give the recording its characteristic mournful pulse; the Tennessee Cut-Ups arrangement is the reference point for younger pickers studying the duo’s mid-period sound. The song works as a moderate-tempo vocal piece in G or A with a clear banjo break and a strong chorus harmony slot.