The South's Gonna Do It
"The South's Gonna Do It" | ||||
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Single by Charlie Daniels | ||||
from the album Fire on the Mountain | ||||
Released | January 1975 | |||
Genre | Rock and roll, country, blues rock, Southern rock | |||
Length | 4:00 | |||
Label | Sony | |||
Writer(s) | Charlie Daniels | |||
Producer(s) | Paul Hornsby | |||
Charlie Daniels singles chronology | ||||
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"The South's Gonna Do It", is a song written and performed by the Charlie Daniels Band and released on their 1974 album Fire on the Mountain.
Content
The song talks about Southern pride and discusses how the South is "gonna do it again".
It also mentions Southern rock bands and musicians such as:
-Grinderswitch
-The Marshall Tucker Band
-Lynyrd Skynyrd
-Dickey Betts
-Elvin Bishop
-ZZ Top
-Wet Willie
-Barefoot Jerry
-Charlie Daniels Band
The song uses a clever play on words to promote Southern rock music. The notion that "the South shall rise again" was a familiar sentiment and rallying cry for disaffected Southern whites after the American Civil War. The song co-opts that sentiment, but uses the statement to celebrate Southern rock acts contemporary to the song itself. The "it" that the South is going to do again, it is implied, is that the South would produce further popular Southern rock bands.
Daniels in fact bristled at more nefarious interpretations of what the "it" was. When the Ku Klux Klan used the song as background music for radio commercials for a 1975 rally in Louisiana, Daniels told Billboard magazine, "I'm damn proud of the South, but I sure as hell am not proud of the Ku Klux Klan. ... I wrote the song about the land I love and my brothers. It was not written to promote hate groups."[1]
Chart performance
Chart (1975) | Peak position |
---|---|
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 | 29 |
Canadian Singles Chart | 68 |
References
- ↑ "KKK Lashed by Daniels on Song Use," Billboard magazine, 20 December 1975, p. 4