In a 1965 interview with Billboard magazine, Cochran stated that he wrote many songs in his car while commuting home from work, including "A Little Bitty Tear". "Nothing prompted the idea for" the song, it "just came into my mind."[3]
In December 1961, American rockabilly and country artist Wanda Jackson released her version of Hank Cochran's "A Little Bitty Tear". Jackson's version was recorded two months following the recording session of Ives' version. The song was cut in Nashville, Tennessee, United States in the Bradley Film and Recording Studio on April 20, 1961. Also recorded on the session was Jackson's previous hit single, "In the Middle of a Heartache".[9]
The single version of "A Little Bitty Tear" was released one month following the release of Burl Ives' version. Perhaps because of intertwining chart positions, Jackson's single version became a minor hit on the Billboard Hot 100, only reaching the number eighty-four in early 1962.[10] The song was then issued onto Jackson's studio LP entitled, Wonderful Wanda.
With the release of his new studio album, Make the World Go Away, in 1980, Hank Cochran released his first official version of "A Little Bitty Tear". Cochran recorded the song with friend and American country artist, Willie Nelson. The duet version was recorded at the Richey House in Nashville, Tennessee, United States in early 1980. The session was also produced by Cochran, as well as Chuck Howard and Rock Killough.[13] Nelson's guest vocals were not officially credited on the single or the album.
"A Little Bitty Tear" was then released as a single in October 1980. The song then entered the BillboardHot Country Singles chart where it reached a peak of fifty-seven. The song became Cochran's highest-charting single since 1963 when "Sally Was a Good Ole Girl" reached the top-twenty of the country songs chart.[14] The song was then issued onto Cochran's 1980 studio effort, Make the World Go Away, on Elektra Records.