“Old Love Letters” was recorded by the Stanley Brothers and the Clinch Mountain Boys in 1960 on King. The recording belongs to the brothers’ productive late-King period, when Carter Stanley’s writing was producing some of the most distinctively textured heartbreak material of his career.
The song was written by Johnny Bond (1915–1978), the Oklahoma-born guitarist, singer, and songwriter who spent decades as a supporting artist and session musician in Hollywood and Nashville, contributing several songs that found lasting homes in the bluegrass repertoire. The song’s authorship is generally given to Carter Stanley, consistent with most of the brothers’ writer-credited material from the period. The lyric is a memory-driven piece: the narrator sorting through old love letters, finding the small details still capable of breaking him after years — a phrase here, a misspelled word, a perfumed page. The conceit gives Carter’s lead vocal a meditative quality unusual in the otherwise direct bluegrass heartbreak repertoire.
Carter Stanley’s lead carries the lyric’s quiet weight, and Ralph Stanley’s tenor adds the higher edge of grief on the chorus. The song belongs to the deep King-era Stanley catalogue and is one of the more frequently covered pieces from the period. It works as a slow vocal feature in G or A with a clear trio harmony slot on the chorus refrain.